Yes: Heart of the Sunrise REACTION & ANALYSIS | The Daily Doug (Episode 331)

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  • Опубликовано: 8 фев 2022
  • #Yes #YesReaction #HeartOfTheSunrise
    In this episode of #TheDailyDoug, we're going into the Daily Doug archives to access our Extended Play Lounge Episode 5, featuring Fragile by Yes. I'm excerpting my reaction to Heart of the Sunrise, the last track on the album, from that video (originally released on October 5, 2021 to my Patreon community.) I hope you enjoy!
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @timterrazas6250
    @timterrazas6250 2 года назад +305

    You know your stoned when Jon's lyrics begin to make perfect sense

  • @michaelbeerbados3291
    @michaelbeerbados3291 2 года назад +422

    what the average person misses is that Bill Bruford does some of his GREATEST drumming on this track. Listen to it again. Missing hits adding rolls cutting off sections-yet the human ear actually is tricked into thinking he fills everything standardly. The drumming here is beyond what most can do.

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +29

      Agreed, some of the best drumming you will ever hear - without a doubt.

    • @MatheusManzano
      @MatheusManzano 2 года назад +30

      I always say that. The drumming here is doctorate thesis by BB.

    • @jasonwilliams6005
      @jasonwilliams6005 2 года назад +20

      His drumming here is beyond great. So much going on and incredibly complex.

    • @johnnicholson8345
      @johnnicholson8345 2 года назад +19

      average listener? Certainly this guy anyway. He missed pretty much everything from the clever minor to major shifts, the transpositions, reintroduction of themes, etc. Pretty much his entire babbling over this masterpiece ruined much of everything.

    • @chrisblower8868
      @chrisblower8868 2 года назад +8

      Always knew I wasn't an average person

  • @magicbrownie1357
    @magicbrownie1357 2 года назад +235

    I had the good fortune of meeting Chris Squire in the 90's. What a talent. The real heart and soul of Yes. RIP, sir.

    • @beefer454
      @beefer454 2 года назад +9

      absolutely right.THE greatest bass player ever.no brainer

    • @doughorton3635
      @doughorton3635 2 года назад +18

      There will never be another Chris Squire. The man was a phenomenal bass player with a unique sound and style.

    • @lmsrox2
      @lmsrox2 2 года назад +1

      Yes (pun intended), but Jon's voice was the magic dust that finished the deal and made Yes Yes, IMO. Many iterations were really good, but the total essentials, i.e., the core of the best Yes stuff to me was Chris, Jon, and Steve Howe. And I mean no disrespect to the other fantastic musicians who came through (Rick Wakeman, Bill Bruford, Peter Banks, Alan White, Tony Kaye, etc.).

    • @mglaser6811
      @mglaser6811 2 года назад +3

      Yes in deed I miss Chriss a Lot...god bless him...still lives on in bass heaven ✌👍👍👍

    • @steveinsydney9919
      @steveinsydney9919 2 года назад +5

      I met Chris too, in Sydney, 2003. He signed my vinyl copy of Fish out of Water. Lovely guy. BUT. Yes of course he was a great bass player, with huge chops all over the place, but to me what made him even greater was his talent for composing the most extraordinary, unusual, out of left field basslines that are completely unique in style, yet perfect for the music they accompany. THAT was his greatest gift to us, IMHO.

  • @Sam_Utah
    @Sam_Utah 2 года назад +90

    When Jon sings it always seems like a prayer, a connection, a plea to the divine.

    • @brunozep
      @brunozep 9 месяцев назад +3

      It's like an angelical singing

    • @scottbilger9294
      @scottbilger9294 7 месяцев назад +2

      Well said

  • @henrymcintosh3
    @henrymcintosh3 2 года назад +181

    This song is, to me, Yes at their absolute most imaginative. It has everything. Jon Anderson is amazing and Bruford's drumming is stunning.

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +8

      Their earlier albums were great, but with Fragile, they took it all to a complete new level. Bill's style is phenomenal.

    • @cherylwoodward
      @cherylwoodward 2 года назад +9

      Bill’s drumming gives me chills. So precise and in the pocket. It’s always what is needed at any given time.

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +5

      @@cherylwoodward You've hit the nail right on the head there, not a wasted note, no overfilling, just perfect.

    • @johammerstein3605
      @johammerstein3605 2 года назад +1

      I agree, Bill seems to me, a little bored on Close To The Edge and is ready to move on to something new.

    • @doclawyer
      @doclawyer 2 года назад +2

      The best YES lineup for sure. They were like a machine back then.

  • @alnitak208
    @alnitak208 2 года назад +65

    Nothing better than the old prog from the early seventies. So inventive, free and entertaining !

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +1

      Record companies just let them have free reign and we're still reaping the benefits!!!

    • @trsalmon
      @trsalmon 11 месяцев назад

      That common reduces Yes to a silly genre.

  • @dvincentblack
    @dvincentblack 2 года назад +238

    It's time to get Jon Anderson on the show! We can ask him! He's very friendly! I've been listening to this since the week it came out. I was just a kid. I had it on eight track. I used to fall asleep with the headphones on and the tape would play over and over and over again all night long. Lol. I learned of the existence of, and placement of every note on this album! 🤘🎼🎶

    • @williamsporing1500
      @williamsporing1500 2 года назад +18

      I couldn’t tell you how many hours I spent listening to fragile, close to the edge, tales from topographic oceans and the Yes album….I’ve got an older brother and he turned me on to them when I was 12 when the Yes album came out.
      Yes changed my life lol

    • @williamsporing1500
      @williamsporing1500 2 года назад +13

      There’s very few people I’d like to meet, but Jon is one of them……

    • @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095
      @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095 2 года назад +9

      @@williamsporing1500
      Jon Anderson and Ozzy Osbourne for me. I just want to fall to my knees, bowing and wailing _"I AM NOT WORTHY! I AM NOT WORTHY!"_
      But that would just embarass Jon, and Ozzy would say _"Get up, ya feckin' ass hole!"_
      So I'll just hug them and thank them for saving my life.
      {:-:-:}

    • @antoniocarlin5026
      @antoniocarlin5026 2 года назад +5

      YES! I founded it on 1998 before a show here in México, and he invite me to go with him to shoping jeje...we enter to a buddhist store!! (a store of antiques) and he bought a lot of litthe buddhas and indian elephants!! Jejeje is very friendly .... I saw 5 times Live here, and I was able to live with all the members of the band :)

    • @johngerstner8399
      @johngerstner8399 2 года назад +21

      Jon did an interview with Rick Beato. Would be really neat to have Doug and Rick hook up

  • @Cleofizoid
    @Cleofizoid 2 года назад +101

    One of my favorites on Fragile...and South Side of the Sky. Looking forward to it.

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +13

      South Side of the Sky, I've been listening to it for 50 years and it still gives me goosebumps.

    • @dhchbhrh82
      @dhchbhrh82 2 года назад +1

      Great album! Heart of The Sunrise, Southside of The Sky and The Fish best songs on Fragile!

    • @diannkelley3481
      @diannkelley3481 10 месяцев назад

      I went for years without Yes, and this is one I remembered the most as well as those from CTTE and South Side of the Sky which makes me think of some Jack London stories.

  • @andymartin3581
    @andymartin3581 2 года назад +158

    This classic still gives me goosebumps... 50 years later!

    • @tommathews3964
      @tommathews3964 2 года назад +2

      Amen, brother!

    • @chrislegner4816
      @chrislegner4816 2 года назад +6

      Fifty years after it's creation, it still sounds ahead of it's time.

    • @Williamottelucas
      @Williamottelucas 2 года назад +6

      Mine too - the hairs may have gone grey, but they still stand on end!

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +1

      @@Williamottelucas Hilarious - but ditto!!!

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +3

      @@chrislegner4816 You just blew my mind!!!!

  • @kenhaynes942
    @kenhaynes942 Год назад +17

    When I bought this album in 1972, I got lost in Heart of the Sunrise for days, dissecting the sections, falling in love with Chris Squire's bass sound, being mesmerized by Jon Anderson's voice, so subtle, angelic, and powerful all in the same song. Still as astounding to me today.

    • @benjaminroe311ify
      @benjaminroe311ify Год назад

      You know it's crazy... every time I listen to this album I think Roundabout is my favorite... then South Side of the Sky... then Heart of the Sunrise becomes my favorite etc... I pretty much have decided that my favorite Yes track is the one that I am listening to right now... Lol. But if I am really honest... I don't think there is a 1-2-3 punch like the Close to Edge Album. Everytime I listen to Fragile it just makes me want to Listen to Close to the Edge. There is no transition from track to track that makes me more emotional or interested then listening to Close to the Edge and then straight into And you and I. It's just incredible... Yes is so AMAZING!

    • @peterbyrne178
      @peterbyrne178 2 месяца назад

      My older brother bought the album ...we had a little shitty mono player and the album still sounded amazing !..when we got a decent stereo a bit later it was life changing . .no other group of musicians have ever come close to the sheer brilliance of the guys here

  • @Keith_KC8TCQ
    @Keith_KC8TCQ 2 года назад +95

    R.I.P Chris Squire a gentleman who inspired so many great bass players including Geddy Lee

    • @cozmicpfunk
      @cozmicpfunk 2 года назад +1

      Totally!

    • @JdoubleU1222
      @JdoubleU1222 2 года назад +1

      My first bass player bought a Rickenbacker because of Squire. He was damn good too.

    • @bethrappeport9381
      @bethrappeport9381 2 года назад +5

      I always found Chris to be so innovative, and he didn’t just play bass, he played lead bass.

    • @cozmicpfunk
      @cozmicpfunk 2 года назад +1

      @@bethrappeport9381 I second that emotion!

    • @Chris.Minarich.LongIsland
      @Chris.Minarich.LongIsland 2 года назад +2

      The absolute GOAT he was.....I can't pick a guitarist & although I lean towards Danny Carey- I really cannot pick a drummer BUT, Chris was the goat....I absolutely love Geddy & Rush but Chris was on another level

  • @stpnwlf9
    @stpnwlf9 2 года назад +55

    I love how the guitar and bass run through those arpeggios, sometimes in unison and sometimes in opposite directions - that is mesmerizing!

    • @mogsy2112
      @mogsy2112 2 года назад +7

      There's another example of this, in the opening of "Changes". Mesmerizing is the perfect descriptor!

    • @DrummerStick
      @DrummerStick 2 года назад +1

      @@mogsy2112 literally disgusting, like how the hell did yes come up with this stuff.

  • @brianalpert2383
    @brianalpert2383 2 года назад +63

    I just love the way you never know when Bill Bruford is going to hit the cymbal - especially in his duet with Chris Squire in the first part of the song. He varies his accents and you can't predict when he'll hit the cymbal or the snare. The accents just keep changing while he keeps impeccable time. And he's only one member of this amazing band.

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +8

      That's what I love about his playing on this album, the variation while still keeping time is incredible and keeps the excitement going through the whole song.

    • @Mertztillithurts
      @Mertztillithurts 2 года назад +2

      Bill Bruford was great at that! Danny Carey also does that kind of thing, even during polyrhythmic parts. Keeps you on your toes!

    • @Mellotron61
      @Mellotron61 2 года назад +1

      Vous avez tout un sens de l'observation musical Brian..👍👍👍👏

    • @BenjWarrant
      @BenjWarrant 2 года назад +2

      It's the most phenomenal, outstanding piece of drumming ever. I can never get enough of it. Sometimes I like to watch a drum cover just to hear the drums much higher in the mix. (Although some of them don't really do the material justice!)

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +1

      @@BenjWarrant ruclips.net/video/kIUEP9VQn88/видео.html

  • @BaneOfXistence4
    @BaneOfXistence4 2 года назад +39

    That undeniable Rickenbacker tone. Gotta love it. You always know when one is cranking.

  • @RushAss
    @RushAss 2 года назад +106

    "Y'all, I'm gonna take it home" - I don't even smoke weed and this still came across as the best possible thing one could do at that moment of the song. One thing that get's overlooked is just how damned syncopated Bruford's drumming is throughout this entire album. Especially on this song and Long distance Run Around. His command of time is other-worldly. Cheers!

    • @tommathews3964
      @tommathews3964 2 года назад +6

      I can promise you that I've never overlooked the Brilliance of Bruford!! Can't speak for anyone else, but he is way up my list! (but I totally get what you're saying, and agree!)

    • @mogsy2112
      @mogsy2112 2 года назад +7

      I'm a drummer, so I have an immense amount of respect and admiration for Bruford. He and Neil Peart are probably my two biggest influences.

    • @Stoovey24
      @Stoovey24 2 года назад +6

      @@mogsy2112 Bruford, Bozzio, Peart, and Portnoy are my 4 top picks for rock/prog rock.

    • @mogsy2112
      @mogsy2112 2 года назад +3

      @@Stoovey24 solid picks.

    • @mogsy2112
      @mogsy2112 2 года назад +3

      @@Stoovey24 I'll add Bonham, and Danny Carey.

  • @genestippell1833
    @genestippell1833 2 года назад +131

    Take a listen to Chris Squires solo album, Fish out of Water! Squire pairs up with Bruford again ... One of the greatest solo albums ever... A combination of classical and jazz fusion. When I first got it I assumed it would be Squire showing off, instead I got serious compositions where squire takes you on a ride, one moment very calm and soothing and the next he reminds you he's Chris squire the bass player from yes . I think only one song has a guitar in it, mostly flutes and strings with Patrick moraz filling in great stuff on the keys. . Ya'all

    • @thatmarchingarrow
      @thatmarchingarrow 2 года назад +9

      It really is a fantastic album. One of my all time favourites I'd say.

    • @markusantonio4866
      @markusantonio4866 2 года назад +9

      Hold Out Your Hand, Lucky Seven

    • @douglasgraham9045
      @douglasgraham9045 2 года назад +9

      Safe (cannon song). Fantastic track

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +4

      One of my all time favourites - I don't think I've heard an album where Chris wasn't at the top of his game - sheer brilliance.

    • @sigil5772
      @sigil5772 2 года назад +6

      I mean, it *is* Squire showing off, but in a good way, shows his strengths right across the board

  • @RandymanB
    @RandymanB 2 года назад +44

    "Thank whatever force created Jon Anderson", I've been wanting to do so since I first heard this album in 1971!

    • @rupertsligh3598
      @rupertsligh3598 2 года назад +5

      His mother was lovely. Such a sweet little, diminutive lady from Lancashire. She was the force.

    • @jonathanroberts8981
      @jonathanroberts8981 2 года назад +1

      Wondering: how high was his voice BEFORE puberty? 🙂

    • @nilsen589
      @nilsen589 Год назад +4

      @@jonathanroberts8981 Only dogs could hear him.

  • @brianleonard9872
    @brianleonard9872 11 месяцев назад +9

    Bruford’s drums are absolutely incredible on this one. One of the greatest performances of all time.

  • @joanbounacos8958
    @joanbounacos8958 2 года назад +34

    Loved the description of Chris' bass as "filthy". It was, in the best way! I once watched Jon sing this using binoculars and focusing on his throat to see if there was any obvious strain. Not one bit! Awesome efforts by every member!

    • @kellynine7438
      @kellynine7438 2 года назад +2

      I remember getting close to the stage at one of their shows, and during this and Fish, Chris' bass would make my face go numb because I was so close to the stacks. It was GLORIOUS. So very filthy, and so very marvelous.

    • @ConceptJunkie
      @ConceptJunkie 2 года назад +1

      @@kellynine7438 I saw Yes in '91 in the nosebleed seats at the Capital Center in Maryland, and even up there you could feel Chris'' bass in your chest. It was amazing. It was the "Union" tour, and everyone got their chance to do a solo bit. Chris played "Amazing Grace", and it was indeed amazing.
      They also played "Awaken", which was something I definitely did not expect, but loved because it's one of my favorites.

    • @douglasanderson8636
      @douglasanderson8636 2 года назад +3

      I played 'Soon" to a friend who is a pro.opera singer.She reckoned Jon has a perfect vocal technique...mind she thought he was a female singer at the beginning

    • @jimcarlson6157
      @jimcarlson6157 2 года назад +1

      I would say feel-thy.

  • @sunpathviewer
    @sunpathviewer 2 года назад +17

    Love to talk to you about meeting Chris. He came to see our band in a casino lounge after a YES concert. He came to our green room after our second set. He and ZMan their tour manager stayed our last set then they stayed with us after the bar closed. Management let Chris share 3 bottles of Grand Mariner with us as we talked music a couple hours during our load out. Huge man, huge heart. Thanks Doug 🤙🥀🎶🕊

  • @cbarbe02
    @cbarbe02 2 года назад +16

    What ii amazing with yes is that they can perform these complex songs live perfectly, just amazing!!!

  • @johnmarsh2078
    @johnmarsh2078 2 года назад +17

    I was eighteen. I borrowed my mother's carand filled it with friends. We drove to Old Trafford .... Manchester United's ground, and parked in the car park. There was a venue called The Hardrock next door (now a DIY store). What followed was totally epic. Sitting cross legged, listening to Yes performing Fragile and most of The Yes Album and a little earlier stuff. What a night. Somebody reversed into the car and I had to repair it but NOTHING could take the lustre off that magical night.

  • @Cleofizoid
    @Cleofizoid 2 года назад +23

    "Dreamer Easy In The Chair That Really Fits You". Great lyric. Bill Bruford tears it up!

    • @souldreamer9056
      @souldreamer9056 2 года назад +3

      In 2001’s “In the presence of” he reference this with the lines:
      As the door was open wide
      There inside was a diamond chair
      Where I sat when I was young
      I wrote down the words

  • @heinzbucksandcastle2053
    @heinzbucksandcastle2053 2 года назад +7

    Yes is a band that you can listen to over and over. I got into them in 1976 and never stopped.

  • @ernaolsson6763
    @ernaolsson6763 2 года назад +12

    All of them are unbeleivable amazing on their instruments and Jon is totally outstanding..

  • @legionofprog
    @legionofprog 2 года назад +48

    What a great song this one is! From what I've seen/read, it was apparently the last song written for the Fragile album (under pressure because they were a song short), and the first song where Rick Wakeman observed Yes's songwriting process. The song was quickly constructed around Squire's opening riff and other fragments that Anderson and Bruford proposed on the fly, prompting Wakeman to think "Who writes songs like THIS!?" Masterpiece.

    • @benjaminlichtenstein6747
      @benjaminlichtenstein6747 2 года назад +2

      Hadn't heard that story, v interesting!

    • @johnnicholson8345
      @johnnicholson8345 2 года назад +2

      Much of this song had Wakeman assembling the disparate pieces to meld it into a cohesive song. No minor task.

  • @jbassguy571
    @jbassguy571 2 года назад +25

    Heart of the Sunrise was probably the first classic Yes song I heard that made me fall in love with Chris' bass playing. So confident and melodic and earthy and sharp.
    Still think you'd like to hear To Be Over off of Relayer. The harmonies are fantastic especially toward the end.

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +1

      Moraz's screaming keyboard solos on the Gates of Delirium - unbelievable.

    • @MonsterhighFREAK0
      @MonsterhighFREAK0 2 года назад

      I was just about to comment this!! I'm glad i found your comment, that song is so nice.

  • @scottkessler4263
    @scottkessler4263 2 года назад +25

    Interestingly, each member was to have a solo piece on the album: Steve Howe had Mood For A Day, Chris Squire had Fish, Bill Bruford had 5% For Nothing, Jon Anderson had We Have Heaven, and Rick had a "cover" since he was still under contract to another label and couldn't create an "original" piece, so he covered Brahams.

    • @gregraines1599
      @gregraines1599 2 года назад +2

      That must’ve been part of his leaving the Strawbs- a really fine Prog band.

  • @nordvegfigg7746
    @nordvegfigg7746 2 года назад +6

    This album, and especially Heart Of The Sunrise challenged me, as a young guitarist, to up my game as it were, to levels I had previously thought far beyond my grasp at age 15. But I went for it, sought out musicians better than me, and worked at it until I kicked down the imaginary doors in my mind that held me back from realizing my potential. And here I am at age 65 still playing guitar, challenging myself every day. And have been lucky enough to always earn my living either playing or teaching guitar. Some of the thanks for that has to go to Steve Howe and Yes for setting the bar so seemingly high way back when I was a barre chord head banger.

  • @jeffburgess4589
    @jeffburgess4589 2 года назад +35

    While Close to the Edge is epic and THE prog masterpiece; Heart of the Sunrise is still my favorite Yes song., especially in concert. Squire's "walking bass" is mesmerizing.

    • @Gary1scuba
      @Gary1scuba 2 года назад

      Mine too!!!!

    • @mogsy2112
      @mogsy2112 2 года назад +4

      I always go back and forth, between Close to the Edge, Heart of the Sunrise, and Starship Trooper. Epic, epic, and epic...

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +5

      @@mogsy2112 The live version of Starship Trooper/Wurm on Yesssongs, with Wakeman's moog solos is mind blowing.

    • @allisonrich5061
      @allisonrich5061 2 года назад

      Which is why I always chose a stage right position at concerts :-)

  • @CJRamos-jv3pb
    @CJRamos-jv3pb 2 года назад +18

    You have to hear the ending in context of the entire album, and how We Have Heaven transitions into South Side of the Sky.

  • @joshuajouet
    @joshuajouet 2 года назад +6

    This music has been a part of my life for so long, and i absolutely love your reactions and analysis of it - fab stuff

    • @williamsporing1500
      @williamsporing1500 2 года назад +3

      Yes has been a huge part of my life. It’s way deeper than the stuff that was and is mainstream. I saw them 19 times, staring with close to the edge tour…

  • @wfdasdjedwjd
    @wfdasdjedwjd Год назад +5

    After my bro died at 23 when I was 13 in 1976 I inherited his extensive album collection. My friends and I listened to all the classic 60’s and 70’s hard rock bands and Yes Heart of the Sunrise and StarTrip Trooper became our anthems. We grew up, got high and dipped into my pops liquor cabinet. Talk about some great times!

  • @mikemasse
    @mikemasse 2 года назад +45

    Love your reactions and analysis, Doug.

  • @matthewmuziani1961
    @matthewmuziani1961 2 года назад

    Love this song, and I really enjoy your videos. Your ear and insight are fun to watch.

  • @erichflake1631
    @erichflake1631 2 года назад

    You're the man Doug, BRAVO, BRAVO! Your choices in what you share are the best,, the way you describe and enjoy these tunes is also very very knowledgeable and sincere, very impressive my friend, plus it doesn't hurt that you partake in the buds, this song is considered one of my very favorite songs from yes, lots of great memories with their music, and had the pleasure of seeing them live twice in Philly in the late 70s, maybe I'll have the privilege of meeting you someday as well, all the best to you Doug

  • @rained5757
    @rained5757 2 года назад +5

    What always amazes me is how Jon's voice is so ethereal and otherworldly, and yet, even with that amazing power-filled rhythm section and guitar at full pitch and strength, it's never overwhelmed, it has that power all of its own - it IS the heart of the music.

    • @benjaminroe311ify
      @benjaminroe311ify Год назад

      It really is an AMAZING instrument to go along with other "hearts" of Yes like Squire's Basslines or Howe's riffs or Wakemen's keys etc. Yes really needed a completely unique and amazing voice like Jon's to go with all of that... Simply incredible when they all mesh and weave together....

  • @guitars4ever176
    @guitars4ever176 2 года назад +8

    Dr Doug, I heard this song when it was released. I was in jr high school. To watch you marvel over Yes’ majesty is such a thrill especially with your amazing credentials. I love what you do sir !!!!

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +2

      Multiply this story a million times over and you begin to see what an impact this band (and this record) had on people over the years.

  • @The_Power_and_the_Glory
    @The_Power_and_the_Glory 2 года назад

    This song is welded into my brain since I've had this record for almost as long as it's been around. Listening to your impressions is both enjoyable and educational. Great stuff!

  • @dailyprognosisnick
    @dailyprognosisnick 2 года назад +3

    Just love watching you react to Yes. No other band gives you such facial expressions! That's Yes! They keep you on your toes and yet comfortable all at the same time!

  • @iemandanders2577
    @iemandanders2577 2 года назад +16

    thank you for doing this one Doug, i love yes, as a bassist i love Chris squire but this song is my favorite, period. my favorite part is the piano part (you know the one) followed by johns vocals followed by the whole band joining in, its just magical.

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +1

      Spot on! When it kicks off again with a couple of snare flams, it's spine tingling!

  • @mercurykingfirst
    @mercurykingfirst 2 года назад +4

    All I can say is wandering around the streets of my city here in Brazil in 2020 listening to that gem for the first time was one o' the most special memories I've got about that sad year.

  • @DiederickBosman
    @DiederickBosman 2 года назад

    Dear Doug, you so clearly state my exact feelings with Yes and this song, it's terrific. A joy to watch! And to listen to of course.

  • @mly4751
    @mly4751 2 года назад

    Doug - i’ve been listening to ALL your videos for a year and only just subscribed BUT your breakdown of the musical layers, the keys and jet changes, as well as the appreciation for transitions and superlative playing to instruments usually given 2nd class status (Squire’s bass; Bruford’s percussion), provides such ad incredible level of insight that you will be my #1 choice.
    I am a 70s prog champion so whether Yes, KIng Crimson, ELP, etc., i am right there with you.
    Your analysis LEGITIMIZES that super period of musical creation.
    Thank you see much for all that you do!

  • @dmCurator
    @dmCurator 2 года назад +11

    This album opened a door for my then young and impressionable taste in music. 💥

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +1

      Ditto - changed the course of my listening forever!

  • @paulmasarek8457
    @paulmasarek8457 2 года назад +6

    Thanks Doug, boy I still love that signature Squire sound. And I agree that Jon's vocals float angelic above the "dirty" bass. Would like hear a Gentle Giant listen sometime, my favorite for contrapuntal parts with a baroque meets rock feel. Thanks again!

  • @StrideLatinProgRick
    @StrideLatinProgRick 2 года назад +1

    Timeless masterpiece. Many thanks Doug for the beautiful way you present these masterworks. Your videos it should be shown and taught at school to make young listeners discover real Music, and make them appreciate and love it. This would perhaps create a better world, and this is the YES message.

  • @TheCenteroftheUniverse
    @TheCenteroftheUniverse 2 года назад

    Doug, you have a new fan. You're the first YT channel I've seen fire up a tasteful bowl to make the job go smoother. Tip of the cap and a subscription. You are an original in your affable affect, like visiting with an old friend.

  • @MDLOP8
    @MDLOP8 2 года назад +29

    That's it: "the yin and yang at the same time!" You captured the essence of Yes!!!!

    • @grife3000
      @grife3000 2 года назад

      I think he said ying.

  • @Aquatarkus96
    @Aquatarkus96 2 года назад +11

    Yes + Cannabis... There has never been a better combination. Got to see them live in Denver around the time of legalization at the Paramount playing Fragile and Close to the Edge in full, definitely one of the best shows I've ever been to out over 1000 shows I've seen. There were a predictable age distribution at the show for sure, but my 2 buddies and I were surprised to see *a lot* of other younger people in their 20s, including 2 very attractive ladies wearing Genesis and ELP t-shirts that I was too sheepish to talk to lol!

  • @stevenhuey8686
    @stevenhuey8686 2 года назад

    I've been waiting for this ever since you did close to the edge!

  • @thomaslaurent2714
    @thomaslaurent2714 2 года назад +1

    These are wonderful explorations! Thank you Doug. The last excerpt is not the end of the song but continuation of Jon Andersons song on the flip side. You should explore, and enjoy the whole album. Amazing work by the band.

  • @marcanglin7127
    @marcanglin7127 2 года назад +3

    One of the most diverse compositions of Progressive Rock music, melded together into a cohesive whole that flows straight from the heart. Each band member contributes brilliantly to the song, leaving room for each and every one of them to shine as bright as the sunrise. Astounding piece of music.

  • @heychas
    @heychas Год назад +4

    For years I would struggle w/ the trying to figure out the meaning of the Yes lyrics. However, it wasn't until this song I realize they finally address that question:
    "Straight light searching all the meanings of the song
    Long last treatment of the telling that
    relates to all the words sung
    Dreamer easy in the chair that really fits you"
    It doesn't matter - let the words mean to you whatever the mean to you. It is really quite beautiful.

    • @andyharman3022
      @andyharman3022 8 месяцев назад +1

      I remember an interview with Jon where he said many times the lyrics were written to fit the music, not necessarily for meaning.

  • @johnschneider7499
    @johnschneider7499 Год назад

    I enjoy your posts very much! Huge Yes fan too. I saw them 6 times. I played in a band in my 20s, used a white Rickenbacker bass just like Chris Squire’s. I need to light up a bowl with you now.

  • @marcgarcelon2927
    @marcgarcelon2927 2 года назад

    Interesting and thoughtful reaction, Doug; I first listened to this song in 1973, and it's just as fascinating now as it was when I first heard it. Enjoy your commentaries!

  • @richieg8432
    @richieg8432 2 года назад +9

    Absolute genius. Nothing like this will be ever written again.

    • @Chris.Minarich.LongIsland
      @Chris.Minarich.LongIsland 2 года назад

      You're so correct. This album was pure genius

    • @bojiden
      @bojiden Год назад

      Nah, I wrote something like this last week.
      jk

    • @ToxicTurtleIsMad
      @ToxicTurtleIsMad Год назад

      I mean... many greater pieces of music have been written since this but ok..

  • @Xraftco
    @Xraftco 2 года назад +20

    I still hold out hope you'll react to Turn of the Century, its Yes' best song in my opinion. Most beautiful writing for sure.

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +3

      Awaken is stunning - so beautiful.
      "Like the time I ran away, turned around and you were standing close to me" - I get goosebumps just typing it out!!!

    • @bobthebomb1596
      @bobthebomb1596 2 года назад +2

      Beautiful song. Always seem to get something in my eye when I hear it though.

  • @daveking9393
    @daveking9393 2 года назад

    Hello there Doug all the best to you and yours Thanks so much for doing this what a great journey it is to take

  • @ManfluWill
    @ManfluWill 2 года назад

    Doug, you’re mind will be blown once again with this one Awesome! Thanks for doing this song. 🙏🏻👍

  • @donallmon1338
    @donallmon1338 2 года назад +3

    "That's filthy, y'all." LOL Perfectly said. That bass line has so much attitude.

  • @johannsebastianb4ss
    @johannsebastianb4ss 2 года назад +3

    Finally you did, in my opinion, the five best Yes songs ever! (Close To the Edge, Awaken, The Gates Of Delirium, The Revealing Science Of God and Heart Of The Sunrise). Now, having an interview with Jon Anderson would be amazing for this channel, for you and for us. It'd be such an incredible opportunity for you to ask everything you want to a original Yes member, he's so kind and lovely and when you listen to him talking is like a grandfather telling a story to his grandchild. Cheers from Argentina, Doug. ;)

    • @prickyX
      @prickyX 2 года назад

      You can listen to Jon with Rick Beato on RUclips.

    • @johannsebastianb4ss
      @johannsebastianb4ss 2 года назад +1

      @@prickyX That's why I think Doug should try to contact with Jon and bring him to the channel. After the interview with Rick Beato, I think a video "Jon-Doug" would be amazing for all of us ;)

  • @mwhitehead1461
    @mwhitehead1461 Год назад +2

    RIP Chuckie, your favorite song by Yes. A hero on 9/11/2001.

  • @pmar27
    @pmar27 2 года назад +1

    When Doug says "Y'all" you know something special is happening. I've enjoyed this Yes Fragile journey with you!

  • @Biden_Cult_Morons
    @Biden_Cult_Morons 2 года назад +4

    Their is a God! I asked Doug to do a reaction for this song a few months back. Thank you sir!! 🎵🎼🎶🎹

  • @smilerpink
    @smilerpink 2 года назад +4

    Did a lot of distance running years ago. This prog classic was on the playlist. Running early in the morning into "the heart of the sunrise."

  • @Dd8505
    @Dd8505 2 года назад

    Awesome reaction Sir, really enjoyed.

  • @richardeast939
    @richardeast939 2 года назад +1

    Been listening to Yes for over 40 years and this song stills hits me the way it did when I first heard it. Absolutely magnificent.

  • @mrmusic248
    @mrmusic248 2 года назад +20

    Anyone for some killer bass ??
    I saw this played several times over the years, and was never disappointed.
    THAT BASS and Wakeman's mellotron are the key ingredients here.

  • @emartc1
    @emartc1 2 года назад +3

    The song is wonderful, the playing is perfect, the singing is amazing, and Bill Bruford is out of this world.

  • @tommathews3964
    @tommathews3964 2 года назад +2

    I can vividly remember this album, coming on the heels of the excellent Yes Album, and just being totally blown away by it! I just ate that material up in huge quantities, and still listen often! I wondered, "what next?" and didn't have to wait long to find out......."Close to The Edge" and the tour, which I was lucky enough to see two shows on, and I haven't been the same since! (The Tuscaloosa AL show opening act was a little known country rock band called "The Eagles")

  • @anneshirley1748
    @anneshirley1748 2 года назад +1

    This is my favourite of all time!! I have always and always will love this track! Wonderful!! 😘👍

  • @tazyou11
    @tazyou11 2 года назад +3

    I would love if you reacted to Yes's Onward from the Tormato album, such a beautiful song. Also The Ladder album is amazing, listening to it again. Every song a winner!

  • @singerofsongs468
    @singerofsongs468 2 года назад +12

    Chris Squire is the heart and Jon Anderson is the sunrise. I know the lyrics don’t give away that much information but I stand by my interpretation. :)
    I love when you mention what makes the vocalists you react to so wonderful. I strain to imitate Jon’s voice when singing along in my car - I’m a chorally-trained soprano so it’s not the best match, to be fair - but as a result I’m always thinking about how unique and interesting his voice is. How he sings with the range of the best broadway belter you’ve ever heard, but how his tone is soft and delicate and brightens up the entire composition. It’s really inspiring!

  • @Relayer56
    @Relayer56 2 года назад

    You could rightfully expound on the excellence of performances of every instrument on this track - voice, guitar, drums, keyboards, bass - and be fully justified. Just a great and immensely underappreciated piece.

  • @bobgross8761
    @bobgross8761 2 года назад +2

    Great stuff! Live versions of this song take on added power and emotion, especially in Jon's softer vocals. I saw them with Bruford on drums, and he's a real treat to watch, too. What a band! What a record! Fragile came out in my Junior year of high school. This record and Close to the Edge forever changed my listening habits. I am in Yes' debt. Thanks for the great reaction, Doug!

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +1

      Same here Bob, Fragile and ELPs first album changed my musical tastes forever - I owe a friend of my older sister a debt of gratitude for allowing us to borrow them back in the day.

  • @salsalzman2325
    @salsalzman2325 2 года назад +26

    I've got the '71 vinyl, and We Have Heaven reprise is on it. And of course the door slaming shut followed by it opening is a clear almost comedic metaphor.
    Funny thing, there's a lot of disagreement in WHH- I've always enjoyed it and it foreshadows Jon's first solo album, "Olias of Sunhillow." But that's another story...

    • @fathervideo454
      @fathervideo454 2 года назад +7

      Didn’t know there was a version WITHOUT the reprise. I wore that 71 vinyl out.

    • @jpirard
      @jpirard 2 года назад +3

      @@fathervideo454 on Yes compilations the REPRISE was removed as it is really not part of the song. Also on certain re-issues.

    • @Magnetron33
      @Magnetron33 2 года назад

      @@fathervideo454 I, too am on copy 2

    • @jms-po7tn
      @jms-po7tn 2 года назад +3

      If Doug does Olias of Sunhillow, he's going to need a bigger pipe. And candles. Incense. . .

    • @salsalzman2325
      @salsalzman2325 2 года назад

      @@jms-po7tn I think Olias is an incredible success considering Jon was barely able to pick up an instrument, he tried to do something incredibly ambitious and for the most part got it done. Done. I love the fact that at the time it was released it had as many instrumental tracks as the entire Yes catalog!

  • @guitarchannel5676
    @guitarchannel5676 2 года назад +3

    Very impressive song, i notice new things with each listen. I'm still amazed at how they managed to arrange such disparate sections into a cohesive unified piece. They really handled the transitions well, such as the brief bass/piano fragment that proceeds howe's soft guitar arpeggios - played in original key then transposed up right before Jon enters. (Did Steve and Jon write this vocal-guitar duet as a separate song? Did Steve happen to notice those arpeggios transposed effectively? Or did they simply deem it necessary to move to a new key to for variety?)
    I also appreciate how they reinsert the pentatonic material from the opening as reoccurring 'interruptions' to new material (i.e. synth, bass, and drum syncopated flurries) which might otherwise sound out-of-place after the slow vocal section. (Bil bruford really enables this with smooth shifts.) The short guitar solo then acts as transitional material and gives way to rick's piano which acts as outro and intro (transitional) to the new vocal section. They eventually 'bandify' these piano breaks before last vocal section, which really works!
    Rick's playing and strategic use of various keyboards - heavy organ, synth wiggle-waggles, soft piano, and Mellotron soundscapes - is how a skilled musician works with multiple keyboards. Not just senseless over-use of synthesizers, as typically happens now.
    So a lot of interesting things going on with this song. I'm not sure many bands would be able arrange this song without it sounding like a series of unrelated parts.

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад +1

      If you haven't got the 5.1 mix of Fragile - it's a must. The separation of instruments bring out absolutely everything.

    • @guitarchannel5676
      @guitarchannel5676 2 года назад

      I'm not really a CD person, never have been. I have a near mint US Atlantic that sounds excellent. (I can hear every instrument loud and clear.) My point about hearing new things with each listen was not regarding particular instruments; rather, it was regarding the arrangement of the different sections, reoccurring sections that change roles, shifts in dynamics, etc.

  • @andrewpatrick4254
    @andrewpatrick4254 2 года назад

    Shocked and delighted by your toke!

  • @mybachhertzbaud3074
    @mybachhertzbaud3074 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for taking a toke for this to bring me back to an actual Yes concert!😜

  • @giuseppeagresta1425
    @giuseppeagresta1425 2 года назад +6

    What a beautiful song from a fantastic album 👀
    Maybe the first prog one I've ever listened to (fun fact: I discovered Yes thanks to Jojo)

  • @michaelschey1084
    @michaelschey1084 2 года назад +6

    Fragile and Close To The Edge are one of the best 1-2 punches of album releases of all time.

    • @benjaminroe311ify
      @benjaminroe311ify Год назад

      So true. I just listened to them both back to back like that the other day. Incredible. It's really like a perfect 1-2 punch combo. Fragile affects you deeply and then Close to the Edge comes and knocks you out cold. Incredible albums...

  • @andrewpatrick4254
    @andrewpatrick4254 2 года назад +1

    Your post-toke analysis is hilarious and awesome.

  • @User_vjp_92753
    @User_vjp_92753 2 года назад

    Loved your reaction to this ! I remember decades ago listening to this while my younger brother and I listened to Fragile over and over while we were decorating the Christmas Tree! He had a great taste in music. Little bro left me at the age of 24, and I inherited all of his LP's. Just found your channel when I was on a Kansas Revival ! Have you reacted to Kansas "Cheyenne Anthem?" My fave is Magnum Opus, and that's the first one I viewed. Will have to go back and look! Thanks for these, I also love Classical, older bro was Manager of The Winston-Salem (NC) Symphony, so I got broken in on "1812 Overture," so my favorite is Tchaikovsky

  • @lionelgibaudan3592
    @lionelgibaudan3592 2 года назад +5

    The story tells that in the very early '70s, Chris Squire shared a flat in London wih Greg Lake and that he was impressed by the Greg's riff on 21th Century Schizoid man (King Crimson) and that inspired him when creating the bass intro riff of heart of the sunrise...
    The song played live has many interesting variations on the bass solo section

    • @martynlester9869
      @martynlester9869 2 года назад +1

      Some would argue that Court of the Crimson King was the first fully gestated 'progressive' recording. Sure, there were precursor elements in early Pink Floyd and elsewhere, but the album did feel like a game-changer to many of us. Doug does seem to be working back towards the roots of the prog that he so often analyses, and Crimson King would be a logical work to focus on soon. Pink Floyd's Interstellar Overdrive (even earlier, but packaged in the very eclectic Piper at the Gates of Dawn) might also be a 'mind-blower'.

    • @dpstrial
      @dpstrial 2 года назад +1

      @@martynlester9869 Syd Barrett to me is the seminal force of prog rock.

    • @martynlester9869
      @martynlester9869 2 года назад +1

      @@dpstrial Piper at the Gates was the first LP that I bought. Second-hand, and not until 68, I don't think. Vinyl, of course. The mono edition (much more painstakingly mixed than the stereo). I think I haggled the price down to four shillings.
      I can't guess if you are old enough to remember 67/68, but 'progressive' wasn't even a term back then. Many of us called music that far removed from the pop charts 'underground'.
      Out of many hundreds, Piper is probably the album I would least happily be parted from. So I'm not knocking it in the slightest. I'm just saying that it's an odd mixture of boundary-breaking rock and nursery rhyme whimsy.
      Was Syd's work 'seminal'? Absolutely. For a man who recorded so few songs, his influence was immense. Were any of his albums classifiable as 'prog'? There I'm not so sure.

    • @dpstrial
      @dpstrial 2 года назад +1

      @@martynlester9869 I bought Piper in the mid-seventies, after I got the compilation album Relics. Relics is my favourite Floyd album by far.
      Syd Barrett's work was, as you say, whimsical and psychedelic, otherwise known as acid-rock.
      "Prog rock" was probably the rebranded term for "underground", when it became more popular in the early seventies with the advent of ELP, Genesis and Yes.

    • @martynlester9869
      @martynlester9869 2 года назад +1

      @@dpstrial Despite its rather dismissive title and an original price that was barely more than that of a seven-inch single, Relics was a splendid collection.

  • @stanjohnson5767
    @stanjohnson5767 Год назад +3

    'Filthy' is such a great way to describe Chris's bass sound. I also think 'nasty' works too. I think if you could capture the energy in this song you could power a city. Jon's voice is so very beautiful in HOTS... just so perfect. Thanks for including this song!

    • @gerrylundergaard60
      @gerrylundergaard60 Год назад +1

      I always thought the world gravely describes that awesome bass play.

    • @benjaminroe311ify
      @benjaminroe311ify Год назад +1

      @@gerrylundergaard60 I agree... Filthy is what you beocme if you down and dirty in a grave though. So Filthy works. Nasty is kind of ok... not LOW enough for a bass descriptor haha.

  • @Wisfid
    @Wisfid 2 года назад +2

    Tremendous and timely pipe shot, Doug!!

  • @garinwebb
    @garinwebb 2 года назад +1

    Doug, you give the most insightful and intelligent reactions of all who do these types of videos. I am so relieved and appreciative of the fact that you understand that Anderson's lyrics are absolutely metaphorical and personal. In fact, I get offended when I hear people describe his lyrics as 'word salad.' They are 'impressionistic' like Mallarmè's poems. Yes produced some of the most beautiful, clever and meaningful music - IN ALL CATEGORIES - of the 20th century imo. I'd love to hear your take on "The Remembering" from Tales. My favorite cut on that album. Also "Turn of the Century" from Going For the One and "To Be Over" from Relayer. Keep at it maestro.

  • @TheMjm55
    @TheMjm55 2 года назад +6

    Try going directly to YESSONGS and hearing them play it live. Astonishing.

    • @gebyrnes
      @gebyrnes 2 года назад +1

      Right, Yessongs showcased Yes at their pinnacle.

  • @twelveeighteenofficial7487
    @twelveeighteenofficial7487 2 года назад +4

    I bought my first copy of Fragile at age 18 (1991), when I was super into vinyl and just starting to get interested in large-scale compositions and progressive music more generally. To me, "We Have Heaven" came off like this singing minstrel troupe dancing through a town, making a terrific racket. At the end of the piece, someone manages to slam the door on them to restore order in the studio so they can get back to work. And, finally, after the last notes of "Heart of the Sunrise", the door bursts back open and in once again they dance.

    • @ConceptJunkie
      @ConceptJunkie 2 года назад +1

      I bought "Fragile" when I was 17 in '82. I think I'd bought a greatest hits first, since I really didn't know anything about Yes. It was the one that came with the 7-incher that had a couple of live tracks. But "Fragile" was my first actual Yes album. Within a few months I had all of their releases. I was also discovering Genesis in the same year.

    • @twelveeighteenofficial7487
      @twelveeighteenofficial7487 2 года назад

      @@ConceptJunkie I was already turned off to Genesis by the time I was a teenager thanks to "Invisible Touch" and "I can't dance" and shit like that. It wasn't until years later that I found out how cool their 70's stuff was.

  • @dmatveev89
    @dmatveev89 2 года назад +1

    Oh this is a long awaited one

  • @jabehauber
    @jabehauber 2 года назад +2

    Dude. Doug, you must do a reaction to the entire Yessongs live album. It takes all of these studio works and elevates them to a higher plain. Just thinking that they could recreate these compositions live is mindblowing; hearing that they can add even more is interdimensional.

  • @DavidLazarus
    @DavidLazarus 2 года назад +3

    Doug - I'm sure others have said it, but as absolutely mind blowing as the studio version is, listening to live versions of Heart of the Sunrise is a must! Chris really plays to the audience on the bass intro! It's fabulous!

    • @steveunderwood3683
      @steveunderwood3683 2 года назад

      The album version is quite restrained. The version on Yessongs is really in your face.

    • @DavidLazarus
      @DavidLazarus 2 года назад

      @@steveunderwood3683 - Well, Alan played drums on Yessongs for the most part. But Bill's drumming on the studio version is phenomenal. He rarely plays the same beat twice. That's what differentiates the studio version from any live version: save for that played by ABWH.

  • @ejozl
    @ejozl 2 года назад +3

    This is pretty much my favourite song, the live version somehow is just as good, if not better. Ty for covering this Doug.
    You probably have so many suggestions lined up, but two albums I would love for you to cover are Gentle Giant - Knots, and Khan - Space Shanty.

  • @k.h.5520
    @k.h.5520 2 года назад

    Greetings from Cornwall, just stumbled over your channel & Love the way you deconstruct and stitch together the music with the audience ,must say I'm now firmly subscribed..
    Yes are a great band ,John Anderson's voice is unique..
    Would be interested on your thoughts on king Crimsons Epitaph ,from In the court of the crimson king ,by way of a tribute to Ian mcdonald, latterly of Foreigner,who we very recently lost ..
    .Great work Doug,keep it up.👍

  • @ryanframe1134
    @ryanframe1134 2 года назад

    Another great Yes song choice, beautiful song.Top notch vocals and musicianship as always.

  • @Liz.Green789
    @Liz.Green789 2 года назад +3

    Fragile is one of my favorite albums. It's nearly perfect. Chris Squire is one of the best bass players.
    A high school marching band used part of Heart of the Sunrise as a wonderful part of their show many years ago. The melody was played by a solo oboe. It was lovely.
    Beautiful work. Great music.

    • @peteh7966
      @peteh7966 2 года назад

      NEARLY??????

    • @benjaminroe311ify
      @benjaminroe311ify Год назад

      Fragile IS perfect... Then Close to the Edge is Perfect+1 haha... Both albums are Masterpieces!

  • @rubicon-oh9km
    @rubicon-oh9km 2 года назад +3

    Too many amazing Yes moments to count but this might be their finest moment for my money.

  • @glennb8251
    @glennb8251 2 года назад +1

    I am remembering the emotions this track shook my world with back in the day ...when this was all new and fresh. I anticipated every day's bounty of musical transcendence! thank you for sharing

  • @kevinlochner941
    @kevinlochner941 5 месяцев назад +1

    Doug, I really like your reviews, especially the 70s prog rock bands, Yes, and Genesis. I've been a fan of Yes since I was a kid in '72.
    Thanks!