Andre gets Yes, just take it all in like nature or beautiful artwork. Just get in the canoe and let it take you on a journey. 47 years I've been listening and it still moves my soul. Dominica is almost there, a few more listens.
This song gives me goosebumps at the very end when they are singing words that are not on the lyric sheet in the album. This ending is the best way to end the greatest concept album in all music history.
One of my favorite Album's of YES "Relayer", I'm telling you do yourself a favor put on the headphones 🎧 sit back, close your eyes and listen to the entire Album, It's excapism at it's best👌😀 Peace✌️ and Love ❤️ your 70 year old forever Young Hippie Gary😊 Great Reaction👍
Yes, you have to hear with an open mind to Yes and bands alike.This song sounds so peaceful and gentle especially at the beginning and the end. The guitar work, keyboards, vocals and the slow, slow rhythm.
Chris Squire's bass playing too .- moving here from gentle Bossa Nova-like marking of the rhythm to heavy outbursts, clouds of thunder...but without ever losing the precision of his sound. Though I would agree that if there is one member of the band that leps to the ear on thsi album it's Steve Howe - he as given a great deal of extra space because they began rehearsing and recording without having any keyboardist on board, and he rose to the occasion! He truly invented a whole new vocabulary for his guitar on this one album. :)
First listen with Yes songs can be very challenging - but when it clicks ,usually after about 4 or 5 listens,it’s something that’ll give you pleasure for the rest of your life
Fantastic reaction again both, you are so true, YES do create a soundscape that has not been heard, this is so interesting to the listener, also the musicianship is extraordinary.
I heard a recent interview with Rick Wakeman, who didn’t play on this album, but understands 1st hand how YES creates masterpieces, that they experimented so much (paraphrasing) that they would capture a “performance” which was so unique and spectacular that the other band members they would demand it go in the final cut. The final result after many trials and OCD studio editing has produced these undeniable masterpieces. Then they had to go back and relearn there performances to be able to recreate it live. Genius approach to creating eternal music in my opinion. Bless You. DW
One of the most BEAUTIFUL SONGS EVER! Throughout the song I still feel WAVES of pure blissful emotions RUSHING up through me! And by the end I'm in HEAVEN! The entire album takes you on a journey that on another level!
One of their most beautiful ballads, a masterpiece on every level. I love the entire Relayer album, and it's unique in many ways, even within the entire work of Yes as a band.
A lot of Yes music has the ebb and flow of a conversation with periods of calm and then excitement (and vice versa), plus interjections and ruminations from each of the participants. It doesn't always follow simple, repetitive rhythms and riffs like much modern computerised music, but it does have a shape and a direction that takes you on a journey. In this way it has more in common with symphonic, orchestral composition than straightforward pop or rock.
Your feeling of closing your eyes and just letting the track carry you wherever is such a perfect comment for this track -- exactly how it was meant to be listened to!! Also your comment on how this track is so deceptively simple even tho there is so much happening - like Steve Howe on guitar playing fast and furious as if it was a metal track and yet it flows so beautifully thru the track. (another Reactioner calls him Cowboy Steve - and in this track it really applies) Yes are masters of transitions, no one can do it like they did, and the sounds they use are astounding. This is such a beautiful and marvellous song! -- from a mind expanding album!!. I hope that you re-listen to the Yes tracks you've reacted to because as you said, each subsequent listen you pick out something new - their music keeps on giving and giving... Thanks for this fine reaction.
Hey Scot! TBO is literally one of my favorite Yes songs but would never expect a reaction out of it, I had no clue what was happening until I heard this at least six times .🤣..then Howe's little solo in the middle grabbed me forever.🤙🗽
Harmony is the key as YES were founded to be a vocal group. Chris Squire the bass player had been in a Church Choir under Barry Rose who would become the choir master of Saint Paul's Cathedral in London. This was my first Yes record back in 1974 aged 14 and this was the calm after the storm of Sound Chaser which will put hairs on your chest
YES = a transcendental experience, a journey into the 5th dimension. When musical complexity touches the sublime. That in the same band, each musician is an exceptional virtuoso of his instrument, that is an extraordinary case. And what about the ethereal voice and the almost mystical (illuminated) poetry of Jon Anderson? Result, YES = Unique, never equaled!
Yes has always been to me, classical music, written and performed on the instruments of the time. As a young musician, learning classical music from inside the orchestra, I loved the complexities of their music. Those beautiful vocals are Jon and bassist Chris Squire. Their harmonies were so tight. You can hear Chris when he sings different lines then Jon. I know Dominika, who loves melodies, noticed that the melody at the end, was the melody formed at the start of the song. Thanks for your reaction to this video. I love listening to your interpretations. ☮💛🎶
I have been a Yes fan 50 years or so. I have thousands of records and have had the pleasure to see 100 of concerts. However this is the album I’ll take to my grave. One of the best albums ever. ❤❤❤❤❤+❤ for Eddie Offord
I always thought this was the result of electronic "magic" but having experienced them live in the 1980's and later, this is actually live music. It was an AMAZING experience almost 50 years ago!
I think you'd both enjoy a Swedish band, 'The Flower Kings'. Melodic, uplifting progressive rock. Stardust We Are would be a good introduction to them.
I love you two so much. I agree, some of Yes's music takes more time to work its way into your bloodstream, but when it finally does, just try to live without it. For me, it's like the ocean. I grew up in San Diego, and if I don't make regular trips to its rocky shores from this Utah desert, I get jittery. In my youth, most of Yes's music perplexed me, but over the years I've come to realize that the boys in that band are not just first rate musicians, they are first of all, storytellers, and they use music just as much - if not more - than words to tell their stories. One of my all-time favorite albums is their two-disc epic, Tales From Topographic Oceans. There are only four pieces of music, one for each side of the records. The longest piece comes at around 22 minutes, and the shortest at 18. It's nearly an hour and a half of pure bliss for me. (Your mileage may vary.) I am enjoying so very much joining you on your voyages of discovery. I think it would be a total blast to hang out with you in the den of my parents' house, and play all of my favorite songs by all of my favorite artists for you. Just thinking about it is giving me a great big grin. Which I've really needed today. Again, you are a delight to spend time with. Thank you for "being there" for us. Carry on!
Thank you so much for your comment. Your words put a massive smile on both of our faces. It's truly amazing how music can connect us from different parts of the world. Much love and all the best 💚
Yes, I've known this one (and the entire album) since my early teenage years and didn't think of "To Be Over" as being about death and passing, but the lyrics of the final verse can certainly be read as metaphor for the soul of a loved one going to heaven, or some other new life: The video featured here, by the way, beautifully illustrates this in the final scenes, with the woman kneeling at a grave in an autumnal landscape, and then it segues over into a new picture of the same landscape: it is now spring and the soul rises up from the grave, walking away in peace. Also, this song is one of their finest recordings ever, a true masterpiece.
I'm interested how different today's reactions are to back in the day when these songs were all new like nothing before. I say this because back then any problem digesting this kind of music. I would say we were even blase about it. Just goes to show how musical perceptions and expectations have changed over the years. Personally, I think digital control and editing where anything can be made to sound ok has had it's adverse impact in what people today consider music (largely fake), and worst of all, shows that only seek to find the the next visually appealing money-spinning act. That said, glad you appreciate Yes's music, 50+ years old.
Great track and Relayer has to be up there with there best albums Steve Howe is such an underrated guitarist for me he's up there with the very best along with Chris squire best Bassist and of course Jon Andersons unique voice Just a fantastic Band of musicians right through Love your reactions great choice of song 🎵
This is the closing track to their masterpiece, "Relayer." Only three tracks (including the epic "Gates of Delirium"), but all three are absolutely fantastic, and yet very different from each other. I get what you're saying, though, that they can be somewhat challenging for some listeners. Very rewarding if you stick with them, though.
I love Gates of Delirium but I am not sure Dominika is quite ready for it yet. I think Andrei could handle it but it may take him a few days to come back down to earth!
Most Yes music is best appreciated and understood after you listen to it a bunch of times. They usually play around a lot with contrasts throughout their songs, and that makes each section, especcially the build up and finish towards the end, so powerful and emotional. The first half of this song in isolation is not my favorite sound, but it works great to build up the song to the amazing 2nd half, especcially the last 3 minutes or so.
While still rather complex, this composition is much more palatable then most of Yes's compositions. Now, the transition after the opening part of the singing is very unique, and not really abrupt as you mentioned, and the guitar solo simply cannot be ignored
Zup Zup makes perfect sense 😂😂, seriously thought 'Relayer' is a masterpiece. Don't think Dominika is ready for 'Gates of Delirium' yet. All their music flows seamlessly to me a long time fan, incredibly rewarding!
I gotta tell you, as a hard core YES fan since 1972, I readily admit that the first time I heard most of YES' masterpieces, I came away not really understanding what I had just heard. I could remember parts that I really liked, enough for me to want to hear it again. And when I heard it again, I'd hear them again with a fuller appreciation, but also a few other things that I had missed the first time that were really great. Well actually, that happened a lot with YES' more complex creations. If I had an opportunity to focus on the song, I'd continue to notice instruments I hadn't noticed before when focusing on other instruments That's probably what I liked the most about YES music: it stayed 'fresher' longer, because of the complexity of composition. Usually with most popular music, you can remember the primary melody & maybe the repeated rhythm & the singer's contribution. But with YES, there's always "a lot going on." When the lead guitar & the bass are playing different melodies at the same time, for example, the first time you hear it you'll only notice one of them, but with repeated listenings you notice the other as well, and then both different melodies somehow complimenting each other in the overall output and that's the trigger for many YES eargasms I think you should stay with the simpler YES songs for a while. I'm going to recommend for you the first YES song on the first YES album: *Beyond & Before.* It's got harder & funkier sound, dominated by the bass & their trademark vocal harmonies, but it's simple enough in the traditional pop song format of a repeated primary melody. I think you'll really like it. A harder rocking sound like Led Zeppelin...with vocal harmonies
You have to listen to these complex songs many times and they grow on you. After a while you're like wow this song is fantastic. Even their lesser songs like this one. I never get tired of listening to them because it's complex and you get more out of it when you listen again and again. By the way YES music doesn't usually get blocked. So keep their songs coming. I suggest you do "Awaken" next. It takes you on an uplifting spiritual journey. Here's a great live version: ruclips.net/video/nDXccU0xgNo/видео.html Or you can do the studio version. It's amazing how close to the studio version the live version is of this song. Not easy to play it.
Sure, it is a matter of personel taste, but some music takes time to grow on you. Hearing it more often you will feel it, feel how it descends into you, as it were. I suppose this is for you maybe the case. Thank you for your response!
This track is like the afterglow song after the mayhem of Gates Of Delerium and Soundchaser and it's a beautiful way to end the album. Relayer is a challenging but exhilarating listen.
You, sir, have explained yourself perfectly, with your body language, facial expression, and use of the English language. You understand the language that is the music of Yes, it is obvious to see. We are kindred spirits in that, I think.
I love your reactions to Yes, but when you are listening to these songs for the first time, please don't use videos with visuals as it's distracting watching you being distracted by them.
A bit of a challenge on first listen since it has many changes. The song needs to listened to several times with no other sensory input in order to get inside it. Your initial reaction is normal given the depth of such a classic yes song where the intro introduces several themes that then recur in the rest of the song.
Continue questioning Dominique, you have it in a nutshell in a world sometimes divided by division and hate humanity has much more in common than what divides us Music, Art, Literature, Film and Theater transgresses across all boundary's whether it be political, culture, or religion . “The man that hath no music in himself, Nor is not moved with concord of sweet sounds, Is fit for treasons, stratagems, and spoils; The motions of his spirit are dull as night, And his affections dark as Erebus. Let no such man be trusted. Mark the music.” "Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice"
Andre gets Yes, just take it all in like nature or beautiful artwork. Just get in the canoe and let it take you on a journey. 47 years I've been listening and it still moves my soul. Dominica is almost there, a few more listens.
One of my favorite deep cuts from the Yes collection. The test of their enduring greatness is the ability to still create goosebumps 50 years later!
This song gives me goosebumps at the very end when they are singing words that are not on the lyric sheet in the album. This ending is the best way to end the greatest concept album in all music history.
One of my favorite Album's of YES "Relayer", I'm telling you do yourself a favor put on the headphones 🎧 sit back, close your eyes and listen to the entire Album, It's excapism at it's best👌😀 Peace✌️ and Love ❤️ your 70 year old forever Young Hippie Gary😊 Great Reaction👍
Yes, you have to hear with an open mind to Yes and bands alike.This song sounds so peaceful and gentle especially at the beginning and the end. The guitar work, keyboards, vocals and the slow, slow rhythm.
Steve ..another level...his guitar is great
Chris Squire's bass playing too .- moving here from gentle Bossa Nova-like marking of the rhythm to heavy outbursts, clouds of thunder...but without ever losing the precision of his sound. Though I would agree that if there is one member of the band that leps to the ear on thsi album it's Steve Howe - he as given a great deal of extra space because they began rehearsing and recording without having any keyboardist on board, and he rose to the occasion! He truly invented a whole new vocabulary for his guitar on this one album. :)
First listen with Yes songs can be very challenging - but when it clicks ,usually after about 4 or 5 listens,it’s something that’ll give you pleasure for the rest of your life
Yeah except for All Good People and Roundabout, Owner Of A Lonely Heart most other Yes needs repeated listens to 'get' the song.
Fantastic reaction again both, you are so true, YES do create a soundscape that has not been heard, this is so interesting to the listener, also the musicianship is extraordinary.
Yes l do love YES ❤
Such a beautiful song. Jon's voice pure. Ty so much.
Just love this song, really beautiful. Relayer remains my favorite Yes album.
I heard a recent interview with Rick Wakeman, who didn’t play on this album, but understands 1st hand how YES creates masterpieces, that they experimented so much (paraphrasing) that they would capture a “performance” which was so unique and spectacular that the other band members they would demand it go in the final cut. The final result after many trials and OCD studio editing has produced these undeniable masterpieces. Then they had to go back and relearn there performances to be able to recreate it live. Genius approach to creating eternal music in my opinion. Bless You. DW
One of the most BEAUTIFUL SONGS EVER! Throughout the song I still feel WAVES of pure blissful emotions RUSHING up through me! And by the end I'm in HEAVEN! The entire album takes you on a journey that on another level!
Best...band...ever. 😇
One of their most beautiful ballads, a masterpiece on every level. I love the entire Relayer album, and it's unique in many ways, even within the entire work of Yes as a band.
the Outro song on the Masterpiece , Relayer , album. this is a masterpiece song release in 1971, written by Jon Anderson. Very Beautiful song!!!!
It’s all done with heart and love with you guys. Wonderful!! ❤️❤️
A lot of Yes music has the ebb and flow of a conversation with periods of calm and then excitement (and vice versa), plus interjections and ruminations from each of the participants. It doesn't always follow simple, repetitive rhythms and riffs like much modern computerised music, but it does have a shape and a direction that takes you on a journey. In this way it has more in common with symphonic, orchestral composition than straightforward pop or rock.
Your feeling of closing your eyes and just letting the track carry you wherever is such a perfect comment for this track -- exactly how it was meant to be listened to!! Also your comment on how this track is so deceptively simple even tho there is so much happening - like Steve Howe on guitar playing fast and furious as if it was a metal track and yet it flows so beautifully thru the track. (another Reactioner calls him Cowboy Steve - and in this track it really applies) Yes are masters of transitions, no one can do it like they did, and the sounds they use are astounding. This is such a beautiful and marvellous song! -- from a mind expanding album!!. I hope that you re-listen to the Yes tracks you've reacted to because as you said, each subsequent listen you pick out something new - their music keeps on giving and giving... Thanks for this fine reaction.
Best band ever!!!
Hey Scot!
TBO is literally one of my favorite Yes songs but would never expect a reaction out of it, I had no clue what was happening until I heard this at least six times .🤣..then Howe's little solo in the middle grabbed me forever.🤙🗽
A great song.
Yes I feel is on a different level and before their time. It’s pure genius. Not for everyone but if you understand it…its great and refreshing music
Harmony is the key as YES were founded to be a vocal group. Chris Squire the bass player had been in a Church Choir under Barry Rose who would become the choir master of Saint Paul's Cathedral in London. This was my first Yes record back in 1974 aged 14 and this was the calm after the storm of Sound Chaser which will put hairs on your chest
YES = a transcendental experience, a journey into the 5th dimension. When musical complexity touches the sublime. That in the same band, each musician is an exceptional virtuoso of his instrument, that is an extraordinary case. And what about the ethereal voice and the almost mystical (illuminated) poetry of Jon Anderson? Result, YES = Unique, never equaled!
YES the greatest show on earth.
✨️🎶👑🎶✨️
Yes has always been to me, classical music, written and performed on the instruments of the time. As a young musician, learning classical music from inside the orchestra, I loved the complexities of their music. Those beautiful vocals are Jon and bassist Chris Squire. Their harmonies were so tight. You can hear Chris when he sings different lines then Jon. I know Dominika, who loves melodies, noticed that the melody at the end, was the melody formed at the start of the song. Thanks for your reaction to this video. I love listening to your interpretations. ☮💛🎶
Beautiful. Thank you for sharing 😊💚
I have been a Yes fan 50 years or so. I have thousands of records and have had the pleasure to see 100 of concerts. However this is the album I’ll take to my grave. One of the best albums ever.
❤❤❤❤❤+❤ for Eddie Offord
I always thought this was the result of electronic "magic" but having experienced them live in the 1980's and later, this is actually live music. It was an AMAZING experience almost 50 years ago!
Once YES music grabs you and pulls you in, it never lets go!🤩
This song is dedicated to me and the passing of my wife ten years ago from my brother. RIP Gail❤
Much love to you 💚
I think you'd both enjoy a Swedish band, 'The Flower Kings'. Melodic, uplifting progressive rock. Stardust We Are would be a good introduction to them.
One of my favorite Yes songs - better with more listens - a Steve Howe tour de force
I love you two so much.
I agree, some of Yes's music takes more time to work its way into your bloodstream, but when it finally does, just try to live without it. For me, it's like the ocean. I grew up in San Diego, and if I don't make regular trips to its rocky shores from this Utah desert, I get jittery.
In my youth, most of Yes's music perplexed me, but over the years I've come to realize that the boys in that band are not just first rate musicians, they are first of all, storytellers, and they use music just as much - if not more - than words to tell their stories. One of my all-time favorite albums is their two-disc epic, Tales From Topographic Oceans. There are only four pieces of music, one for each side of the records. The longest piece comes at around 22 minutes, and the shortest at 18. It's nearly an hour and a half of pure bliss for me. (Your mileage may vary.)
I am enjoying so very much joining you on your voyages of discovery. I think it would be a total blast to hang out with you in the den of my parents' house, and play all of my favorite songs by all of my favorite artists for you. Just thinking about it is giving me a great big grin. Which I've really needed today.
Again, you are a delight to spend time with. Thank you for "being there" for us.
Carry on!
Thank you so much for your comment. Your words put a massive smile on both of our faces. It's truly amazing how music can connect us from different parts of the world. Much love and all the best 💚
YES! 😊
this song is therapeutic for grief
Yes, I've known this one (and the entire album) since my early teenage years and didn't think of "To Be Over" as being about death and passing, but the lyrics of the final verse can certainly be read as metaphor for the soul of a loved one going to heaven, or some other new life: The video featured here, by the way, beautifully illustrates this in the final scenes, with the woman kneeling at a grave in an autumnal landscape, and then it segues over into a new picture of the same landscape: it is now spring and the soul rises up from the grave, walking away in peace.
Also, this song is one of their finest recordings ever, a true masterpiece.
I'm interested how different today's reactions are to back in the day when these songs were all new like nothing before. I say this because back then any problem digesting this kind of music. I would say we were even blase about it. Just goes to show how musical perceptions and expectations have changed over the years. Personally, I think digital control and editing where anything can be made to sound ok has had it's adverse impact in what people today consider music (largely fake), and worst of all, shows that only seek to find the the next visually appealing money-spinning act. That said, glad you appreciate Yes's music, 50+ years old.
As the song builds almost makes you feel like you’re falling into a new dimension. JMPO 😉
Great track and Relayer has to be up there with there best albums
Steve Howe is such an underrated guitarist for me he's up there with the very best along with Chris squire best Bassist and of course Jon Andersons unique voice
Just a fantastic Band of musicians right through
Love your reactions great choice of song 🎵
This is the closing track to their masterpiece, "Relayer." Only three tracks (including the epic "Gates of Delirium"), but all three are absolutely fantastic, and yet very different from each other. I get what you're saying, though, that they can be somewhat challenging for some listeners. Very rewarding if you stick with them, though.
I love Gates of Delirium but I am not sure Dominika is quite ready for it yet. I think Andrei could handle it but it may take him a few days to come back down to earth!
to be over it's about death and passing to the next level
We would put on our headphones turn off the lights sit back and be bathed in the experience of YES
Most Yes music is best appreciated and understood after you listen to it a bunch of times. They usually play around a lot with contrasts throughout their songs, and that makes each section, especcially the build up and finish towards the end, so powerful and emotional. The first half of this song in isolation is not my favorite sound, but it works great to build up the song to the amazing 2nd half, especcially the last 3 minutes or so.
Thank you 😊
@@MerchantOfAlbaSpaghetti is right you listen to their music several time's, you'll find yourself listening again to discover more😊 Peace ✌️ Gary 😊
While still rather complex, this composition is much more palatable then most of Yes's compositions. Now, the transition after the opening part of the singing is very unique, and not really abrupt as you mentioned, and the guitar solo simply cannot be ignored
Zup Zup makes perfect sense 😂😂, seriously thought 'Relayer' is a masterpiece. Don't think Dominika is ready for 'Gates of Delirium' yet. All their music flows seamlessly to me a long time fan, incredibly rewarding!
Andre and Dominica….it’s Yes. It’s thought-provoking brilliance.
Beatiful
I gotta tell you, as a hard core YES fan since 1972, I readily admit that the first time I heard most of YES' masterpieces, I came away not really understanding what I had just heard. I could remember parts that I really liked, enough for me to want to hear it again. And when I heard it again, I'd hear them again with a fuller appreciation, but also a few other things that I had missed the first time that were really great. Well actually, that happened a lot with YES' more complex creations. If I had an opportunity to focus on the song, I'd continue to notice instruments I hadn't noticed before when focusing on other instruments
That's probably what I liked the most about YES music: it stayed 'fresher' longer, because of the complexity of composition. Usually with most popular music, you can remember the primary melody & maybe the repeated rhythm & the singer's contribution. But with YES, there's always "a lot going on." When the lead guitar & the bass are playing different melodies at the same time, for example, the first time you hear it you'll only notice one of them, but with repeated listenings you notice the other as well, and then both different melodies somehow complimenting each other in the overall output and that's the trigger for many YES eargasms
I think you should stay with the simpler YES songs for a while. I'm going to recommend for you the first YES song on the first YES album: *Beyond & Before.* It's got harder & funkier sound, dominated by the bass & their trademark vocal harmonies, but it's simple enough in the traditional pop song format of a repeated primary melody. I think you'll really like it. A harder rocking sound like Led Zeppelin...with vocal harmonies
You have to listen to these complex songs many times and they grow on you. After a while you're like wow this song is fantastic. Even their lesser songs like this one. I never get tired of listening to them because it's complex and you get more out of it when you listen again and again. By the way YES music doesn't usually get blocked. So keep their songs coming. I suggest you do "Awaken" next. It takes you on an uplifting spiritual journey. Here's a great live version: ruclips.net/video/nDXccU0xgNo/видео.html
Or you can do the studio version. It's amazing how close to the studio version the live version is of this song. Not easy to play it.
Sure, it is a matter of personel taste, but some music takes time to grow on you. Hearing it more often you will feel it, feel how it descends into you, as it were. I suppose this is for you maybe the case. Thank you for your response!
This track is like the afterglow song after the mayhem of Gates Of Delerium and Soundchaser and it's a beautiful way to end the album. Relayer is a challenging but exhilarating listen.
You, sir, have explained yourself perfectly, with your body language, facial expression, and use of the English language. You understand the language that is the music of Yes, it is obvious to see. We are kindred spirits in that, I think.
Great song ! If you haven't heard roundabout, it's a must!trust me 😂❤😊😊 love your reactions, thanks 😊
Thank you...we did react to Roundabout already. Please search in our videos 😊
@@MerchantOfAlba I will !thanks !☺️
800 khz to 1.000 khz thats God Cosmic frecuency Yes use this frecuency in their music and developed true meditation Jon Anderson is a Buda student
Stanleymerritt. YES.!!!!!!!!!
I love your reactions to Yes, but when you are listening to these songs for the first time, please don't use videos with visuals as it's distracting watching you being distracted by them.
Patrick Moraz on keyboards
A bit of a challenge on first listen since it has many changes. The song needs to listened to several times with no other sensory input in order to get inside it.
Your initial reaction is normal given the depth of such a classic yes song where the intro introduces several themes that then recur in the rest of the song.
Moraz had much better Minimoog sounds than Wakeman.
No !
Can't agree with you there. Wakeman's moog cuts through concrete.
Patrick's contribution to this album can't be underestimated.
@@adam872 totally agree. I couldn't imagine Rick fitting into this jazz fusion style. I just disagree that Patrick's moog is better than Rick's
🎉🎵🎶🔥🙏💪🐝🍀🇬🇧
Another one thats, Not My Cup of Tea!
So have some coffee😅
Strange choice of a video title lol.
Continue questioning Dominique, you have it in a nutshell in a world sometimes divided by division and hate humanity has much more in common than what divides us Music, Art, Literature, Film and Theater transgresses across all boundary's whether it be political, culture, or religion .
“The man that hath no music in himself, Nor is not moved with concord of sweet sounds, Is fit for treasons, stratagems, and spoils; The motions of his spirit are dull as night, And his affections dark as Erebus. Let no such man be trusted. Mark the music.”
"Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice"
i don't like it so mutch
You seem to be in the minority category 😅😅