Yes - Roundabout | REACTION

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  • Опубликовано: 29 янв 2023
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    COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER
    • Copyright disclaimer under Section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
    Here is the video link: • Roundabout (2003 Remas...
    Credit: ‪@yesofficial‬
    Theme Music: ‪@MattCherne‬
    #Yes #Roundabout
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Комментарии • 419

  • @maxbrazil3712
    @maxbrazil3712 Год назад +81

    "Fragile" is a start-to-finish rock album masterpiece.

  • @michlkwitz
    @michlkwitz Год назад +151

    I've always thought of Yes as a band where everyone is playing lead, at the same time. And somehow it works.

    • @carlgibbons5777
      @carlgibbons5777 Год назад +9

      Much like Rush. Except Rush does it with fewer members.

    • @markjacobsen8335
      @markjacobsen8335 Год назад +5

      That's about right.

    • @peterkassner3552
      @peterkassner3552 Год назад +7

      only band where that has ever worked... too many virtuosos together, it can end up sounding like a competition... but through brilliant writing and arrangement, Yes pulled it off like nobody else

    • @carlgibbons5777
      @carlgibbons5777 Год назад +3

      @@peterkassner3552 Rush's odd time transitions are unmatched.

    • @timwhitnell7145
      @timwhitnell7145 Год назад +4

      Just like Rush

  • @JJ8KK
    @JJ8KK Год назад +36

    The thing about YES' Masterpieces, like Roundabout, is that they cram so much complexity into them, you can only fully appreciate them with *_repeated listenings._* That's when you pick out how each of the members blend in their contributions _so perfectly._

  • @54sks
    @54sks Год назад +67

    The late Chris Squire was the only member of Yes to play on every album. His base playing is incredible.

    • @Someone-kg8qf
      @Someone-kg8qf 11 месяцев назад +1

      I really admire Squire, he is such a solid bassist. I will admit I am entranced by Jon's voice but we without Mr Squire the music would be missing a very important component. Rock bottom, holds the entire composition together. It is essential, along with the drums. Otherwise it is lacking.

    • @Someone-kg8qf
      @Someone-kg8qf 11 месяцев назад +1

      Despite the many amazing drummers and bassists they are still not appreciated. It's why I switched over to bass, but It has not hurt my guitar playing.

  • @StarGeezerTim
    @StarGeezerTim Год назад +13

    This song practically invented "headphone rock" and had an incalculable impact on the sale of strobe lights back in the day! Proud to say I was part of it all! Great to see yet another generation discover and enjoy this treasure!

  • @dennisr.4918DennyDesigns
    @dennisr.4918DennyDesigns 9 месяцев назад +8

    This song is perfect in every way.

  • @joelliebler5690
    @joelliebler5690 Год назад +123

    The song that launched progressive rock into popularity.

    • @stevensmith8454
      @stevensmith8454 Год назад +13

      Err, one of them .

    • @lesblatnyak5947
      @lesblatnyak5947 Год назад +5

      True dat the shortened version played on am radio and was a dance favourite

    • @EJSmith-dk3yg
      @EJSmith-dk3yg Год назад +7

      Yeaaaa ... NO !
      Here are some that predate Yes and one contemporary;
      The Moody Blues, Pink Floyd, Supertramp, and Emerson, Lake & Palmer !
      Think about that !

    • @stevensmith8454
      @stevensmith8454 Год назад +6

      @@EJSmith-dk3yg , Take a chill pill pal,he's entitled to his opinion

    • @jonathanlocke6404
      @jonathanlocke6404 Год назад +9

      It's in valid contention, for sure. If we're going to pick just one song, I might say King Crimson's "21st Century Schizoid Man"...

  • @shoker8696
    @shoker8696 Год назад +50

    The problem is that no one performs this kind of music now, maybe not everyone will agree, but modern music is shit compared to the music of the 20th century. For me personally, this is good music, and John Anderson's voice is beautiful!

    • @talshayar4279
      @talshayar4279 Год назад +1

      Mate, check out 'The Day That The World Breaks Down' by Ayreon. Modern prog at it's finest.

  • @thatguysme
    @thatguysme Год назад +91

    Yes, more Yes! Chris Squire was THE best bass player and it's exemplified in all their music.

    • @CAdams6398
      @CAdams6398 Год назад +5

      I wouldn't dream of doubting Chris Squire's ability, but the jazz cats could match him stride for stride. It would be more accurate to describe him as the best rock bassist!

    • @thatguysme
      @thatguysme Год назад +4

      @@CAdams6398 You are entirely right. I stand humbly corrected. 👍

    • @78yestor93
      @78yestor93 Год назад +4

      @Christian Adams the point is Chris pioneered a new way of playing the bass in a pioneering new genre of music of the late 60s early 70s.

    • @CAdams6398
      @CAdams6398 Год назад +4

      I don't doubt that for a second, but the implication was best ever. Is he really the greatest man to pick up a bass guitar?

    • @78yestor93
      @78yestor93 Год назад +4

      My point is that it is futile to compare jazz with prog rock it's like apples and bananas totally different. Also, these genres come from different times, different backgrounds and different musical worlds!!

  • @MrSmartAlec
    @MrSmartAlec Год назад +14

    1971 senior year of hs starts. Seems like almost every morning someone with a portable cassette player had this song blasting by the lockers before class. What a musical golden age.

  • @michaellockhart554
    @michaellockhart554 Год назад +23

    Chris Squire, 'nuff said, there will never ever be a bass player to compare to Chris

    • @Gary19702
      @Gary19702 Год назад +2

      Except his main influence.....John Entwistle.

  • @toddstevens13
    @toddstevens13 Год назад +15

    Yes asked Geddy Lee to stand in to do this at their HOF concert portion.

  • @chriswiedeman2956
    @chriswiedeman2956 Год назад +9

    "Oh my God, The Bass!" Chris Squire was a beast.

  • @deweyg1555
    @deweyg1555 10 месяцев назад +5

    Geddy said he was honored to stand in for his biggest influence. Yes was a group with unusually gifted instrumentalists having remarkable breadth skills. Howe, Wakeman, Squire, Bruford, White and of course Anderson...were likely the most talented and amazingly creative musicians...possibly ever. The Mozart's of the 20th century..

  • @timwhitnell7145
    @timwhitnell7145 Год назад +9

    The song is 52 years old and I still get chills hearing it. From the best year in rock music: 1971. A masterpiece. Chris Squires' bass playing is mind blowing and Steve Howe's lead guitar is great but it is keyboard master Rick Wakeman's Hammond 3C organ work that is the most memorable for me. The arrangement of this song defies description. Prog rock at its absolute best. One of the handful of pop/rock songs that could be declared the best ever IMO.
    Next up with Yes for you should be their other early '70s popular prog epics such as: the upbeat and happy I've Seen All Good People, Long Distance Runaround, Starship Trooper and Close to the Edge. They changed their sound drastically for the hugely popular - with others not necessarily hardcore Yes fans - 1982 LP 90125. Owner of a Lonely Heart was the big radio hit but the entire album is fire especially Hold On, Changes, It Can Happen and Leave It. Jon Anderson's voice sounds so good throughout 90125.Guys, please continue to be 'progressive' in your musical reaction pursuits. I love it.

  • @GGLee315
    @GGLee315 Год назад +17

    Guys, you need to listen to this 10 times before you decide what’s your favorite part and this and that and the other because it’s a lot of song. And all the parts will grow on you. Still turns my headlights on after 50 years!!

  • @markoliver630
    @markoliver630 Год назад +10

    5 virtuosos in 1 band. Amazing

  • @donnernoneya26
    @donnernoneya26 Год назад +6

    I sang along to the entire song! LOVE, LOVE, LOVE YES!!!

  • @glennawhiteman742
    @glennawhiteman742 Год назад +9

    Rush bassist Geddy lee played bass for Yes at their rock and roll hall of fame induction .He stood in for Yes bassist Chris Squire after his death.
    They played this song. Geddy looked to be having a great time.

  • @firebird7479
    @firebird7479 Год назад +7

    I live in New Jersey, where roundabouts, AKA traffic circles, are a way of life.

  • @gaznathemoon1128
    @gaznathemoon1128 Год назад +28

    Remember when Ryan said that part of "Spirit of Radio" was his get up and go music?..Roundabout was the song for me when I was 13 yrs old flying home on my bicycle from my friends house to mine from across town for supper on a semi-cool early summer night. Wind in my hair, not a care in the world, and this song pumping thru my veins.

    • @hklinker
      @hklinker Год назад +4

      I would blow dry my hair to this song every morning before school. Welcome to the late 70s 😉.

  • @johnnelson3869
    @johnnelson3869 Год назад +5

    The first note fade-up is actually a recording of a piano note. It's recorded on tape, then cut out and attached in reverse to the master recording tape (back-masking). No digital captures and manipulations in 1971. Just great musicians, engineers and producers.

  • @maryyoung2549
    @maryyoung2549 Год назад +14

    If you like this type of music, check out Emerson Lake and Palmer, one of the earliest prog rock bands. Trilogy is a great starting point.

  • @chrisblower8868
    @chrisblower8868 Год назад +6

    Imagine hearing this as a 15 year old in 1971....that was me.

    • @JamesBrady-rl7pz
      @JamesBrady-rl7pz Месяц назад +1

      I'm right there with you.

    • @nathanwahl9224
      @nathanwahl9224 Месяц назад +1

      Same. Second album I ever bought with my own money.

  • @pamnicklas5536
    @pamnicklas5536 Год назад +9

    I saw Yes twice in the 80's....both times they put on a stellar performance!

  • @danacasey8543
    @danacasey8543 Год назад +3

    I'm a grandma that rocked out to Yes! I've seen them 4 times in concert and each time they were awesome! My dad loved Yes too, and got Rick Wakeman's album "The Six Wives of Henry The 8th" for me for Christmas in 1975. I loved it, but he listened to it more than I did!

  • @mikeroche9986
    @mikeroche9986 Год назад +42

    I’m sure two out of three of you will know this song. So glad you’re finally getting to it! Another suggestion for the future is “Heart Of the Sunrise” from the same album. It’s amazing!

  • @ekmyaki
    @ekmyaki Год назад +4

    incredible bass line

  • @switchflow5405
    @switchflow5405 Год назад +3

    Yes "I've Seen All Good People" a must.... that is all.

  • @gpg9516
    @gpg9516 Год назад +6

    Their skill as musicians was unequalled.

    • @moonrich3492
      @moonrich3492 Год назад +1

      Would be true if Emerson, Lake & Palmer had never played music.

  • @stevensmith8454
    @stevensmith8454 Год назад +6

    Hi Guys ,All I'd add to what has already been said is that Jon Andersons voice absolutely soars ,there are very few vocals that could match his range . When you have some spare time give 'Soon' a spin & listen to the voice & a few other things.

  • @tommythompson9565
    @tommythompson9565 Год назад +17

    Came in mid-song. Get ready for an avalanche ...
    2 of y'all weren't blown away. I can almost guarantee that your affection for this song will grow upon multiple listens.

    • @tjtampa214
      @tjtampa214 Год назад +6

      Or else the affection is dead.
      This is a great song... if you can feel it. Butcha gotta feel.

    • @micheleparker3780
      @micheleparker3780 Год назад +3

      Exactly.

  • @rickandgen
    @rickandgen Год назад +9

    That THX sound was actually inspired by the closing of A Day In The Life by the Beatles

  • @paulwicht6294
    @paulwicht6294 Год назад +4

    The amazing bass is Chris Squire, the band leader.

  • @lindazee
    @lindazee Год назад +7

    YES are pioneers of the progressive rock style. Their musicianship is of the highest caliber. The mystical melodies and lyrics are grounded by a fierce rhythm section of the strongest bass and drums. The harmonies, time signatures, rhapsodic storytelling, and tight performances will forever embed them at the top of the music landscape as classic. Their era of "modern classical" music is what musicians and music lovers will continue to play and rediscover for many years to come. I seriously doubt that much of the music from this latest era will last at all.

  • @glyngasson8450
    @glyngasson8450 Год назад +3

    That fade in was produced by hitting a piano note and letting it die away and then reversing the tape.

  • @go234ko96ts5
    @go234ko96ts5 Год назад +24

    A great Yes song by a super group of the 70's and even the 80's. Their style changed somewhat in the 80's but they still sounded good. A favorite song of mine from the group during the 70's were " Your Move". Don't forget guys, a group that didn't get the recognition they deserved was Captain Beyond. Their album came out in 1972 and the songs to me that were good rock and roll were, " Thousand Days of Yesterdays, " Dancing Madly Backwards" and Raging River of Fear" and I Can't Feel Nothing". You won't be disappointed.

  • @Werewindle
    @Werewindle 8 месяцев назад +3

    It's great watching young people discover real music!

  • @shawnmurdock8059
    @shawnmurdock8059 Год назад +3

    The THX is a crescendo. the ramp up on the song is a piano chord played backwards. Yes is amazing

  • @barrycohen311
    @barrycohen311 Год назад +7

    That opening chord is a C major chord on piano played backwards. So that the fade out starts first, and the initial attack comes at the end.

  • @x0539p
    @x0539p 10 месяцев назад +3

    Lead singer is Jon Anderson and he has a song called “Friends Of Mr Cairo” and it’s a wonderful masterpiece leading you in various directions. You all would enjoy this immensely. Love your reactions.

  • @FreeMTrider
    @FreeMTrider Год назад +3

    Yes-Roundabout was way before my time when it was released in '71, so I had no idea how to like it or not. I first learned about Yes until they reformed in '83 with the release of the single Owner of a Lonely Heart. And also Asia. It was many years later until I was able to understand how badass Yes was. Yes can be found in a bunch of bands......their influence on progressive rock is everywhere.

  • @fantasyguru26
    @fantasyguru26 Год назад +8

    There are so many intricate elements to this song but the bass is what ties it all together for me.

  • @jenniferfoster1692
    @jenniferfoster1692 Год назад +8

    Owner of a Lonely Heart is another great one from them.

  • @ScottDeBerg
    @ScottDeBerg Год назад +5

    Yes is a very cool rabbit hole to go down. “Heart of the Sunrise” also from the album Fragile. Their masterpiece, however, is “Close to the Edge”, the song and the album. Great reaction - thanks for the return to Yes.

  • @atdeacon
    @atdeacon Год назад +3

    Its a masterclass of rock and roll

  • @anthonyblakely399
    @anthonyblakely399 Год назад +6

    Glad you guys like it! This is the first masterpiece and really intro to prog music....by the band YES. For your next reaction you must hear their second masterpiece, "Close To The Edge," which will make you forget about Roundabout!!! This song "Roundabout" and "Close To The Edge," were performed in the concert I went to last year in October and it was so AMAZING that it made you not want to hear the studio version!!!! It was just incredible that tears fell from eyes!!!! Yes are sooooooooooooooo Great in concert!!!!

  • @mariaportengen2959
    @mariaportengen2959 Год назад +11

    I already was in love with this record, when it came out in the early seventies. A real Masterpiece. Greetings from the Netherlands. 🎶🎶❤️

    • @toddwebb6216
      @toddwebb6216 Год назад +1

      You truly understand the GRANGER of YES...Greetings from America, Maria.

  • @Beamshipcaptain
    @Beamshipcaptain Год назад +3

    I danced to this song in Summer Camp in 1972 when I was 11. So wonderful.

  • @cdfdesantis699
    @cdfdesantis699 10 месяцев назад +3

    The fuzz bass is absolutely off the CHARTS in this masterpiece by this incredible band. Thanks for your reaction.

  • @joelliebler5690
    @joelliebler5690 Год назад +8

    This was the song that launched the popularity of Progressive rock genre.This is the Mt. Rushmore of this type of music.Chris Squire is considered one of the best bass players ever on Earth!

    • @jeffreylyons5785
      @jeffreylyons5785 Год назад +2

      Chris was the most unique bass and great backing vocalist

  • @annewoodard6803
    @annewoodard6803 Год назад +21

    MAKE SURE YOU LISTEN TO THE 2008 REMASTERED VERSION. THE RADIO VERSION IS… the radio version. 😁

  • @kirkstevens8499
    @kirkstevens8499 Год назад +2

    The intro fade in is a chord on the keyboard played backwards to get that effect. A popular 70’s trick..

  • @robinlowe2329
    @robinlowe2329 Год назад +16

    Rick Wakeman's "Journey to the Center of the Earth" and "The Six Wives of Henry 8th" are excellent albums.

  • @mowerdan8133
    @mowerdan8133 Год назад +18

    Epic tune. Believe or not, there was a shorter AM radio version of this tune heard from many a transistor radio back then! So yes, even my grandparents were hearing this in the early '70s

    • @micheleparker3780
      @micheleparker3780 Год назад +3

      Of course we were - we were just graduating from high school!!! (That would be me..😁)

  • @cindysimpson1046
    @cindysimpson1046 Год назад +2

    There was never, ever a weekend where we didn't play this song turned up to the max in my 1973 Mercury Cougar XR7 with all of us singing our lungs out! Such a classic! We were like the teenagers in "That 70's Show". Wild and free times! Best memories ever.

  • @direnova6284
    @direnova6284 Год назад +2

    There is so much to hear with Yes that of all my favourite bands they have remained the most fresh, after 50 years I still hear new things.

  • @dano4518
    @dano4518 Год назад +6

    The opening sound at the beginning of the song was a reverse guitar strum. Brilliant sound.

    • @BarnDoorProductions
      @BarnDoorProductions Год назад +5

      It's a reversed E minor chord on piano. The second one is a C major chord.

  • @rayeckert242
    @rayeckert242 Год назад +5

    This one lives in your soul. Gut-wrenchingly outstanding. Haven’t caught my breath since I first heard this one.

  • @sandrabanghart2000
    @sandrabanghart2000 Год назад +3

    One of my favorites from -Yes -. Another good one that was more popular in the day was "Owner of a Lonely Heart". Awesome!!!!!
    Here's a band to check for a reaction, if you haven't done it already is "Blackfoot". Fox Chase. A bit of Southern Rock like Lynard Skynyrd. And really good guitars.

  • @scottstewart5784
    @scottstewart5784 Год назад +3

    Jack Black handed a CD to the keyboarding student in "School of Rock." It was this record, and he directed him to study the keyboard playing on this song.

  • @lesblatnyak5947
    @lesblatnyak5947 Год назад +3

    Nice gentlemen. Been dancing to Roundabout for 52yrs

  • @thegorn68
    @thegorn68 Год назад +6

    Such a kickass song! Really shows off Chris Squire's bass playing wizardry and is the epitome of what 70's Prog Rock was all about.

  • @barriehull7076
    @barriehull7076 Год назад +4

    Did the British invent roundabouts?
    The era of modern roundabouts began in the United Kingdom in 1956 with the construction of the first "yield-at-entry" roundabouts. In 1966, a nationwide yield-at-entry rule launched the modern roundabout revolution. Australia and most other British-influenced countries soon built modern roundabouts.
    The Magic Roundabout in Swindon, England, is a ring junction constructed in 1972 consisting of five mini-roundabouts arranged in a circle.
    ...
    Magic Roundabout (Swindon)

  • @daveman_50
    @daveman_50 Год назад +2

    The bass tone is iconic. Chris Squire played an old Rickenbacker bass with a straight neck and low action, played with a pick, to get that rattly "clank" -- you'd never think that setup could be so funky, but it is!

  • @tubesterini
    @tubesterini 4 месяца назад +2

    What a PHENOMENAL MUSICAL MASTERPIECE! So glad you decided to play and react to it. And YES--it's on FIRE! 🔥 from first note to the last. THANKS GUYS!!!

  • @noteverton
    @noteverton Год назад +2

    The opening note is a single note on the piano played backwards.

  • @TheGreatGig73
    @TheGreatGig73 Год назад +11

    The Beatles of Prog Rock

  • @genestippell1833
    @genestippell1833 Год назад +2

    From that lineup there wasn't anyone better than Squire on bass with Bruford on drums. The precision was second to none. Plus both were very creative in the use of their instruments. As you listen to yes look for the tone changes Squire uses in different parts of the song. He used an array of foot pedals and his Rickenbacker bass was "stereo". 2 pickups that could be used independently and run through separate amps.

  • @natmoss139
    @natmoss139 5 месяцев назад +2

    Guys, check out Yes’s “Going for the One”! It has all the compositional craftsmanship you expect from Yes combined with hard charging straight-up rock and roll. It’s a song to start your day with and get the blood pumping.

  • @onsesejoo2605
    @onsesejoo2605 Год назад +4

    This and the closing track "Heart Of The Sunrise" are the backbone of this album.

  • @IllumeEltanin
    @IllumeEltanin Год назад +9

    Yay!
    Although I wish you had chosen to do Yes in chronological track order with Clap/Starship Trooper, the next tracks from The Yes Album, rather than skipping ahead to Fragile.
    But, more Yes on the channel is always a good thing.

  • @jaquestraw1
    @jaquestraw1 Год назад +5

    Some of the finest music ever created

  • @markrobertdevison1227
    @markrobertdevison1227 Год назад +2

    Jon Anderson, the man with the angelic voice is how he was referred to back in the day. Roundabout is a masterpiece. Nothing can be taken out of it or added, it's perfect as is.

  • @grelch
    @grelch Год назад +3

    Btw, don't let people tell you that Yes came before Rush. Technically both bands formed in 1968 although the classic line up of Rush that endured for the next few decades gelled in the early '70s. But officially, both bands started concurrently.

  • @dreamweaver8913
    @dreamweaver8913 Год назад +12

    Please check out Yes, "Starship Trooper"! It's one of their early ones and is amazing!

  • @jonathanlocke6404
    @jonathanlocke6404 Год назад +6

    If you focus on the bass in the last line leading out of the organ and guitar solos, you can really hear just how hard he is hitting those strings...He was an incredibly strong player...

  • @fastandfurious5755
    @fastandfurious5755 Год назад +4

    My father said 10 years ago, in the future there will be DJs who will remix everything well forgotten old.

  • @Someone-kg8qf
    @Someone-kg8qf 11 месяцев назад +3

    Found this album in my early teens. I love Yes.

  • @GaryColemanNC
    @GaryColemanNC Год назад +3

    There's my beautiful boys... Brilliant, too!

  • @nancymjohnson
    @nancymjohnson Год назад +7

    YES IS TOTALLY AWE-MAZING!! Been a fan since 70. I was 12. And they still amaze me with this music…and thru the decades. Chris Squire on bass. There was no one that could touch him. Bill Bruford on drums, they made an unstoppable rhythm section. I ❤️ them all. Listen daily!! Love you guys too! ☮️❤️

    • @joelliebler5690
      @joelliebler5690 Год назад +2

      Me too while listening to my brother’s albums and then finally purchasing Tormato in 1978. Finally seeing them live at MSG in 1979 with my other brother!Best concert to date!

    • @nancymjohnson
      @nancymjohnson Год назад +1

      The Tourmato tour in Dallas, Jon held my hand for a whole song. They had to quit rotating the stage. Almost lost my boyfriend that night. Would have been worth it! Lol

  • @reneelyons6836
    @reneelyons6836 Год назад +5

    YES and Genesis!!!! Musical Masters. We are sooooooo lucky.

    • @carlgibbons5777
      @carlgibbons5777 Год назад +3

      Rush probably more talented than both of those:)

    • @reneelyons6836
      @reneelyons6836 Год назад +2

      @@carlgibbons5777Watch the video of Geddy playing with Yes. Yes is clearly a musical influence on Rush. That's almost like saying , which came first the chicken or the egg? We know Yes came first.

    • @carlgibbons5777
      @carlgibbons5777 Год назад +2

      @@reneelyons6836 Yes. Peace! All three bands are legendary:)

  • @z-man2343
    @z-man2343 Год назад +4

    @15:10, when the drums (Bill Bruford), bass (Chris Squire), keys (Rick Wakeman) and guitar (Steve Howe) drop that insane groove, it may just be the best 1minute 30 seconds in all of recorded music...seriously. I defy anyone to find a more complex yet straight up rockin' jam...those four were absolutely killin' it.

  • @brucemarshall9521
    @brucemarshall9521 Год назад +2

    Old fire that's never burned out.

  • @davidhoward6254
    @davidhoward6254 Год назад +2

    THX has been happily replaced by Dolby Atmos which provides not only surround but elevation as well! But glad you picked this song, it's a really excellent example of the prog-rock scene of the 70s and 80s

  • @PK1971PK
    @PK1971PK Год назад +16

    That slow fade in at the beginning is a recording of a chord being struck played backwards. I think Rick Beato talks about it in his review of this song--I believe he said it was a technique used a good bit in the seventies.
    As someone else posted on here, this song being played on the radio was my introduction to Yes, and was a big part of me becoming a fan of prog rock. Got the Fragile album (on eight track) and played the hell out of it. I've been a Yes fan ever since, love most all of their music, but I never get tired of listening to this song--none of their stuff is better than this to me.
    Funny, I agree with Ty on the middle part of the song--overall not my favorite section. However , it may be my favorite performance of Bill Bruford on the drums--he is just wailing it.

  • @Jims_Camera_at_dawn
    @Jims_Camera_at_dawn Год назад +8

    Great song start to finish. First album and first CD I ever purchased. Cannot say this enough, don't let the 3 minute limit radio imposes limit your music interest.

  • @cynthiawhite9830
    @cynthiawhite9830 Год назад +6

    Very much looking forward to this!

  • @novacrowsnest597
    @novacrowsnest597 Год назад +3

    So many bands.. So much great music came from the 70s. Yes is a band that I've learned to appreciate much more later in life, with their complex mixes and progressive sounds.

  • @toddboyle1716
    @toddboyle1716 Год назад +2

    That THX sound effect came from the opening to a 1985 Asia song called "Countdown to Zero".

  • @yeshayahuhomberger2079
    @yeshayahuhomberger2079 Год назад +3

    Yes to Yes. Thx for the nice analysis and reaction. 💪👍

  • @Jax4umalta
    @Jax4umalta Год назад +2

    Just found you guys watched a few videos. The three of you are awesome together. I love this channel one of my new favorites. I was born in 66 so this music has a lot of memories for me. There’s a lot of great music out there. Can’t wait for you guys to explore and see your reactions.

  • @jamescox4231
    @jamescox4231 Год назад +2

    The “fade in” was a piano chord recorded then played backwards. Back in the day when they did the THX logo, we would yell “louder!”

  • @astroteech
    @astroteech Год назад +3

    I was first introduced to this as a sophomore in high school when it first came out. There is no progressive rock equal to YES, accept the "Moody Blues". "Twenty-four before my love you'll see I'll before there with you".

  • @LyndaHill
    @LyndaHill Год назад +2

    Totally exquisite. I saw them live three times in the 70's. Each time I went down the front and stood right in front of them. I was in heaven.

  • @davidschecter5247
    @davidschecter5247 Год назад +4

    I loved the immediate reaction: "Interesting." How about: "One of the greatest rock songs of all-time?"

  • @elfinmagic4022
    @elfinmagic4022 Год назад +4

    Rick Wakeman on keyboards!! This band was great!

  • @JuanKGM
    @JuanKGM Год назад +8

    That bass tone...

  • @mistymorning436
    @mistymorning436 Год назад +2

    Boldness with a capital B. Did you know it's a love song? Most unforgettable love song ever! ♥

  • @enderjed
    @enderjed Год назад +2

    That memorable intro note is a piano chord on tape played backward