If I like a song, there is nothing more fascinating - and pleasing - than hearing the deconstruction of it, and being able to identify the various components. This video is stunning.
The drop into 3/4 in the middle gives me the goosebumps and the weird jazz section makes me smile. And the ending - what an ending. What a record! Genius.
@@AL-PAKA Personal taste will always have huge variations :). In it's genre ( Jazzy/ funky / atmospheric) it's definately a stand out production. And it was way ahead of it's time.
@@AL-PAKA I don't know how old you are, or if you are a musician (I've been a musician for 40 years). This was released in 1985. Name some other act that did something slightly comparable at that time?
Trevor says “now it’s 2018, it’s not an innovative record anymore” truth be told, it’s just as fresh and inspiring as the day I first listened. To be able to make a record like that in the 80’s was cutting edge. No one makes music like that anymore. Today’s music scene is simply sad.
@@sw6188 Do you know of and follow anyone whom you feel might carry that torch so far? I feel like it’s probably out there, but they get drowned out by the ubiquity of new works nowadays
@@bg357wg Sadly I don't. I think there has been the odd song produced which is reminiscent of the 80s, but as you say they get drowned out by the dross of modern offerings.
@@bg357wg I can think of modern bands who carry the 80s in their heart, so to speak. But *produced* like the 80s? I'm not so sure, and sadly I don't have the expertise to really pin it down.
Moments in love has got to be one of the greatest and also most underrated songs to come out of the 80s . I have had that track in constant rotation for years whenever I'm demoing or tuning audio systems.
I love Trevor - he's been in my musical life these past 40 years. He's so straight forward and honest - and of course he's incredibly knowledgeable and gifted.
Cooool I sat in for my older brothers band when I was in high school, (just for a rehearsal). I was “the kid“ and very nervous, so I quietly tuned my drum set, by tapping my finger. We started jamming and then at one point one of the guys stopped and said “hey, hit those drones for a second”. It turns out I had subconsciously tuned them to EADGBE. Craaaaazy !!
In my humble opinion, this is the greatest feat in audio engineering and production in the 80s. And possibly the best song made in the 80s all together.
This song also had one of the worst videos of the ‘80s-a packed field. Still, it’s great fun to play this song, and it allows for infinite improvisation.
"Owner of a Lonely Heart" is a great GREAT song and production, but "Slave to the Rhythm" is objectively the peak of 1980s bombast. £800,000, two studios, dual sync'd 24-track machines,, endless remixes, mountains of cocaine-fueled reinvention adding more and more parts. People are still making remixes and reminiscing about the project. I'd love to hear Trevor Horn talk about many of his other production masterpieces.
We're a young band and when our dad played the original for us, it floored us. The musicianship, the vocals, the production... AND the snare. Outstanding!
Nowadays there's really no reason not to have at least some dynamic range in your music, since every streaming platform (which are what matters now) and even RUclips will normalize the volume.
well actually! compression is used so often because of the different situations in which people will find themselves listening to music in nowadays. often through some little headphones with the sound of the world around them, or in their noisy but affordable car, or on their cheap laptop or computer speakers that are not at all specialized for music. the majority of us listen to music now in subpar situations on subpar systems and its for this reason that dynamic range has been lost. music has to compete with the listeners situation, and squashing the range a little is how they do it. so its not like they do it just cause they like to(although that is applicable too), its because it is necessary!
That Trevor Rabin arpeggio sequence during the Verses is absolutely unforgettable! And then there's the Bridge part with Chris Squire's descending pattern! Awesome! 90125 marked a brilliant return for Yes. Kudos to Sound on Sound for posting this!
@@XHuntinatorX Agreed! It felt like a Masterpiece as soon as I slipped it out of the wrapping and tossed it onto the turntable and the sound came out of the speakers! It Can Happen is an All Time Favorite. Especially where Rabin and Squire's voices blend in near the end with Anderson's! Perfection!
I just hate when it’s old Yes fans vs new Yes tracks. My point: I would listen to nearly all Yes and love it! This track is a gem - had YES not recorded it, I’m certain the OG Yes fans could have appreciated it. Liking this track takes nothing away from Fragile, Starship Trooper, etc… Musicians love it all because Yes is killing.
I always loved that snare sound. It was perfect for that track. Everything you did on that track was PERFECT! Masterful production. Thank you for the years of quality recordings to listen to. LOVE GREAT AUDIO.
What a treat to come across this on May 3, 2023 !! I really liked the original "tight" snare drum - perfect! Thank you for this - Cheers from Seattle 🍻 Alex
"people hated the snare sound". What?! No way, best sounding snare sound I heard during that era. I nearly crapped my pants in awe when I first heard the song. Great song that never gets old.
Classic Material..... Always loved this track... Man this dude is a legend... Moments in love, Video Killed the radio star, Slave to the rhythm... Just a few of the classic records he produced I was raised on.... Legend 👑 💯
Love Trevor. The stuff he did on Frankie goes to Hollywood, esp. on the 12" mixes, are huge-sounding groundbreaking stuff. And it still sounds great today, (with a little bump up in the low end )
Trevor Horn, truly one of the most brilliant producers not only in the 80s but he’s a great bass player and he plays horn as well no pun, brilliant guy, you put Trevor Horn and Trevor Rabin in a studio together - hits are going to come out of it.
Trevor is such a genius. These guys are from a different era. The way they hear music and produced it will die with them. These videos are a must to teach the young generation.
That’s not how it works; the art or the craft of it. It learns and grows. Producers, musicians, instrument makers, everyone. We’re here because we were there. And if you prefer there, it’s still there. People building analog synths, coding gated reverbs, making YT vids to explain those techniques and genres.
Yes segment starts at 7:45. people didn't like that snare?! its absolute perfection ... Jon Anderson's legendary voice was, and is to this day, a marvel.
The breakdown of the 80s tracks gave me a whole new appreciation for this song, especially the nerdy tech stuff like balancing a high pitched snare with Chris's sub octave bass... brilliant. However, I think the orchestral version was a missed opportunity. The power of an 85 piece orchestra lies in the ability to weave & mesh dozens of different parts. But here we have everyone hitting the same note. That's how soundtracks to cheesy made-for-tv movies are done. The original "Owner" was a minimalistic song, produced brilliantly, and that was its power. In the new version, the minimalism is cranked up to 11 which defeats the purpose (sort of like Spinal Tap mocked in "Big Bottom" with 3 basses playing the same part). Trev, I love what you're doing, but if you had an 85 piece orchestra at your disposal I would've LOVED to hear something more intricate like "Changes" or even going back to the Drama album, "Does It Really Happen" where you could've really made those orchestra musicians earn their pay!
To be fair, high pitched snares weren't common in the early 80s. It was all fat bottom, deep snares left over from the 70s (thank you Mr.Bonham). Stewert Copeland taught the world to rethink that, as well as what a hihat is capable of. 🤘
@@DaveMcleanJr I would add sampling and triggering to that list. I was just a kid but I remember the controversy riled up by each one. Was sampling stealing? Are drummers going extinct? Trigger tech letting you mix acoustic and premade sounds and sequencers and was that 'selling out' or innovative? Took a couple decades to sort it out, and when the general 'Is a machine like AI going to replace me' irl stress arose this decade, I just smiled to myself. We'll be fine.
Wow!! I was always intrigued by this track because it was waaaay ahead of it's time with the sounds and samples.I was hoping that they made more songs like this! The other version of this song is SICK!! Trevor Horn is a true musical genius!
I can remember sitting in a club back in the 80’s and a guy walked in with a lady , sat down, sat quietly seemed to be engrossed in listening to the music, someone in the know said that’s Trevor horn, I said who ? … if it was him, my apologies, what a Legend 👌🏻😎
Legendary yes, but marvel, why do you say that? Because he sang such high notes? Have you heard him speak? His voice is naturally VERY high, he speaks at around a D4. Conversely, have you ever heard him sing low notes? I myself, can't recall. That is to say, his range is quite limited. I love his voice and am a Yes fan, but I would not say anything he is doing is superhuman. Geoff Tate, however, in his prime was a marvel. This guy spoke in the second octave(F2), almost 2 full octaves lower than Jon Anderson and could hit the notes Anderson hits plus go even higher, like significantly!! So he sang all those notes Anderson could hit plus higher AND a rich low range. Check out ¨Take Hold of the Flame, live in Tokyo´´ by Queensryche to hear what I mean :) Even Micheal Jackson, who seemed to have a high speaking voice, similar to Anderson had a significantly wider range. Remember, I am not saying he doesn`t have a killer voice, but not a marvel by a long shot.
@@tarekwayne9193 A "Marvel" is, for the one who speaks of it, to behold. It is of their feeling and response to what is ( or in this case, whom ) is creating that "Marvel" for them. You cannot tell them how they should feel, it is for them alone to experience.
@@tarekwayne9193dude, he said voice, not singing voice. thats part of it, but how many singers out there you hear sound like jon anderson. there's a reason every instrumentalist from kitaro to vangelis to mike oldfield wanted to work with him. thats a marvel, and a killer songwriter to, and queensryche sucks.
@@mikearchibald744 Very good points, you are absolutely right. He said "voice". Queensryche sucks, however, is a totally unproveable opinion. I will concede that I'm not a huge fan of their latest incarnations. In their prime, another story altogether.
Together with Scritti Politti's "Cupid & Psyche" and Rush's "Power Windows", this album is my favorite production from the 1980's. Stellar album, 90125.
Frankie and Grace Jones were not my thing back in the 80's, but listening to them more attentively 35 years on, the production on Pleasure Dome and Slave is epic.
Yeah, he wasn’t a fan of the Synclavier. That might be more to do with Lipson experimenting. TH was so in awe of the CMI he made it the sound of the Eighties.
I still consider the long album version of Welcome To The Pleasuredome to be an early taste of what later would evolve into techno. The middle part with its 4 on the floor beat, the offbeat hihats, and that room filling bass. Sonically it was light years ahead of its time and even today it's as hifi as it can get.
You say it Trevor NO MELODYNE, you got to have talent, that's the main reason those records are so good, those were the days were not only we got great musicians we got excellent producers like you, hat's off! Long live the 80'S!
Agreed. And I am not a fan of high tuned snare drums, quite the opposite actually....but that snare just drives it. Crazy they cut it with that gate tho. I’ve done crazy things in sessions (like a famous producer that wanted to run the singer through a DJ mixer prior to tape so they could “scratch” the singer to tape. Of course it didn’t work out. But gating a snare to tape is pretty aggressive. Nice commiment there.
Such an AMAZING guy . . . Trevor Horn❣️ Fascinating to watch & listen to how he originally imagined . . . & remained 80's music with orchestra . . . just a GREAT new rewind & way to enjoy original electronic to now orchestra use❣️🐾🐞😻 Thank you❣️ I agree that Trevor Horn is one of the most imaginative & GREATEST music producers!
Trevor is one of THE major influencers on 1980’s pop synth music which has been so readily mimicked in last 40 years, but rarely bettered… so sad he lost his wife.
"Owner Of A Lonely Heart" is truly a masterpiece of The 1980s and all time. I So would like Trevor Horn and Siouxsie Sioux to work together...even though he said to S&TB, in the late-'80s, "What could I possibly do with your sound, that you haven't already done?" I still think those 2 in a studio together could certainly create some kind of new, original alchemy..esp. w/ regard to lyrical/poetical composition. Those 2?! My God...the possibilities! I hope some of your new material from this very interesting work gets airplay on the radio and TV, Good Sir.
That cracked me up when he did that, because I know 99.9999% of the people watching this did something like it there, too. (I'm more of a Bap than a Pang, but we can all get along. 😂)
Taking a song where the minimalist aspect really made it work and then adding a 64 piece orchestra, horns, flutes, timpani, percussion, big modern drum sound, drum editing, more strange samples, a much more elaborate arrangement, a bee-bop inspired bridge with an organ solo, a big vocal outro with many vocal tracks, tempo changes and a big ending really fucked it.
the two minute long intro to that one sounds like the intro music to a ride at Epcot Center "Get ready for the experience of a lifetime and climb aboard the Star Voyager as we take you through the....brought to you by Qualcomm and BASF - for a brighter tomorrow!" not in a good way. why do this
Fascinating stuff. Just watched the DVD of YESSONGS the other night: was fun to finally see the film, but my god it really needs a full restoration, which it hasn't really gotten yet. Audio was pretty poor, and the video quality is just fair at best. I do hope they can do a full restoration someday. Saw YES on the 90125 tour at the Nassau Coliseum in 1984, it was some show.
If I like a song, there is nothing more fascinating - and pleasing - than hearing the deconstruction of it, and being able to identify the various components. This video is stunning.
The performances in the original are just mind blowing.
Chris squire… not only a great bassist, but a great vocalist.
@@777jones I got some fantastic pictures of Chris... All the way down to his shoes. 😊 Wish he was still here.
The drop into 3/4 in the middle gives me the goosebumps and the weird jazz section makes me smile. And the ending - what an ending. What a record! Genius.
I've always loved the extreme shifts on this song from massive loose grunge to super tight, crisp tracks. Brilliant.
This man knows how to make drum tracks sound amazing. Slave to the rhythm is a masterpiece!
My husband is a singer reakeses with a German label his producer says slave to . Is the best production ever . the holy grail
no its not
@@AL-PAKA Personal taste will always have huge variations :). In it's genre ( Jazzy/ funky / atmospheric) it's definately a stand out production. And it was way ahead of it's time.
@@taccamine8312 no it wasn't ahead of its time at all, plenty of other artists tried this before, you know nothing about music.
@@AL-PAKA I don't know how old you are, or if you are a musician (I've been a musician for 40 years). This was released in 1985. Name some other act that did something slightly comparable at that time?
My all-time hero of producers, Trevor Horn is a legend.
Yup. This guy and Ted Templeman for me.
I loved the snare sound when the album came out. I was in music school studying jazz and ate this album up. Masterpiece.
Yup, it was all about that tight drum sound/playing for me.
That guitar tone is off the charts! One of the greatest productions ever…easily.
Trevor says “now it’s 2018, it’s not an innovative record anymore” truth be told, it’s just as fresh and inspiring as the day I first listened. To be able to make a record like that in the 80’s was cutting edge. No one makes music like that anymore. Today’s music scene is simply sad.
Absolutely true.
I have often wondered why no one today makes music as it was done in the 80s. There's a whole generation of us who would eat up "modern" 80s music.
@@sw6188 Do you know of and follow anyone whom you feel might carry that torch so far? I feel like it’s probably out there, but they get drowned out by the ubiquity of new works nowadays
@@bg357wg Sadly I don't. I think there has been the odd song produced which is reminiscent of the 80s, but as you say they get drowned out by the dross of modern offerings.
@@bg357wg I can think of modern bands who carry the 80s in their heart, so to speak. But *produced* like the 80s? I'm not so sure, and sadly I don't have the expertise to really pin it down.
Trevor Horn will always be regarded highly in my book because he created one of the most original and best bands of the 80s: The Art of Noise.
Moments in love has got to be one of the greatest and also most underrated songs to come out of the 80s . I have had that track in constant rotation for years whenever I'm demoing or tuning audio systems.
I loved them. Marketed as ' god's backing band' and 'the band that doesn't exist'. Brilliant!
One of the first jobs I had in the 80s was working on a video for the AON.
@@KennyEvansUK Which one?
He also created some of my favourite extended versions of eighties tunes. Legend.
I love Trevor - he's been in my musical life these past 40 years. He's so straight forward and honest - and of course he's incredibly knowledgeable and gifted.
Have you heard Frostbite? Wonderful!
No, no, and just no.
people didn't like that snare?! its absolute perfection ...
Blew my mind at the time
I was thinking the same thing. LOL! I loved that song when it was out and I still do.
I want that snare drum sound on every recording I play on, forever. I just need a late-1970s Pearl steel like Stewart's... mine's close, but no cigar!
It's tuned to A as well. Thats part of the reason it works so well
Cooool
I sat in for my older brothers band when I was in high school, (just for a rehearsal).
I was “the kid“ and very nervous, so I quietly tuned my drum set, by tapping my finger. We started jamming and then at one point one of the guys stopped and said “hey, hit those drones for a second”. It turns out I had subconsciously tuned them to EADGBE. Craaaaazy !!
In my humble opinion, this is the greatest feat in audio engineering and production in the 80s. And possibly the best song made in the 80s all together.
I would put tears for fears maybe on the same level regarding engineering and production. But musically i prefer yes.
Bobby Kimball (lead singer for Toto) "hold my drink, we gotta a little song called 'Africa'"
@@benadams1661 Doesn't even come close.
This song also had one of the worst videos of the ‘80s-a packed field. Still, it’s great fun to play this song, and it allows for infinite improvisation.
"Owner of a Lonely Heart" is a great GREAT song and production, but "Slave to the Rhythm" is objectively the peak of 1980s bombast. £800,000, two studios, dual sync'd 24-track machines,, endless remixes, mountains of cocaine-fueled reinvention adding more and more parts. People are still making remixes and reminiscing about the project.
I'd love to hear Trevor Horn talk about many of his other production masterpieces.
We're a young band and when our dad played the original for us, it floored us. The musicianship, the vocals, the production... AND the snare. Outstanding!
wait till you hear them do the gates of delirium
Trevor is the wizard of all wizards. My absolute favorite. Thank you for this.
Back when music had dynamic range. Very cool to see the various tracks!
There are still bands that have dynamic range. Tool sticks out as one. Stupid loudness wars.
And melody. And a memorable hook. And originality too.
Nowadays there's really no reason not to have at least some dynamic range in your music, since every streaming platform (which are what matters now) and even RUclips will normalize the volume.
Great music doesn't get talked over.
well actually! compression is used so often because of the different situations in which people will find themselves listening to music in nowadays. often through some little headphones with the sound of the world around them, or in their noisy but affordable car, or on their cheap laptop or computer speakers that are not at all specialized for music. the majority of us listen to music now in subpar situations on subpar systems and its for this reason that dynamic range has been lost. music has to compete with the listeners situation, and squashing the range a little is how they do it. so its not like they do it just cause they like to(although that is applicable too), its because it is necessary!
Amazing, that record was so ahead of it's time, crazy good. New version is wonderful!
That snare is glorious. As glorious as it was back when it came out. I remember being completely blown away by the album, it's songs and the sound.
That Trevor Rabin arpeggio sequence during the Verses is absolutely unforgettable! And then there's the Bridge part with Chris Squire's descending pattern! Awesome! 90125 marked a brilliant return for Yes. Kudos to Sound on Sound for posting this!
yeah. But they hated it. And the Dinosaur Yes fans forever grumble about Rabin.
David Rollo ... Agreed... I have 90125 in my top 3 best performed, written, and produced. Every track is just pure perfection.
@@XHuntinatorX Agreed! It felt like a Masterpiece as soon as I slipped it out of the wrapping and tossed it onto the turntable and the sound came out of the speakers! It Can Happen is an All Time Favorite. Especially where Rabin and Squire's voices blend in near the end with Anderson's! Perfection!
@@XHuntinatorX big generator is excellent as well
I just hate when it’s old Yes fans vs new Yes tracks. My point: I would listen to nearly all Yes and love it! This track is a gem - had YES not recorded it, I’m certain the OG Yes fans could have appreciated it. Liking this track takes nothing away from Fragile, Starship Trooper, etc… Musicians love it all because Yes is killing.
"That's a Synclavier *and* a Fairlight". The fact that they used both gives away the type of song this is.
I always loved that snare sound. It was perfect for that track. Everything you did on that track was PERFECT! Masterful production. Thank you for the years of quality recordings to listen to. LOVE GREAT AUDIO.
I can watch and listen to this kind of thing all day, every day. Fantastic.
Rhythm section is a killer on this track. Trevor Horn and Trevor Rabin are geniuses.
What a treat to come across this on May 3, 2023 !! I really liked the original "tight" snare drum - perfect! Thank you for this - Cheers from Seattle 🍻 Alex
One of the best produced of all time in my opinion and so ahead of its time. When it's broken down like this it seems so simple.
My god, how good does Jon Anderson sound on this in isolation....such a great tone and projection....bloody marvellous.
Rabin, not Anderson
Always loved the song. Eventually I know a bit better why. Incredibly driving rhythm. What a perfect recording. Thanks so much for sharing!
"people hated the snare sound". What?! No way, best sounding snare sound I heard during that era. I nearly crapped my pants in awe when I first heard the song. Great song that never gets old.
Yes Paul! This is one of those songs you bring to test equipment with before you buy it. It will move the air in some great ways....... tight!
YES! The Police were setting the pace. The guitar riffs in this tune are influenced by Andy Summers no doubt! Great snare sound!
@@widescreennavel The Police won that Grammy for Best Instrumental, so ....
Regardless of whether people feel dissapointed it has been redone having TH take us into his making of the original was pure gold.
This is great! Oz behind the curtain. A rare glimpse of a master at work. Thanks to Trevor and SOS!
This is a brilliant analysis by Trevor of a wonderful song. It will be 40 years old next year, but the album 90125 still sounds as fresh as a daisy.
Classic Material..... Always loved this track... Man this dude is a legend... Moments in love, Video Killed the radio star, Slave to the rhythm... Just a few of the classic records he produced I was raised on.... Legend 👑 💯
Love Trevor. The stuff he did on Frankie goes to Hollywood, esp. on the 12" mixes, are huge-sounding groundbreaking stuff. And it still sounds great today, (with a little bump up in the low end )
11:43 Bang! Doodooleeadlow. 😂 now I'm going to hear that every time I hear this song!
Trevor Horn, truly one of the most brilliant producers not only in the 80s but he’s a great bass player and he plays horn as well no pun, brilliant guy, you put Trevor Horn and Trevor Rabin in a studio together - hits are going to come out of it.
Trevor is such a genius. These guys are from a different era. The way they hear music and produced it will die with them. These videos are a must to teach the young generation.
That’s not how it works; the art or the craft of it. It learns and grows. Producers, musicians, instrument makers, everyone. We’re here because we were there. And if you prefer there, it’s still there. People building analog synths, coding gated reverbs, making YT vids to explain those techniques and genres.
Yes segment starts at 7:45.
people didn't like that snare?! its absolute perfection ...
Jon Anderson's legendary voice was, and is to this day, a marvel.
Yes, that's exactly to where I skipped.
No Jon, no Yes.
Thanks for that mate...I started thinkin' I was crazy.
@@Twobarpsi Wow, that is an great band title for Jon to use:
"No Jon, No Yes" 😂
@@rabarebra kind of catchy isn't it?😃
I.LOVE.THIS.VIDEO . All my life I've been wanting to listen to the separate tracks. THANK YOU !!!!
The breakdown of the 80s tracks gave me a whole new appreciation for this song, especially the nerdy tech stuff like balancing a high pitched snare with Chris's sub octave bass... brilliant.
However, I think the orchestral version was a missed opportunity. The power of an 85 piece orchestra lies in the ability to weave & mesh dozens of different parts. But here we have everyone hitting the same note. That's how soundtracks to cheesy made-for-tv movies are done.
The original "Owner" was a minimalistic song, produced brilliantly, and that was its power. In the new version, the minimalism is cranked up to 11 which defeats the purpose (sort of like Spinal Tap mocked in "Big Bottom" with 3 basses playing the same part).
Trev, I love what you're doing, but if you had an 85 piece orchestra at your disposal I would've LOVED to hear something more intricate like "Changes" or even going back to the Drama album, "Does It Really Happen" where you could've really made those orchestra musicians earn their pay!
How can someone not like that snare ?!?
Love it!
To be fair, high pitched snares weren't common in the early 80s. It was all fat bottom, deep snares left over from the 70s (thank you Mr.Bonham).
Stewert Copeland taught the world to rethink that, as well as what a hihat is capable of.
🤘
@@MrRezRisingfat bottomed snares make the rocking world go round
@@MrRezRisingYup. I also think the emergence of drum machines in the 80s influenced drum sounds.
@@DaveMcleanJr I would add sampling and triggering to that list. I was just a kid but I remember the controversy riled up by each one. Was sampling stealing? Are drummers going extinct? Trigger tech letting you mix acoustic and premade sounds and sequencers and was that 'selling out' or innovative?
Took a couple decades to sort it out, and when the general 'Is a machine like AI going to replace me' irl stress arose this decade, I just smiled to myself.
We'll be fine.
Wow!! I was always intrigued by this track because it was waaaay ahead of it's time with the sounds and samples.I was hoping that they made more songs like this! The other version of this song is SICK!! Trevor Horn is a true musical genius!
Omg i have always been wondering about all these crazy tracks since i was a boy in the 80s how and who made these, oh wow now i can die peacefully :)
You can see how The Art of Noise was born. This guy needed that outlet.
AON was not Trevor Horn; it was Anne Dudley, Jj Jeczalik and engineer Gary Langan.
@@soundonsound yeah, but Trevor was involved no? Or does producing count for nothing.
@@WrvrUgoThrUR Trevor was involved! i respect SOS but Trevor was abso-smurfly involved with AON.
Loved hearing Jon's voice on one track without any music.
Goosebumps!
Same!😎
This was my warm up song all through the 80s.
Alan's snare sound hit me like my best friend's laugh.
I can remember sitting in a club back in the 80’s and a guy walked in with a lady , sat down, sat quietly seemed to be engrossed in listening to the music, someone in the know said that’s Trevor horn, I said who ? … if it was him, my apologies, what a Legend 👌🏻😎
Classic LinnDrum in the background. One of my favorite producers EVER!
Those are real drums
Jon Anderson's legendary voice was, and is to this day, a marvel.
Legendary yes, but marvel, why do you say that? Because he sang such high notes? Have you heard him speak? His voice is naturally VERY high, he speaks at around a D4. Conversely, have you ever heard him sing low notes? I myself, can't recall. That is to say, his range is quite limited. I love his voice and am a Yes fan, but I would not say anything he is doing is superhuman. Geoff Tate, however, in his prime was a marvel. This guy spoke in the second octave(F2), almost 2 full octaves lower than Jon Anderson and could hit the notes Anderson hits plus go even higher, like significantly!! So he sang all those notes Anderson could hit plus higher AND a rich low range. Check out ¨Take Hold of the Flame, live in Tokyo´´ by Queensryche to hear what I mean :) Even Micheal Jackson, who seemed to have a high speaking voice, similar to Anderson had a significantly wider range. Remember, I am not saying he doesn`t have a killer voice, but not a marvel by a long shot.
@@tarekwayne9193 A "Marvel" is, for the one who speaks of it, to behold. It is of their feeling and response to what is ( or in this case, whom ) is creating that "Marvel" for them. You cannot tell them how they should feel, it is for them alone to experience.
@@tarekwayne9193dude, he said voice, not singing voice. thats part of it, but how many singers out there you hear sound like jon anderson. there's a reason every instrumentalist from kitaro to vangelis to mike oldfield wanted to work with him. thats a marvel, and a killer songwriter to, and queensryche sucks.
@@mikearchibald744 Very good points, you are absolutely right.
He said "voice".
Queensryche sucks, however, is a totally unproveable opinion.
I will concede that I'm not a huge fan of their latest incarnations.
In their prime, another story altogether.
@@westrig180 Indeed, I stand corrected💯
The orchestra is playing the Stravinsky Firebird sample from the Fairlight, aawesome! Very meta. Incredible orchestration and performance :)
madtheory - I always wondered what sample that was. Thanks.
always wanted to know thx!
I thought it was from Firebird.
@@simonvetter2420 Oh yes, you're right. Will edit to correct.
Together with Scritti Politti's "Cupid & Psyche" and Rush's "Power Windows", this album is my favorite production from the 1980's. Stellar album, 90125.
Scritti Politti ❤
Loved the snare! Will never forget hearing this on my friends quad system with radio shack super tweeters. As crisp as it gets!
those bullet tweeters!
Frankie and Grace Jones were not my thing back in the 80's, but listening to them more attentively 35 years on, the production on Pleasure Dome and Slave is epic.
A well preserved copy of Welcome to the Pleasure Dome on Vinyl will make anyone wonder why they bother with CD.
That Electra Bass with "the Chip In It" is pure magic!
That's crazy that people were hating on the snare drum! I loved it when it came out. I thought that was such a cool departure from the trends.
Yeah, I guess they weren’t ready to let go of the LINN snare chip 2 or whatever.
Yes segment starts at 7:45.
Cheers.
Fanks !!!
The original album track was just stunning at the time. A groundbreaking marriage of writing and production.
I remember 'Owner of a Lonely Heart' was introduced, it made the evening news! Great sound!
saw Trevor with Art of Noise way back when they toured as a 9-piece.....i've seen a lot of things but THAT was definitely one of them.
Trevor you´re genious, seminal, llife musical influence and pride for all of us. You´re a legend! Thank you
that's the kinda stuff i'd like to see on this channel :)
I am so sorry for the loss of your home. Will check this project out. Sounds great.
This song introduced me to the YES catalog. Amazing musicians!! And wholy crap! This is going into my study book!
I love this playing around with the melodies towards the end ....
Higher standards back then for radio music
Amazing song. I bought the album for this one song.
Great album, too!
Great to hear the Fairlight and Synclavier samples in isolation. The mix of those breaks all make sense now!!!!
I think that's the first time I've ever heard TH mention the Synclavier in a positive light, other than what Steve Lipson got out of it.
Cutting edge tech for 83. I was a big fan of AON at the time 90125 came out which is really AON/Yes.
@@jbforce10 I think he liked the Synclavier... when he delegated someone else to fiddle around with it!
Yeah, he wasn’t a fan of the Synclavier. That might be more to do with Lipson experimenting. TH was so in awe of the CMI he made it the sound of the Eighties.
Fantastic to see the original track breakdown and get the thoughts behind!
I still consider the long album version of Welcome To The Pleasuredome to be an early taste of what later would evolve into techno. The middle part with its 4 on the floor beat, the offbeat hihats, and that room filling bass. Sonically it was light years ahead of its time and even today it's as hifi as it can get.
ya masterpiece indeed
Nah techno was already a thing mate. Detroit had it down pat. Maybe for Europe though.
Agreed. And then Trevor Horn turned the knobs to 13 for "Slave to the Rhythm"... I wouldlove to hear Trevor Horn talking about those two songs.
@@zachary6737 hello, Kraftwerk anybody?
You say it Trevor NO MELODYNE, you got to have talent, that's the main reason those records are so good, those were the days were not only we got great musicians we got excellent producers like you, hat's off!
Long live the 80'S!
13:35 - My new phone notification. Thank you
One of the most fascinating tunes in history! 🙏
I always liked the snare drum sound and thought it was the center of that song.
Agreed. And I am not a fan of high tuned snare drums, quite the opposite actually....but that snare just drives it. Crazy they cut it with that gate tho. I’ve done crazy things in sessions (like a famous producer that wanted to run the singer through a DJ mixer prior to tape so they could “scratch” the singer to tape. Of course it didn’t work out. But gating a snare to tape is pretty aggressive. Nice commiment there.
Great Music Always....Thank you Trevor 🙏
Fantastic video, this kind of multitrack analysis makes for great content!
Totally love the new version of Owner of a Lonely 💜❤️💜 fantastic!
the man who put YES back on the Billboard charts...
that song was Yes' ONLY #1 single ever, masterpiece!
Mr. HORN is a brilliant chap! Thanks for sharing this...fascinating!❤
This is Fabulous Trevor Horn is now Mr Horn himself (string arrangements)
Such an AMAZING guy . . . Trevor Horn❣️ Fascinating to watch & listen to how he originally imagined . . . & remained 80's music with orchestra . . . just a GREAT new rewind & way to enjoy original electronic to now orchestra use❣️🐾🐞😻 Thank you❣️ I agree that Trevor Horn is one of the most imaginative & GREATEST music producers!
11:42 “Baaang, boodedeleeduhdum” pure magic right there!
My all-time favorite producer! So much love to detail!
Trevor is one of THE major influencers on 1980’s pop synth music which has been so readily mimicked in last 40 years, but rarely bettered… so sad he lost his wife.
Such a great song. One of the few songs I crank up solely so I can listen to the mix.
"Owner Of A Lonely Heart" is truly a masterpiece of The 1980s and all time. I So would like Trevor Horn and Siouxsie Sioux to work together...even though he said to S&TB, in the late-'80s, "What could I possibly do with your sound, that you haven't already done?" I still think those 2 in a studio together could certainly create some kind of new, original alchemy..esp. w/ regard to lyrical/poetical composition. Those 2?! My God...the possibilities! I hope some of your new material from this very interesting work gets airplay on the radio and TV, Good Sir.
...and 40 years later I finally hear those funny synth bits on their isolated. amazing stuff
11:42 "Pang! Drinnininoong!" Yep, that's EXACTLY how I remembered it went. LOL
HAHA
lol
Pang! Diddliddliong! 😅🎶
That cracked me up when he did that, because I know 99.9999% of the people watching this did something like it there, too. (I'm more of a Bap than a Pang, but we can all get along. 😂)
Probably the best album ever made. Thanks Trevor.
No, that would be Welcome to the Pleasure Dome. Or Lexicon of Love. 😎
Taking a song where the minimalist aspect really made it work and then adding a 64 piece orchestra, horns, flutes, timpani, percussion, big modern drum sound, drum editing, more strange samples, a much more elaborate arrangement, a bee-bop inspired bridge with an organ solo, a big vocal outro with many vocal tracks, tempo changes and a big ending really fucked it.
the two minute long intro to that one sounds like the intro music to a ride at Epcot Center "Get ready for the experience of a lifetime and climb aboard the Star Voyager as we take you through the....brought to you by Qualcomm and BASF - for a brighter tomorrow!" not in a good way. why do this
Yeah- but it still sounds small. Way smaller than the original, and it sounds like fake orchestra!
Philip Brodermann they really made a mess of it... the orchestra does nothing for that song at all 🤦🏼♂️
TREV!!! DRAMA IS MY FAVE YES....WHY? CUZ YOU WITH THEM SOUNDED BRILLIANT.....Taught me further recording techniques as well.
Much love n respect
Sometimes even the creator of a great thing can't just leave it alone.
Esto es un productor y nos que ahora dicen serlo...mil gracias por su talento Sr. Trevor Horn.
This is 50l karat solid gold....brilliant!!
My favorite producer in many inspiring ways. Love to hear a breakdown of Seal on whatever song you'd choose. Thank you for your great records
That snare is one of my favorite things in that Yes song lol.
Fantastic. The song had so much open space.
legend
One of the best remixes ever! It hit the floor in the 80ies, and still does.
What a legend! Very informative and entertaining, thanks for posting :)
What a great watch, so cool! Trevor Horn is a legend!
Fascinating stuff. Just watched the DVD of YESSONGS the other night: was fun to finally see the film, but my god it really needs a full restoration, which it hasn't really gotten yet. Audio
was pretty poor, and the video quality is just fair at best. I do hope they can do a full restoration someday. Saw YES on the 90125 tour at the Nassau Coliseum in 1984, it was some show.