Yes - The Story of Drama (and the '79 Paris Sessions) Documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024
  • An in-depth look at the ill-fated 1979 Paris recordings by Yes and their subsequent Drama album. This video also discusses the XYZ project with Jimmy Page and other Trevor Horn productions.
    After researching / writing the script, I then set about hours and hours of sourcing and individually cleaning up / colourising photos, all of which have to be re-made to fit the aspect ratio of this screen. It's a slow, manual and tedious task. After recording my voice I then weave the sounds in and out of it, this is the fun part were the general shape of the video comes to life. Finally, I glue it all together, which, on my computer, is a real slog. The software glitches constantly under the sheer strain and it takes an age with software that I am basically learning as I use.
    The reward is seeing the comments roll in and knowing that the video will bring so much pleasure to people. I suspect one day this channel will be wiped by the copyright bots but until then I'll continue to make them, perhaps on different (and even - shock - NON PROG!!!) bands.

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @robjordan2506
    @robjordan2506 Год назад +246

    My 17-year old self saw them on this tour, front row. I camped in front of the ticket office at Notre Dame U. for 3 days to get those seats. I had no idea that Anderson was not on the tour and was disappointed when I saw TH singing, wearing a short brown jacket that had HOLLYWOOD written across the back in sequins. It didn't seem very ''Yes-like.'' However, the concert was musically brilliant even without him. I had the good fortune to meet Steve and Chris after the show and was given a ride home in their limo after I jumped a barricade to get Steve the posters (Studebaker Museum) that he had left behind after signing autographs for fans. They asked me what other music I listened to and we talked about Rush and King Crimson. I could barely breathe in their presence and couldn't believe my good fortune. What a thrill.

    • @BrunoniTube
      @BrunoniTube Год назад +6

      Indeed!

    • @sternzbt
      @sternzbt Год назад +13

      What a great experience for you. I had a very similar thing happen to me when I met Peter Gabriel

    • @ednewton4455
      @ednewton4455 Год назад +7

      What an incredible experience/memory 👏

    • @papadopp3870
      @papadopp3870 Год назад +11

      Cool memory, Rob!!! Was that in Indiana in America?
      During the 90s “Union” tour, I met Rick and Jon when I was thirty-five. I had the same reaction! Fortunately, Rick fixed me a nice drink. Way nice. He became me best mate right away. We mocked John about his pronunciation of the word “idea”, then realized I did, too. I felt bad the next day… not for the mockery of my favourite vocalist, but because of Rick’s nice drinks! That, and we had to drive 425 miles for a gig that day. It was well worth it!!! Haven’t heard from me mate since, tho!

    • @missingremote4388
      @missingremote4388 Год назад +2

      Amazing stories
      I went to and saw Yes 90125 in 1983 .
      Probably when I became a fan. But I was more into the Who's style R&B or ledzeppelin
      ☆ shout-out to Gary Newman in the white corvette

  • @paulweiss3818
    @paulweiss3818 Год назад +326

    Honestly, Drama is one of my favorite Yes albums. I never understood why so many fans wouldn't accept it as a true Yes album.

    • @kuttycrew
      @kuttycrew Год назад +10

      Agreed, my favorite to play drums to.

    • @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849
      @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849 Год назад +29

      Drama *is* my favorite Yes album. I don't accept Yes fans that don't accept Drama. Same with Genesis fans that don't accept A Trick Of the Tail and Wind and Wuthering. They cease to exist in my worldview.

    • @paulnolan4971
      @paulnolan4971 Год назад +4

      @@russellszabadosaka5-pindin849 I feel the same about them and Floyd very especially

    • @kuttycrew
      @kuttycrew Год назад +11

      @@russellszabadosaka5-pindin849 yes, but do you accept calling all stations?

    • @warptek
      @warptek Год назад +9

      Paradoxically they don't accept because of the absence of Jon Anderson yet, if Jon had been let in on these sessions it would have been a completely different record entirely.

  • @LoneLee2022
    @LoneLee2022 Год назад +72

    Drama is one of my favorite YES albums. The music is incredible.

  • @timmee6937
    @timmee6937 Год назад +153

    Drama has always been my favorite Yes album. Its futuristic, almost extraterrestrial soundscape, is deeply hypnotic. Trevor's production is absolutely flawless and packs a smooth sonic punch. Forty two years have gone by yet it's still as fresh as ever.

    • @roboneil408
      @roboneil408 Год назад +6

      I have to agree with you. I'm 57 years old and have listened to an extreme amount of music throughout my life. However, YES has always been my mainstay and my favorite overall. And mind you, I like many different genres of music.

    • @josephbenesch4220
      @josephbenesch4220 Год назад +1

      Today agree !!! Fav by far

    • @jamesbyers6720
      @jamesbyers6720 Год назад

      22 years

    • @jamesbyers6720
      @jamesbyers6720 Год назад +4

      I couldn't agree more. 42 years, 22 years, 12 years, yesterday. The songs are ageless, yet they define an age of the band.

    • @Acujeremy
      @Acujeremy Год назад +5

      Something is wrong with people that think Drama is the best Yes album. Sorry, but that is just absurd!

  • @progessiverockstories
    @progessiverockstories  Год назад +181

    How I make these videos:
    After researching / writing the script, I then set about hours and hours of sourcing and individually cleaning up / colourising photos, all of which have to be re-made to fit the aspect ratio of this screen. It's a slow, manual and tedious task. After recording my voice I then weave the sounds in and out of it, this is the fun part where magic happens and the story starts to tell itself. Finally, I glue it all together, which, on my computer, is a real slog. The software glitches constantly under the sheer strain and it takes an age with software that I am basically learning as I use.
    The reward is seeing the comments roll in and knowing that the video will bring so much pleasure to people. I suspect one day this channel will be wiped by the copyright bots but until then I'll continue to make them, perhaps on different (and even - shock - NON PROG!!!) bands.
    Enjoy Droogs....

    • @kevhead1525
      @kevhead1525 Год назад +3

      I will, little Alex. 😄

    • @TheProgCorner
      @TheProgCorner Год назад +3

      Thanks for all you are doing for the Prog community!!! 👍❤️🤘

    • @Originalspruce
      @Originalspruce Год назад +1

      Thank you so much for dedicated and creative efforts. They are truly appreciated

    • @gordonlandreth9550
      @gordonlandreth9550 Год назад +1

      Rock history from the late 60's to about the early 80's is definitely fascinating , because that was when most of the greatest music was produced . Enjoy all of your documentaries !

    • @mattmarkus4868
      @mattmarkus4868 Год назад +1

      why is jon anderson singing annoying vocals like that of a leprechaun in my ears during the studio scenes where they are speaking?

  • @loftlegacy
    @loftlegacy Год назад +114

    The 79 sessions sound really tired. It was accidental genius that Buggles were stitched into Yes. The resulting album is 100% a Yes album and stood the test of time.
    The production of the album is the sharpest and crispest the band has done.
    The hangover from the album laid the foundations for the mega-success of 90125.
    Another amazing documentary (with welcoming narration local to me!)

    • @raymondhartmeijer9300
      @raymondhartmeijer9300 Год назад +11

      I agree and also with the documentary. The Paris sessions do sound as if they're tired and running out of good ideas.. It sounds like they were making a Jon Anderson solo record. They lacked an edge and a drama in the music.
      Messiah, Does it really happen, Tempus F all had that rocking quality that the band needed, even if that ment they had to go ahead without Anderson

    • @220773
      @220773 Год назад +3

      The Paris sessions were typically Yes, this album is so un-Yes, we've finally got to take this and accept it. 'Drama' will remain an unfinished project and their best album. As you can clearly see, I'm not a Yes lover at all, so take me for what I am, I'm not trying to be in tune with you fans so I know I'll probably upset some of yous.

    • @hpatss4966
      @hpatss4966 Год назад +11

      @@220773 bro you might as well just say “I want attention”

    • @johng2880
      @johng2880 Год назад +7

      It's usually trouble if you can understand Jon's lyrics clearly.

    • @220773
      @220773 Год назад +2

      @@hpatss4966 That's what you like to think.
      I simply speak my heart out, for me myself first and for those who might connect with it. All the rest doesn't bother me at all, I know many people might disagree, not a problem.
      So there you go, lad.

  • @winstontk
    @winstontk Год назад +84

    This documentary is absolutely ASTONISHING!! So incredibly well done. I totally agree with so much of the commentary as well. What a fascinating era for this incredible band. Congratulations, sir, on producing such a fine piece of work for us all to enjoy.

  • @MurfTunes
    @MurfTunes Год назад +33

    Thank you for this doc. I was able to interview Steve Howe several years ago on my radio show. I told him Drama was my favorite Yes album. He said he had great affection for the project.

    • @aeropilot4419
      @aeropilot4419 Год назад +6

      The last of Howe’s peak creative period is on Drama, imho

    • @darkcharles7472
      @darkcharles7472 Год назад +1

      @@aeropilot4419 Thats 100%. He never played with that intensity and power again. Shame.

    • @monicadonnelly4991
      @monicadonnelly4991 Год назад

      @@aeropilot4419
      What happened to him after that

    • @autk
      @autk 5 месяцев назад

      After Drama and Asia, Howe went lounge with his sound and style, killed my heart

    • @autk
      @autk 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@darkcharles7472 Facts

  • @dbaytug
    @dbaytug Год назад +18

    The reprise in Does it Really Happen? Is one of the stand out moments of the album and Squire's work. It is stunning.

  • @jonesy2111
    @jonesy2111 Год назад +17

    I don't care what anyone says (including Yes purists and fans) Drama is the bands masterpiece and I have bought it on several formats over the years and unlike some of their albums Drama still sounds so fresh and powerful.

    • @mihali9655
      @mihali9655 4 месяца назад

      I agree totally. All killer no filler.

    • @charlesnolan7602
      @charlesnolan7602 2 месяца назад

      Excellent album, after 44 years, I still play it regularly

  • @3243_
    @3243_ Год назад +64

    Downes' metallic/glassy B3 chords and Squire's flanged bass on "Tempus Fugit" are among the band's greatest moments.

    • @gordonlandreth9550
      @gordonlandreth9550 Год назад +4

      Totally agree , right - the bass put through a flanger . A cool organ sound , and one of the hottest arrangements ever by Yes .

    • @ArtB414
      @ArtB414 Год назад +5

      Squire owned a bass guitar which had a flanger system unit build in. He used that in couple Yes songs. It was very distinctive. You couldn't miss it.

    • @johnsharp71
      @johnsharp71 Год назад +4

      It was a Hammond J122, so far as I am aware; he didn't have a B3 until he bought my old one, previously owned by Ken Hensley, prior to the second Asia album. It can be viewed in all its tubular steel legged glory on the Asia in Asia video although, frankly, it sounds awful!

    • @3243_
      @3243_ Год назад +1

      Well, it sounded great on "Tempus Fugit". :)

    • @3243_
      @3243_ Год назад

      And thank you for the correction/elucidation.

  • @jprph1
    @jprph1 Год назад +41

    This was an absolute delight to watch. I consider myself a pretty big Yes fan, but many of the historical points that were covered in this documentary I had never known about. I appreciate all the time and effort put forth to produce this and I subscribed to the channel and I’m looking forward to reviewing the rest of the content by this creator. Congratulations on a job well done!🎉❤

  • @davethomas6337
    @davethomas6337 Год назад +19

    1980, a 16 year old wanted to give trial to a band he never heard of, but where to begin? I tried the latest album. From first note to end note I was frozen in amazement with each instrument BUSY and so well orchestrated!!! This quickly became my daily practise album with guitar & bass, along with Rush & Pink Floyd. Howe’s playing style appeared to be a prelude to Asia music. To this day I crank up Drama, so as to send me to bed full of incredible music in my mind- note for note with each instrument. Thank you Drama Crew- Howe, Squire, White, Downes & Horn

    • @giovannigalvagno6968
      @giovannigalvagno6968 4 месяца назад

      I share the same story, with the difference that I was 12 and not 16 and I asked my aunt the LP Drama as a present for Christmas. From then on Yes were always in my life and built a sort of Soundtrack to it!

  • @caramanico1
    @caramanico1 Год назад +36

    While I loved The Yes Album through Going For The One, I wasn't stuck on holding them to that sound/feel. When Drama came out it instantly became one of my top couple of fave Yes albums. One of the most underrated albums ever.

    • @BKastrosky
      @BKastrosky Год назад +1

      Right, Close to the Edge sucks! And that singer with high pitched voice - how great that he didn't sing on that brilliant album!

    • @guitarpedaldemos9121
      @guitarpedaldemos9121 Год назад

      I liked Drama

    • @jtoms3
      @jtoms3 Год назад

      @@BKastrosky Okay, I'll admit it: I can't tell if you're being sarcastic or sincere.

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose Год назад

      Yeah, it's not a bad album at all - just different! (must have seemed very confusing to fans at the time though, because Anderson and Wakeman had come to be seen as essential elements of the band). It will have helped that Trevor Horn was not just a superb producer, but also a big and long-term fan of Yes - something that wasn't true of most young bands during those years! Horn is on record saying that seeing Yes (with Patrick Moraz on keys) during the Relayer tour in 1975 (probably the London Queen 's Park gig, which was filmed by the BBC and has been released on dvd since) was one of the most powerful and moving shows he went to during the entire 1970s, and I understand him - I too LOVE Relayer and its particular sound, that album was far ahead of its time and a musical triumph. :)

  • @dreamscuba
    @dreamscuba Год назад +8

    Drama is one of my favourite Yes albums. I love the energy and riffs... it's classic. Thanks for the documentary.

  • @GraachAhim
    @GraachAhim Год назад +25

    Some albums from exactely the same era were also ill-received at the time, but as the years-decades passed most people came to understand them and recognize them as the true mastepieces they were. I'm talking about Genesis' Duke and Zeppelin's In Through The Outdoor.

  • @major9991
    @major9991 Год назад +15

    There are many great albums by Yes, Fragile , Close to the edge are on top for me. Then Drama is next, its fresh and dynamic throughout the album. I saw Yes touring the "Drama" album. Such a great concert!

  • @TomHolliday9
    @TomHolliday9 Год назад +11

    Great take on this period of Yes' history! Thanks for posting this. Really enjoyed it. Drama has always ranked pretty high in their catalog for me..

  • @brianostube
    @brianostube Год назад +13

    Extremely well done! I hadn't seen many of these photos before - great research & production to pull this all together!

  • @mathames4679
    @mathames4679 Год назад +16

    Fantastic, well done. All of your hard work on the audio and visuals is worthwhile.

  • @allenbrooksoffical
    @allenbrooksoffical Год назад +7

    I received this album as a Christmas gift when it was released... I was just a kid but knew of Yes from roundabout. This record had a huge impact on me. It's very unique! Love this record.....

  • @stevelanemusic4463
    @stevelanemusic4463 Год назад +13

    I'm only a 1/4th of the way in, and I can already say this is brilliant, yet again. Fantastic content brother, as always...

  • @rhoadnaroahs
    @rhoadnaroahs Год назад +6

    I didn't discover this album until 1986. Being a huge Yes, Asia and Buggles fan, I somehow found out that Geoff and Trevor were on Drama and bought it immediately. Loved it since then!

  • @mpRamosgroove
    @mpRamosgroove Год назад +5

    Great job on this documentary. It really struck me when you compared Drama to The Yes Album because they are my favorite two albums by YES.

  • @ElCrusherDeCraneos
    @ElCrusherDeCraneos Год назад +7

    I have to tell you as a Rush fan early on when my good friend turned me on to Yes (he wasn't into Rush) I loved their music but Drama quickly became my all time favorite recording from the band. It is still in my regular rotation of music to play in my car and phone. It's as timeless as ever! Also, I'm a huge Buggles fan and I thank you for making this informative documentary as I've often wondered how the album came to be! Kudos to you!!!

  • @gabesvidz
    @gabesvidz Год назад +6

    Love Drama. It brought a 3rd dimension to Yes and gave them a much needed punch that really kicked ass & modernized them at a changing time in rock.
    Excellent rockumentary.

  • @antfactor
    @antfactor Год назад +6

    First rock concert I ever saw - at 14 years old. It blew me away! And the Fairlight never lost my imagination. Kudos to Horn and Downes for breathing new sonic vistas into the Yes vocabulary... 🙏

  • @skeezix64
    @skeezix64 Год назад +16

    Fantastic “documentary?” In 1980 I was 16 and a fanatical Yes fan. Seeing this tour in the round in LA in the 5th row, was such a thrill. Of course I was somewhat devastated not to have Rick and Jon up there on the stage, but Steve Chris and Alan were three of my heroes. Seems so long ago and yet remains so vivid. And I still love Drama. Always will.

    • @tragus44
      @tragus44 Год назад

      same here same age also was a yes fanatic

    • @gabesvidz
      @gabesvidz Год назад

      I also was at the sports arena for that tour but was 18.

  • @2LegsAPaulMcCartneyPodcast
    @2LegsAPaulMcCartneyPodcast Год назад +6

    Knocked it out of the park again! Thank you! Please keep doing more Yes albums!

  • @TheSteveSteele
    @TheSteveSteele Год назад +8

    Excellent commentary! I’ve always liked Drama. In fact, after the early albums with Bruford, and Relayer, Drama sits solidly after those. I now remember the Page and Squire attempt. I’d forgotten about that.

  • @davidbutler8096
    @davidbutler8096 7 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you for another fantastically researched and delivered video.
    YES is the band I've seen the most times live, and it's a shame that Jon and Steve can't bury the hatchet and give us longtime fans one last tour.
    Drama was a turning point for a lot of the old school fans, but I, like the majority here, liked it...a lot.
    Trevor Horn hit it out of the park with his involvement with FGTH and Welcome to the Pleasuredome, which I think is the best track...with a cameo from Steve.

  • @Justin_Kipper
    @Justin_Kipper Год назад +4

    Saw the band on the Drama tour in Tulsa. Wasn't sure what to make of it or the album itself at the time. But over the years, I've come to appreciate how good the album is, and it's probably what Yes needed to do at that point. It's an essential and important part of the long and somewhat mysterious musical road that Yes traveled, some of which we'll never know the full story behind...but we have the most important part of the story: the music itself.
    Great video, your work in making these is much appreciated!

  • @lordybomb
    @lordybomb Год назад +5

    It's absolutely worth it- all you've been doing... I learn so much and hear so many things that are new... just saying thank you.

  • @markwdixon
    @markwdixon Год назад +3

    Thank you! Really enjoyed this video. I'm a long time Yes fan who was very surprised to find that I loved Drama when it came out. Still sounds great today. Cheers!

  • @kevhead1525
    @kevhead1525 Год назад +6

    The new wave Yes album. Looking forward to this.

  • @tommonk7651
    @tommonk7651 Год назад +7

    Drama came out when I was in college, and I had the album. I always liked it quite a bit.

  • @barrykimber
    @barrykimber Год назад +14

    Agree totally that this is one Yes album that doesn't seem to sound dated. I can recall the hostility from many fans to the idea of 'plastic pop' in the form of Buggles teaming up with the remants of Yes, but it actually worked....i loved this album & saw them on the UK leg of the Drama tour and they were excellent, a real shame they didn't go on to do more together

    • @nelmquist
      @nelmquist Год назад +3

      Agreed. Never would expect Yes+Buggles to mix, but the key factor is talent. Trevor Horn is a brilliant music mind.

    • @jefflofgren5304
      @jefflofgren5304 Год назад +1

      All 5 of the same musicians regrouped for the Yes album "Fly From Here-Return Trip" something like 30 years later!

  • @lesimprosdulezardvert1342
    @lesimprosdulezardvert1342 Год назад +49

    I always thought that "Drama" was the nervous point between Chris Squire and Jon Anderson. Yes made their music revolution, and they needed it too, without Jon Anderson. He came back when all the work was done for "90125", but the acrymony still lives when Anderson tried to get back the direction of the band. And we know the story, Big Generator, ABWH, Union, Talk, and after, get back to the original Yes with Keys to Ascension.
    It can explain why Chris Squire got rid of Jon Anderson in 2008 (?) But as a fan, I deplore the loss of Jon Anderson's voice.
    The current Yes is just a shame

    • @charleshemphill6923
      @charleshemphill6923 Год назад +3

      Im just happy to have seen Steve play

    • @Jeff-o-Lee
      @Jeff-o-Lee Год назад +6

      I agree. The current YES is a shame. After the 2004 tour, Jon wanted a break. Then he got sick. So, in 2008, the guys told Wakeman that they are moving on. Wakeman wanted no part of YES. Supposedly Jon & Chris reached out to each other of a possible future but, Chris passed.
      Jon said on Rick Beato's channel that Steve was dodging him during the '17 R&R Hall of Fame. Geddy Lee said there was a schism between ARW & Yes during the rehearsals. So, it's best Rick & Wakeman moved on. Without Chris & even Alan, it's not Yes

    • @nickmonks9563
      @nickmonks9563 Год назад +6

      @@Jeff-o-Lee "Without Chris & even Alan, it's not Yes." I think it can be, though...these just aren't the musicians to capture the spirit of what Yes is. Yes isn't a sound...it's more like a philosophy of music making. There is a "something" underneath everything that defines them - an "X" factor if you will beyond just big, tight, high harmonies, rhythmic creativity, dream-like lyrics and expansive melodies and solos...there's an energy that underlies the band's best work, and I believe the right musicians could find it. Unfortunately, I feel like the current band is more of facsimile of Yes' components than the keeper of the flame that truly defines the band.

    • @garyevans3051
      @garyevans3051 Год назад

      As a life long Yes fan i say go to hell Steve Howe. Yes is not Yes without Jon Anderson.

    • @220773
      @220773 Год назад +4

      Not being a Yes fan but a Genesis one indeed I do think this will hurt you quite a lot but, man, I still think Yes' main problem has always been Steve Howe. Not Chris, not Jon.
      Steve Howe, to me one of the most overrated guitar players ever. Multiple licks everywhere, constantly playing and fitting in any bit of any song, getting sometimes lost in what he's doing and even (ever noticed?) missing some notes and mistaking them. He fared much better on classic and acoustic guitars.
      He did all that in Yes and while on 'The Yes Album' someone must have told him to play WITH the band and not as a soloist, what he was left free to do in the subsequent albums is such a shame. I can't get why Rick Wakeman could stand all this, he was constantly overshadowed by Howe. Jon Anderson seemed to like it, after all he also tends to build music non-stop losing himself into it... what Yes lacked was (as Rael here says) 'precision and control'. They never knew when it was time to stop it and turn pages... strangely enough, they succeded in doing that only on 'Tales', in my opinion, there are many more silent and sweet moments in those tunes, unlike what usually happened in Yes. When you hear this band you can lose your breath, not because it's breathtaking but simply because you just can't breathe all through this mess!!! 'Tormato' is their worst example ever. How can you really like that album? Apart from its opener, a fine song that reminds me of my dear bagpipes (I'm Scottish), the rest is unlistenable. It was good they broke up after that, it shows justice exists and this band couldn't go on playing senselessly for more and more years.
      Genesis were quite the opposite: measure, sense of melody, control, craftwork. And Genesis were much more direct and even forward looking than Yes.
      Anyway, if ever someone got rid of Jon Anderson don't point your fingers on Chris alone, he's the best Yes music writer, he could punch you straight in the eye with his aggressive tunes... try and check out what Steve Howe had in his mind... now Chris has gone, so why is Steve not considering letting Jon in again? There must be something wrong............
      'Drama' will remain a lone gem, unrepeated , probably not repeatable. Their best album by far. But I'm a Genesis man, not a Yes one, proudly.

  • @tomfenn7149
    @tomfenn7149 Год назад +2

    Still my favourite YES recording. And when I sold all my records, 'Drama' was the one YES album I kept, and still have. Agree completely that it still sounds modern and fresh today. It does! My 17 year old daughter loves it too. Great video!

  • @kennybrown1315
    @kennybrown1315 Год назад +4

    Superb documentary of a time in the band that should never be forgotten for all the best reasons. Great musicianship, production, engineering, songwriting, its only a pity a decent live recording and video doesnt exist. Horn and Downes gave them a reboot and its arguable 90125 wouldnt have happened without this line up. It allowed Yes to move on from Anderson and when they brought him back it was on the band’s terms. It was good that some Drama songs were given an airing when Benoit David was in the band and for me Fly From Here is a stunning album. Also Topographic Drama tour put the album back on the map. Great work mate

  • @barryclay9084
    @barryclay9084 Год назад +4

    My friends and I were always amazed at the crisp, clear production of Drama. This album sounded sooo fresh, especially when compared to Tormato. We would crank it up in my car (which was white, incidentally) and always listened to it in one sitting, so to speak. It has remained the most played of all my Yes albums. Tempus Fugit!

  • @aschule5684
    @aschule5684 7 месяцев назад +2

    Such a brilliant masterpiece !
    Steve Chris and Alan played with a genuine enthusiasm for this project with unexpected newbies that created a YES not heard before or since.
    A captured moment in time that will forever stand alone in it's unique flare and excitement.
    Sometimes out of chaos comes magic!

    • @autk
      @autk 7 месяцев назад

      Definitely

  • @minsterhill
    @minsterhill Год назад +3

    Rael!!!! You rock! Nothing else could be or should be said. Thank you!!!

  • @julienthomas8321
    @julienthomas8321 Год назад +6

    Thanks a lot, this is a brilliant insight and it does much justice to this criminally underrated album. Your documentaries are awesome, please keep up the good stuff, many thanks in advance ! Best wishes from France.

  • @marinhrabric6162
    @marinhrabric6162 Год назад +3

    great album, just as good as the previous albums. one of my favourites. and i have to say this channel is doing wonders with these documentaries.

  • @ikkenhisatsu7170
    @ikkenhisatsu7170 Год назад +10

    Drama was one of the best YES records, for me. I've been a fan since 1971. The band grew and they've always changed to fit the times. I'm a huge Jon Anderson fan, but Trevor Horn brought a new voice, and a good one, and Geoff Downes was a perfect fit. Great video.

    • @ikkenhisatsu7170
      @ikkenhisatsu7170 Год назад +1

      @Randy A I like Benoit very much. I wish they'd kept him instead of Davison - his voice, while more like Horn's, sometimes has a bite or edge like Anderson's.

  • @mattbrowne7862
    @mattbrowne7862 Год назад +3

    As an avid Yes fan for 40+ years, I really love the fade in of Does It Really Happen! Such a great jam and I'm so drawn to the off beat going on with Howe and Downes. Always fresh to listen to. Yay Yes

  • @joshcreasey
    @joshcreasey Год назад +4

    You did more than an incredible job with this doc. I love the Drama album. Great job with this!

  • @arthurbristol1611
    @arthurbristol1611 Год назад +7

    I appreciate the hours, days and weeks it took to create this documentary. Yes was always a deep dive for a young listener, and Drama was just as demanding and rewarding as it's predecessors. You've illuminated the process and psychology of Drama's creation and the band's internal reaction in a historical context. A beautiful accomplishment, and worthy of accolades. To a community who love Yes as individuals, and Yes as an evolving collective, this RUclips post delivers a 33 minute goldmine.

  • @ednewton4455
    @ednewton4455 Год назад +2

    To make this documentary for RUclips is so applaudable. Hats off to you, I have really enjoyed it.
    And for what it's worth, one of my top 5 Yes albums 🙌

    • @ednewton4455
      @ednewton4455 Год назад

      Although (as I type on Dec 23rd) sad to dismiss Run With the Fox ☹️

  • @lylesmith3506
    @lylesmith3506 Год назад +7

    This is a great album. I play it all the time. Finally Steve, Chris and Alan could open up.

  • @burke9497
    @burke9497 Год назад +3

    Hey brother. Can’t wait to watch this one.
    I bought this album the day it was released, which happened to be the day I left home for college. Also saw yes on this tour in Pittsburgh. It’s a special recording for me. Thank you for your great videos!

  • @louise_rose
    @louise_rose Год назад +47

    I remember hearing Anderson saying in some interview: "We had a lot of fine dinners in Paris, with quite a bit of good wine, while we were also trying to work out an album. One day when Rick and I were the only ones to show up at the studio after one of these dinners, we stood there looking at each other across a large table with tape reels, paper sheets and bottles, considering the situation. That's when we both felt that the sessions had more or less stalled, and decided to pull out of the band". This is probably a bit stylized and oversimplified, but it may catch some of what it felt like in the band at the time... :)

    • @cjo2012
      @cjo2012 Год назад +1

      Bless Ya Loise Rose. And Merry Christmas.

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose Год назад

      @@cjo2012 Yes, it's a rather funny picture he painted, isn't it? ;) Merry Christmas and Many Happy Returns!

    • @yes_head
      @yes_head Год назад +4

      I gather Anderson was working with Vangelis on the Short Stories album in early '79, before the Yes tour that year. But I also get the sense that experience shifted his whole working style and the kind of music he wanted to make. Rick seemed sympathetic, but there must also have been big personality conflicts going on. In the Dan Hedges book he refers to Steve Howe ripping into Jon at one point. I have a feeling much of their current dysfunction dates all the way back to that period.

    • @skeezix64
      @skeezix64 Год назад +2

      Thats really sad. Those guys are all such heroes to me. I got to meet all five of the classic line up in 1996 at a private performance at Tower Records in Hollywood. I guess it makes me sad that they didn’t honor themselves and their deeply devoted fans enough to handle adversity better than they did back then, and again when Jon was sick a few years ago and they just moved on without him. Man those shows in SLO in ‘96 and then the tours in the early aughts with Wakeman. Priceless how we all got to recapture it together for a while, while Chris was still alive.

    • @yes_head
      @yes_head Год назад +3

      @@skeezix64 What's *really* tragic is that it seems a lot of the rift was because of Jon and Chris' wives not getting along. Which is really stupid considering both marriages were over by the end of the 80's.

  • @BrentAdams
    @BrentAdams Год назад +18

    Drama became, probably, my favorite Yes Album. It had the "life" and vitality reminiscent in many groups first albums. It also seemed like more of a complete work, rather than a varied collection, like a few of their other albums.

  • @gregggoss2210
    @gregggoss2210 7 месяцев назад +1

    When my friends and myself purchased tickets for this show, there was absolutely no mention of the personnel change by anyone involved. Not the promoter, not the radio stations, no one. We felt betrayed and cheated. Strangely enough, when Asia formed and toured, we forgot it and moved on. Looking back now, the show was good but it didn't feel like it at the time. By the way, great job on this. You are awesome.

  • @fallingmanuk
    @fallingmanuk Год назад +1

    My older brother took to Hammersmith Odeon for the first time December 1980 to see Yes with the Buggles chaps - wow what a first London gig! I was 13 years old but already mad about prog rock especially Genesis and Yes, and already a wannabe synth player so Geoff Downes' keyboard rig was highly drollworthy! Really enjoyed this documentary as I do all your other ones so thank you so much and keep up the fantastic work.

  • @SteveBello
    @SteveBello Год назад +15

    When I was getting into Yes in the early 80s, people told me not to buy DRAMA but glad I didn't listen to them. I think it's a fantastic album, definitely in my top 5 Yes albums! It's almost 'metal' for Yes!

    • @BKastrosky
      @BKastrosky 9 месяцев назад

      I am a camera, camera is metal indeed! LOL!

  • @leddygee1896
    @leddygee1896 Год назад +7

    Drama is my favorite album by far,
    Not to say any of their other albums
    Are bad, they just seemed to hit the
    Sweet spot in their creativity. thanks for showing some background details of this record.
    It was fantastic!!

  • @marksaxon
    @marksaxon Год назад +3

    Great video! One of my favorite Yes albums. I don't care if Jon isn't on it. It had a fresh sound and memorable songs I still listen to today. Can't remember the last time I listened to Tormato. Lol.

  • @williamlangan5902
    @williamlangan5902 Год назад +2

    Watching this documentary has given me more of an appreciation for Drama. I always loved Tempus Fugit and liked Does It Really Happen and Machine Messiah. My least favorite was Into The Lens.
    Of course I missed Jon Anderson. How can you not? The 1979 songs are interesting but could've used some more production work, as great a producer as Roy Thomas Baker is.
    Run With The Fox wasn't that bad. It was interesting but I found a parody of it A New Pair Of Socks more entertaining.
    Once again, a great documentary. Thanks for making it!

  • @JohnHancotte
    @JohnHancotte Год назад +3

    Terrific use of the non-album demos and other historic bits. Your attention to detail makes for an ideal recounting of the this historical album. I remember being turned off by the lack of Jon and Rick. My buds had the album and I was converted by their enthusiasm for this mainly uptempo and rocking album. Too bad they didn't make a true follow up, but then the lineup was always in a state of flux.

  •  Год назад +3

    Thanks for this one. 'Drama' was my first Yes record and it still ranks among their best albums in my book. I knew there was a lot of music written before and after the 'Drama' sessions, but I was unfamiliar with the original demos, except for some of the stuff they recorded with JP.

  • @redstrat1234
    @redstrat1234 Год назад +2

    As usual, an excellent presentation and assessment of the album. Good work sir, I look forward to your next post.

  • @WolfhandsYouTube
    @WolfhandsYouTube Год назад +4

    Chris was using his Ranney 8 string bass heavily in these sessions - it sounds so good, especially cranked through a Marshall.

  • @daveycretin664
    @daveycretin664 Год назад +3

    Engaging, exciting, excellent, and exquisite. Another extraordinary entry into your unique and unequivocal palatial prog programming pantheon. Three cheers to you!
    Greetings from Noo Yawk, ova heyah!! Prog On!!!
    🎸 🎹 🥁 🎤

    • @progessiverockstories
      @progessiverockstories  Год назад +1

      I am in awe, Sir, at your affecting and articulate alliteration 🤓

    • @daveycretin664
      @daveycretin664 Год назад +1

      @@progessiverockstories ~ ¡Muchas Gracias, Señor! Murray Christmas 🎄, Happy Chanukah, Groovy Kwanza & a Fun-Filled Festivus to you and yours!
      🤘😇🤘

  • @joebill3400
    @joebill3400 Год назад +1

    So rich with precious information, so well written, wonderfully documented, so interesting...Outstanding. Congratulations and thank you so much for sharing.

  • @johnreed9435
    @johnreed9435 Год назад +1

    Was 16 when this came out and remember it well. I even bought on the old Columbia Records 10 for $1 deal. I simply love the album and now this documentary too. Thank you!

  • @eyesoftheworld362
    @eyesoftheworld362 Год назад +3

    Loved Drama and both tours. Go Through This and Fly From Here were wonderful surprises on their first tour. Squire and Howe stepped up with more harmonies with Squire assisting Horn on lead. Loved Horn on all the classics, especially And You And I.

  • @2112Relayer
    @2112Relayer Год назад +15

    Great work...Drama has always been one of my favorite Yes albums.
    I seem to remember an interview with Howe from the time in which he explains that he and Jon simply weren't seeing eye to eye on what an 80's version of the band should sound like. Howe even said that all of Jon's material from the time equated to "airy fairy bits of music", while Howe wanted something grittier. On past albums, they were able to work things out as most of their best material combines sections of Howe's rockier playing and Jon's softer approach. I guess they just got fed up with compromising with each other. I think those things combined with the fact that the classic lineup had to be burnt out at the time led to artistic change becoming a necessity.

    • @grantpenton1850
      @grantpenton1850 Год назад +5

      The AWBH story I read asserts that Jon and Steve did not communicate for almost a decade after the split, and that the reunion happened only because Jon talked to Rick about a joint project and Ricked talked to Bill who was working with Steve at the time, who initially had no interest in ever working with Jon again... like the state of the band today!

    • @2112Relayer
      @2112Relayer Год назад +2

      @@grantpenton1850 I certainly don't envy the creative process that these guys must have gone through back then. Write, record, tour...maybe get a couple weeks off here and there. Pressure from the record company to continue this cycle every year. It has to become a real grind after a while and topped off with the fact that it's the same bunch of guys their stuck with. I imagine it would be very easy, friendships aside, to get really annoyed at the others from time to time.
      I think Jon assumed when he left Yes, that would be the end of the band. I don't believe he considered that they may want to try it without him. It happened back in the Drama days and happened again later on when Jon was going through his health issues and was replaced by Benoit.
      Working with the same people all the time, each of whom have their own agenda, has to be a serious drag. You get to the point where you know how the others will respond to a question before asking it, so topics stay buried instead of being brought out into the open. There aren't a whole lot of bands that have been able to survive that without taking years off to recharge every now and then.
      Unfortunately, I think Jon and Steve have passed the point of no return years ago.

  • @richardmorgan1588
    @richardmorgan1588 Год назад +2

    Thank you for digging up and so marvelously presenting us this wonderful window into the band that was the introduction of the very concept of “progressive rock” to myself and … dare I say… most others! I’d love to get my hands on that album “Golden Age”. Most of that was new to me and I’ve been a Yes fan since I bought Fragile the year it came out which was one of the first rock albums I ever bought! These kinds of videos really enrich me! Please know you are appreciated and we would love to see more!

  • @starwarsunfiltered7848
    @starwarsunfiltered7848 Год назад +1

    As a longtime Yes fan of nearly 25 years, you knocked this out of the park. (I'll forgive the negative mention of "Run With The Fox", which is a perennial Christmas favorite.) Just days after discovering Yes via 90125 on the week of my 18th birthday, I almost nonchalantly found a cassette of Drama for 99 cents at my local Wherehouse.
    My first listen was permanently imprinted into my consciousness, and through that summer and beyond the album became not only one of my top favorites of all time, but one of the catalysts that propelled me into delving into more of Yes for these last three decades as I scoured for every record, video and boxed set and saw the band live fifteen times since 1998.
    It's been very vindicating to see not only love for Drama slowly bubble up through the years, but also magical and surreal that Geoff would rejoin for these last 11 years and that the album would eventually be played in its entirety in 2016. I still can't quite believe it.

  • @sogggyyy
    @sogggyyy Год назад +6

    Two of my all-time favorites are Tormato and The Paris Sessions. However, Drama was so distinctive and the complexity of the songs necessitated multiple listenings. Without Drama launching Yes into the 1980s, we wouldn't have 90125 and Big Generator.

  • @fenderstratocastertelecast8479
    @fenderstratocastertelecast8479 Год назад +4

    The drama lineup is brilliant and as once said by Alan white... Has a lot of credibility
    And i love It!!!

  • @Terminus1962
    @Terminus1962 Год назад +1

    What an incredible and poignant testament to an incredible and very progressive album. It truly is a Yes album in every way. It also gives us Yes fans a glimpse of some of the music that could have been and helps restore dignity to the band after so much "drama". Thank you for the hard work you put into this documentary. I will view it many times!!

  • @GTP_Mars
    @GTP_Mars Год назад +1

    Brilliant documentary, heartfelt commentary and stunning depth of information - and, above all, a great testimony to a unique incarnation of a unique band, great work!

  • @natema5927
    @natema5927 Год назад +3

    Great video! It took a few listens for Drama to grow on me, but nowadays it’s one of my favorites

    • @LoneLee2022
      @LoneLee2022 Год назад

      Oh for sure..................

  • @rickshearer
    @rickshearer 11 месяцев назад +15

    Drama IS and ALWAYS will be a proper YES album!

    • @BKastrosky
      @BKastrosky 9 месяцев назад

      Really?

    • @rickshearer
      @rickshearer 9 месяцев назад

      Does it really happen? Yes! @@BKastrosky

  • @paulwilliams6593
    @paulwilliams6593 Год назад +1

    Your documentaries are awesome. I have been a huge Yes fan for nearly 50 years (as well as Genesis) and a huge lover of all music and I have learned many things from these very well researched and professionally assembled pieces. Many congratulations and very well done !!

  • @teamflanneloutdoors5631
    @teamflanneloutdoors5631 9 месяцев назад +1

    SO.
    Once again I had avant garde taste that was ahead of the times...
    Has been years, but here I am yet again revisiting an ol' favorite friend.

  • @craigwillms61
    @craigwillms61 Год назад +5

    To this day Drama is my favorite Yes album.

  • @marcjdt5796
    @marcjdt5796 Год назад +6

    The first album of Yes i heard in 1983... I discovered how the bass could be creative !

    • @LoneLee2022
      @LoneLee2022 Год назад +2

      Because Squire was the best bass player that ever lived.

  • @zephead64
    @zephead64 Год назад +1

    Really enjoyed this mini doc! Having been a Yes fan for a few years prior to Drama, I was initially skeptical about the new line up but quickly ended up loving the Drama album. I still play it quite often and consider it a masterpiece.

  • @stevebasford6598
    @stevebasford6598 Год назад +1

    Well that was absolutely bloody excellent mate,so we’ll put together with so much stuff I didn’t know
    Big thanks and keep it going we really appreciate your work

  • @tonysienzant6717
    @tonysienzant6717 Год назад +4

    I've always felt that the "TORMATO" album was a much better album than "DRAMA." I loved ALL the tracks on it, especially the ones dismissed by the narrator of this video. To me, "TORMATO" was a re-invigorated YES, with catchy & clever songs, often pared down in time-length.
    It is finely recorded & beautifully sounding in stark contrast to the Punk movement at the time.
    It is highly enjoyable from start to finish & remains one of my all-time favorites of theirs, alongside "CLOSE TO THE EDGE" & "FRAGILE" & some of their earlier albums which first put them on the map, pre-Rick Wakeman.

  • @Kenneth_Fishing
    @Kenneth_Fishing Год назад +4

    Part of why the album is so good is because Chris and Howe were given the reigns and were able to do whatever they wanted. They are full of ideas and energy

    • @autk
      @autk 5 месяцев назад

      Indeed!!

  • @skinner5334
    @skinner5334 Год назад +1

    Top notch record. Absolutely some of the best drum sounds I’ve ever heard. Run with the fox is a classic Christmas/ holiday track- warms my heart every year like clockwork and it arguably gets Yes the most “mainstream” listens in the catalog. It sneaks into unsuspecting ears- you can’t beat that!

  • @dr91262
    @dr91262 Год назад +1

    i was also at that show at Notre Dame for the Drama Tour. I was in Heaven! All were seated and i walked up the aisle to take awesome shots of Chris and the group! Big moment in my life! They were great! i had no problem with Trevor singing lead, it matched the 80s Drama scene for me.

  • @MuzixMaker
    @MuzixMaker Год назад +3

    Tempus Fugit is one f my favorite Yes tracks. Amazing energy.

  • @julio_scissors
    @julio_scissors Год назад +2

    Your content is so amazing! Fantastic job, thank you so much.

  • @bizzynomo6624
    @bizzynomo6624 Год назад +1

    Drama is one of my favorite YES LP's. I was amazed how seamlessly the Buggles integrated into the YES sound. I get why some fans rejected this line up and dismissed the LP but I think it holds up very well in the context of their body of work.

  • @chazblitz
    @chazblitz Год назад +5

    This album has always been my favorite with Relayer a close second.

    • @progessiverockstories
      @progessiverockstories  Год назад +2

      Several people here have said this. With myself included. They go hand in hand.

    • @nelmquist
      @nelmquist Год назад

      IMHO:
      1. Fragile
      2. Relayer
      3. The Yes Album
      4. Close to the Edge
      5. Drama
      6. 90125
      7. Tormato
      8... everything else drops off from here for me with a few bright spots (Wonderous Stories, Shoot High Aim Low...

  • @davelanciani-dimaensionx
    @davelanciani-dimaensionx Год назад +3

    I love the Drama album. It sounds like Steve Howe finally learned how to get a decent, gritty rock tone from his guitar, like he started using an overdrive pedal, and it sounds great.

  • @rranswerman
    @rranswerman Год назад +2

    Really nice, thanks. I loved this tour. Alan White's drum riser rising up and spinning the opposite direction as the rest of the band during Machine Messiah was way cool. The King Biscuit Flower hour played songs from the live shows before they came to LA, including (I think) And You and I so I knew going in that the earlier songs were going to be played well.

  • @BigBass-xf5yi
    @BigBass-xf5yi 11 месяцев назад +1

    Always have and always will be a fan of Drama.
    Some really solid prog rock songs on the effort.
    And another fantastic/compelling video from realnyc…Thanks for another banger.

  • @colinburroughs9871
    @colinburroughs9871 Год назад +11

    Drama is just a weird thing that happened that bridges so many loose ends in Yes lore together it's very unique and underrated. Has anyone else noticed that Does it Really Happen and It Can Happen have all kinds of overlapping elements including subtle bits of synth texture in the background?

    • @progessiverockstories
      @progessiverockstories  Год назад +3

      Certainly, I am curious as to what other parts of Yes songs he had a direct influence on?

    • @gr8dane626
      @gr8dane626 Год назад +1

      Drama pretty much marked the end of Yes. That said... I fucking LOVE Drama.

    • @gr8dane626
      @gr8dane626 Год назад +1

      @@eyesoftheworld362 yeah... not for me. Again, I LOVED Drama. But it is not a "YES" album for me.

    • @colinburroughs9871
      @colinburroughs9871 Год назад

      @@gr8dane626 It's funny right? And I'm certain my perspective is different because I didn't live through this (my first gig was the Talk tour as a kid). I see Talk as the end of the band being a legitimate risk taking endeavor making up for the attempted suicide that was Union. Subsequent Talk they sort of went into legacy mode, even though a few of those newer-ish tracks are pretty good.

    • @gr8dane626
      @gr8dane626 Год назад

      @@eyesoftheworld362 Of course it can be answered. I just answered it. I didn't think I had to add that it was just my opinion. So, IMHO Yes stops at Tormato. They have no great songs or albums after that. And FWIW I can't stand Davison. He does not do it for me. No one but Anderson does. David came close. Again... just my opinion!

  • @craigfazekas3923
    @craigfazekas3923 Год назад +3

    Out of all of Steve Howe's lead/solo guitar work in Yes ? The outro to Run to The Light is among my very favorites. It has a almost etherial sound to it- the sound that a beautiful sunset would make, if it could.....
    🚬😎

    • @progessiverockstories
      @progessiverockstories  Год назад +2

      Whilst making this doc it was Howe’s playing on ‘I am a camera’ that I was most impressed by.

    • @craigfazekas3923
      @craigfazekas3923 Год назад +2

      @@progessiverockstories I was fortunate enough to see Steve solo twice. Both were super memories. The 1st time was Halloween night at the TLA in Philly, 2000. While walking up & down South St. prior to the gig ? I hear live KISS music, and growing louder as I walked along. Yup, unmistakenly, are blasting the sounds of the song 'Got to Choose'. There was a KISS tribute band playing a free show outdoors on Halloween night. They focused on all the early material- Deuce, Strutter, Parasite, Cold Gin, ect. What a trip....
      And the second Steve Howe gig I saw was at a Yacht Club in Belmar, NJ- with an extremely noisy & rude crowd. Steve was clearly miffed as well- he politely asked the crowd why they came if they weren't going to listen.
      Yeah.
      Prior to that show ? I'd just bought the King Crimson CD of the entire Asbury Park show in '74.
      Asbury Park was near Belmar, so I went to the original Casino where KC played, and listened with my eyes closed with headphones on at full volume- just soaking it in & knowing I was going to see Mr. Howe immediately after.
      It was great. I was wasted on painkillers too- being that I was an addict at the time.
      Fun ? You bet....
      I also saw Joe Walsh at The Stone Pony in Asbury Park too- 10 years prior. And stayed at The Empress that night, knowing that Crimson stayed there when they played there in '74.
      Btw- what is Fred Flintstone's fave rock band ? Of course; King Crimstone.....
      Sorry.
      🚬😎

    • @monicadonnelly4991
      @monicadonnelly4991 Год назад

      @@craigfazekas3923❤❤❤

  • @PhillipEaton
    @PhillipEaton Год назад +2

    Great video, thanks for making it. IMO, Drama is the best Yes album, short but brilliant.

  • @davidwatkinson1226
    @davidwatkinson1226 Год назад +1

    Well done I know how hard work this will have been to produce. The never ending Yes story means plenty more video to come. Congratulations 👏👍

  • @Latexhandske
    @Latexhandske Год назад +3

    Bloody fantasic ❤

  • @gedofgont1006
    @gedofgont1006 Год назад +2

    Great video, loads of stuff I didn't know about.
    I have to disagree on thing, however: I think Run with the Fox is a stunningly brilliant song. I play it religiously, every Christmas season and it always lifts me up.

    • @progessiverockstories
      @progessiverockstories  Год назад +1

      FFS, I think I'll have to add a disclaimer to this video that I will give all donations to an anti- fox-hunting charity. 🦊