55 of you voted and the results were:
1. various artists: A Life in Yes: The Chris Squire Tribute (w/ Sherwood, Kaye, Moraz, Davison): 38% (21 votes)
2. Peter Banks's Harmony in Diversity: The Complete Recordings: 24% (13 votes)
3. Jason Becker: Triumphant Hearts (w/ Rabin): 11% (6 votes)
4. Rick Wakeman: Piano Odyssey: 9% (5 votes)
5= Dave Kerzner & Sonic Elements: Yesterday and Today: A 50th Anniversary Tribute to Yes (w/ Sherwood, Kaye, Downes, Davison): 7% (4 votes)
5= William Shatner: Shatner Claus: The Christmas Album (w/ R Wakeman) 7% (4 votes)
7. other: 4% (2 votes)
8. Light Freedom Revival: Truthonomy (w/ Sherwood, O Wakeman) 0% (0 votes)
Billy Sherwood's tribute to his belated mentor easily won, with the comprehensive Harmony in Diversity set with Pete Banks second. I actually preferred the Sonic Elements Yes tribute, but it struggled to get votes.
Neither of the 2 other votes said who they were voting for. It may have been Funky Monkey's Undecover (w/ Banks), which I mistakenly omitted from the poll.
Saturday, 23 March 2019
Friday, 1 February 2019
Best Yes-related album of 1983
You voted, 106 of you... or maybe it was one of you 106 times? But the results are...
1. Asia: Alpha (w/ Downes, Howe) 45 votes (42%)
2. Jon & Vangelis: Private Collection 27 votes (25%)
3. Bruford-Moraz: Music for Piano and Drums 18 votes (17%)
4. The Moody Blues: The Present (w/ Moraz) 7 votes (7%)
5. Mike Oldfield: Crises (w/ Anderson) 4 votes (4%)
6. Malcolm McLaren: Duck Rock (w/ Horn) 3 votes (3%)
7= Al Di Meola: Scenario (w/ Bruford) 1 vote (1%)
7= Rick Wakeman: G'ole! 1 vote (1%)
There were no votes for Annette Peacock's Been in the Streets Too Long (w/ Bruford) or Rick Wakeman's Cost of Living. Not a great poll result for Wakeman, with his first replacement at 3rd and 4th and his second replacement at 1st... and his almost replacement at 2nd. But a clear win for Asia, even with an album even the band somewhat saw as something of a disappointing follow-up.
1. Asia: Alpha (w/ Downes, Howe) 45 votes (42%)
2. Jon & Vangelis: Private Collection 27 votes (25%)
3. Bruford-Moraz: Music for Piano and Drums 18 votes (17%)
4. The Moody Blues: The Present (w/ Moraz) 7 votes (7%)
5. Mike Oldfield: Crises (w/ Anderson) 4 votes (4%)
6. Malcolm McLaren: Duck Rock (w/ Horn) 3 votes (3%)
7= Al Di Meola: Scenario (w/ Bruford) 1 vote (1%)
7= Rick Wakeman: G'ole! 1 vote (1%)
There were no votes for Annette Peacock's Been in the Streets Too Long (w/ Bruford) or Rick Wakeman's Cost of Living. Not a great poll result for Wakeman, with his first replacement at 3rd and 4th and his second replacement at 1st... and his almost replacement at 2nd. But a clear win for Asia, even with an album even the band somewhat saw as something of a disappointing follow-up.
Saturday, 3 November 2018
REV: Trevor Horn Reimagines the Eighties Feat. The Sarm Orchestra, Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, 2 Nov 2018
Trevor Horn, a potted career summary: fronts The Buggles, fronts Yes, is so traumatised by the latter experience he sticks to producing from then on, produces everyone who is anyone... and that's where many people think the story ends. But in recent years, Horn the performer, the live performer, has re-emerged. The Producers begin small and build, release an album, morph into the Trevor Horn Band, play bigger shows, Horn does his first album under his own name (The Reflection Wave One—Original Soundtrack). And now in 2018, we've had Fly from Here—Return Trip, a tour with Dire Straits Legacy, and this new project...
Go back a bit... The Producers played covers, the group picking songs they like, like “Everybody Wants to Rule the World”, as well as from their own careers. They soon began writing their own material (released as Made in Basing Street), but perhaps that element of covering songs they liked never went away and now sees fruition of its own, because a new album Trevor Horn Reimagines the Eighties sees Horn interpret a set of songs, more of which he didn't work on than he did (nine to three). The album is released February 2019; the debut single “Everybody Wants to Rule the World”, is out digitally; and we have this sold out show at the Southbank Centre's Queen Elizabeth Hall (capacity 916).
The set was a mix of the standard Trevor Horn Band (and Producers before that) repertoire and new album material, heavy on the string arrangements, with a bit of the Dire Straits Legacy set at the end (I believe four of the band members were off for a Dire Straits Legacy date in Finland the next day).
The band:
Backline from stage right to left:
Alan Clark: Hammond, keys
Steve Ferrone: drums
Cameron Gower Poole: samples, percussion
8-piece string section (which I think was with Q Strings, Paloma Deike, Jess Cox, Amy Stanford, Laura Stanford, Miriam Wakeling)
Frontline from stage right to left:
Kate Holmes: vocals
Izzy Chase: vocals
Phil Palmer: lead guitar
Lol Crème: guitar, vocals, keys, bass
Trevor Horn: bass, vocals
Simon Bloor: lead guitar, keys
Julian Hinton: keys, conductor
Front of house sound: Tim Weidner
Organisation: Joel Peters
Set:
“Owner of a Lonely Heart” intro, string section only
“Two Tribes”, Ryan Molloy lead vocals
“Video Killed the Radio Star”with “Check It Out” insert, Horn lead vocals
“Dancing in the Dark”, Kate Holmes lead vocals
“Different for Girls”, Steve Hogarth lead vocals
“Ashes to Ashes”, Steve Hogarth lead vocals
“Rubber Bullets”, Lol Crème lead vocals, no strings
“All the Things She Said”, Izzy Chase/Holmes lead vocals, Crème second bass, no strings
“Slave to the Rhythm”, Chase/Matt Cardle lead vocals
“The Power of Love”, Cardle lead vocals
“Living in the Plastic Age”, Horn lead vocals
“What's Love Got to Do With It?”, Molloy lead vocals
“Take on Me”, Horn/Molloy/Cardle lead vocals
“Cry”, Molloy lead vocals, no strings
“Blue Monday”, Jimmie Wood lead vocals, harmonica
“Brothers in Arms”, Horn lead vocals, Mick MacNeil accordion
“Girls on Film”, Chase/Holmes lead vocals
“I'm Not in Love”, Cardle lead vocals, Crème keys
“Everybody Wants to Rule the World”, Molloy lead vocals
“Owner of a Lonely Heart”, Horn lead vocals, Crème bass, Cardle additional backing vocals
“Relax”, Molloy lead vocals
“Money for Nothing”, Molloy lead vocals, Wood harmonica
Perhaps under-rehearsed in places, as Horn acknowledged at one point, it was an eclectic set, with a range of singers, some more dominant in their temporary role as front man – like Hogarth gesticulating through “Ashes to Ashes” or Molloy bouncing all over the stage – while others, like Chase and Holmes, were more restrained. Those different styles, of the original songs and of the performers, meant there were different highs and lows for different people in the audience. Chatting afterwards, opinions varied on Molloy, songs were recognised or not.
For me, highlights were a heartfelt “The Power of Love”, Hogarth channelling Bowie for “Ashes to Ashes”, a weird “Blue Monday”, and a rousing “Relax”. On the other hand, “Brothers in Arms” were the strings-based, ballad arrangement failed for me, and “Take on Me” was a nice idea, but hard to pull off (and with some technical problems with feedback at the start). I've heard them tighter as Producers, with 5 rather than 18-20 on stage. At times, Clark and Poole had little to do; at others, it was Crème who seemed not to be doing much strumming his guitar. But Horn likes playing live in a big group. It was an audacious set list. They covered all of the new album, with the live integration of strings and rock band, often challenging, largely going well. And they re-arranged some of the older Trevor Horn Band material too.
The string section were excellent throughout. The surprise vocal star for me was Holmes, great in both lead and backing roles. Palmer is always solid on the guitar. I miss Ash Soan on drums, however, with Ferrone too aggressive in his playing in places.
To go through the evening in more detail... Support came in the form of a 6-song set by singer-songwriter Nathan Ball, accompanied by a second guitarist. Ball explained how he had gotten the call asking him to play only the night before. All a bit samey for me, with “Just Say Something” the best number.
After an intriguing opening string arrangement, the headliners kicked off with a Trevor Horn Band favourite in “Two Tribes”. It took a few songs to get the mix right, at least where I was sitting to the edge of the auditorium. Molloy's vocals were nearly inaudible at first. It also took a few songs for the band to settle,with a somewhat stilted “Video Killed the Radio Star” following.
The first full piece from the new album was “Dancing in the Dark”, which exemplifies the album's approach. The song has been re-arranged as a ballad, mainly performed on strings and bass guitar, with a gender swap for the lead vocals. Then into a second and third album track with Marillion's Steve Hogarth doing “Different for Girls”. He'd done this before at the band's July show and, while Hogarth is an engaging performer, the arrangement does little for me. But the show really took off for Hogarth's second song, “Ashes to Ashes” (done by Seal on the album).
Leaving the eighties and without the string section were “Rubber Bullets” and “All the Things She Said”, two Trevor Horn Band standards, both polished, with good vocals from Holmes and Chase.
“Slave to the Rhythm” is also a Trevor Horn Band regular. Horn explained that they had tried the new album version in rehearsals (it's sung by Rumer on the album), but that it didn't completely work live, so they came up with a mix of the new and usual arrangements. In practice, this meant a strings-heavy first half sung by Chase, seguing into the usual funky version, but with vocals shared between Chase and Matt Cardle.
Former X-Factor winner Cardle sings regularly with the Trevor Horn Band. One of the highlights of the show for me was his “The Power of Love”. This was a new arrangement compared to past shows, using the string section, presumably matching the new album's version. Next up we got a solid performance of “Plastic Age”, again with added strings. Molloy was back for “What's Love Got to Do With It?”. He wasn't always as strong a frontman as Cardle or Hogarth, and I felt his performance too theatrical here. Writing that, it seems an odd thing to say given how Tina Turner does the original, but Molloy had better songs in the evening.
Horn introduced the next number, explaining how it “seemed like a good idea after a couple of joints and a few pints of beer”. He imagined Il Divo doing “Take on Me”, but they weren't available, so it was Horn, Molloy and Cardle 'doing' Il Divo doing “Take on Me”, with additional vocals form Holmes and Chase, Hinton on piano, and the string section.
Horn announced the next track, saying, “If I go up to Manchester, I'll be lynched.” Yes, it was a version of “Blue Monday”, all driving strings and techno rhythms, with Jimmie Wood growling through the vocal (after missing a cue).
There was a false start for “I'm Not in Love” as Crème's keyboard didn't work, but once they had re-started, this was a familiar performance for a song long in their set.
Horn having teased that the band would play an excerpt from “Gates of Delirium” next, it was of course time for “Owner”. Horn had a jacket brought out that he claimed he hadn't worn since being in Yes, and he explained that, as he'd written a verse of the song, he had the right to sing it! In the past, Chris Braide or Cardle has sung “Owner”, but I believe Horn first sung it himself at the band's private gig in July. He was fine on the song, but he was better on his own Buggles material. Clark then Palmer took the solo.
Back for a third Frankie Goes to Hollywood song and Molloy prowled all over the stage during an energetic performance of “Relax”. Horn then explained that there were too many of them to leave the stage and come back for an encore, so we would have to pretend that had happened. The night then ended with “Money for Nothing”, another high energy performance, Palmer enjoying playing the classic riff.
Merchandise was just T-shirts and mugs. The show was being filmed, with multiple cameras, although I don't know for what purpose.
Go back a bit... The Producers played covers, the group picking songs they like, like “Everybody Wants to Rule the World”, as well as from their own careers. They soon began writing their own material (released as Made in Basing Street), but perhaps that element of covering songs they liked never went away and now sees fruition of its own, because a new album Trevor Horn Reimagines the Eighties sees Horn interpret a set of songs, more of which he didn't work on than he did (nine to three). The album is released February 2019; the debut single “Everybody Wants to Rule the World”, is out digitally; and we have this sold out show at the Southbank Centre's Queen Elizabeth Hall (capacity 916).
The set was a mix of the standard Trevor Horn Band (and Producers before that) repertoire and new album material, heavy on the string arrangements, with a bit of the Dire Straits Legacy set at the end (I believe four of the band members were off for a Dire Straits Legacy date in Finland the next day).
The band:
Backline from stage right to left:
Alan Clark: Hammond, keys
Steve Ferrone: drums
Cameron Gower Poole: samples, percussion
8-piece string section (which I think was with Q Strings, Paloma Deike, Jess Cox, Amy Stanford, Laura Stanford, Miriam Wakeling)
Frontline from stage right to left:
Kate Holmes: vocals
Izzy Chase: vocals
Phil Palmer: lead guitar
Lol Crème: guitar, vocals, keys, bass
Trevor Horn: bass, vocals
Simon Bloor: lead guitar, keys
Julian Hinton: keys, conductor
Front of house sound: Tim Weidner
Organisation: Joel Peters
Set:
“Owner of a Lonely Heart” intro, string section only
“Two Tribes”, Ryan Molloy lead vocals
“Video Killed the Radio Star”with “Check It Out” insert, Horn lead vocals
“Dancing in the Dark”, Kate Holmes lead vocals
“Different for Girls”, Steve Hogarth lead vocals
“Ashes to Ashes”, Steve Hogarth lead vocals
“Rubber Bullets”, Lol Crème lead vocals, no strings
“All the Things She Said”, Izzy Chase/Holmes lead vocals, Crème second bass, no strings
“Slave to the Rhythm”, Chase/Matt Cardle lead vocals
“The Power of Love”, Cardle lead vocals
“Living in the Plastic Age”, Horn lead vocals
“What's Love Got to Do With It?”, Molloy lead vocals
“Take on Me”, Horn/Molloy/Cardle lead vocals
“Cry”, Molloy lead vocals, no strings
“Blue Monday”, Jimmie Wood lead vocals, harmonica
“Brothers in Arms”, Horn lead vocals, Mick MacNeil accordion
“Girls on Film”, Chase/Holmes lead vocals
“I'm Not in Love”, Cardle lead vocals, Crème keys
“Everybody Wants to Rule the World”, Molloy lead vocals
“Owner of a Lonely Heart”, Horn lead vocals, Crème bass, Cardle additional backing vocals
“Relax”, Molloy lead vocals
“Money for Nothing”, Molloy lead vocals, Wood harmonica
Perhaps under-rehearsed in places, as Horn acknowledged at one point, it was an eclectic set, with a range of singers, some more dominant in their temporary role as front man – like Hogarth gesticulating through “Ashes to Ashes” or Molloy bouncing all over the stage – while others, like Chase and Holmes, were more restrained. Those different styles, of the original songs and of the performers, meant there were different highs and lows for different people in the audience. Chatting afterwards, opinions varied on Molloy, songs were recognised or not.
For me, highlights were a heartfelt “The Power of Love”, Hogarth channelling Bowie for “Ashes to Ashes”, a weird “Blue Monday”, and a rousing “Relax”. On the other hand, “Brothers in Arms” were the strings-based, ballad arrangement failed for me, and “Take on Me” was a nice idea, but hard to pull off (and with some technical problems with feedback at the start). I've heard them tighter as Producers, with 5 rather than 18-20 on stage. At times, Clark and Poole had little to do; at others, it was Crème who seemed not to be doing much strumming his guitar. But Horn likes playing live in a big group. It was an audacious set list. They covered all of the new album, with the live integration of strings and rock band, often challenging, largely going well. And they re-arranged some of the older Trevor Horn Band material too.
The string section were excellent throughout. The surprise vocal star for me was Holmes, great in both lead and backing roles. Palmer is always solid on the guitar. I miss Ash Soan on drums, however, with Ferrone too aggressive in his playing in places.
To go through the evening in more detail... Support came in the form of a 6-song set by singer-songwriter Nathan Ball, accompanied by a second guitarist. Ball explained how he had gotten the call asking him to play only the night before. All a bit samey for me, with “Just Say Something” the best number.
After an intriguing opening string arrangement, the headliners kicked off with a Trevor Horn Band favourite in “Two Tribes”. It took a few songs to get the mix right, at least where I was sitting to the edge of the auditorium. Molloy's vocals were nearly inaudible at first. It also took a few songs for the band to settle,with a somewhat stilted “Video Killed the Radio Star” following.
The first full piece from the new album was “Dancing in the Dark”, which exemplifies the album's approach. The song has been re-arranged as a ballad, mainly performed on strings and bass guitar, with a gender swap for the lead vocals. Then into a second and third album track with Marillion's Steve Hogarth doing “Different for Girls”. He'd done this before at the band's July show and, while Hogarth is an engaging performer, the arrangement does little for me. But the show really took off for Hogarth's second song, “Ashes to Ashes” (done by Seal on the album).
![]() |
Horn introducing a song |
Leaving the eighties and without the string section were “Rubber Bullets” and “All the Things She Said”, two Trevor Horn Band standards, both polished, with good vocals from Holmes and Chase.
“Slave to the Rhythm” is also a Trevor Horn Band regular. Horn explained that they had tried the new album version in rehearsals (it's sung by Rumer on the album), but that it didn't completely work live, so they came up with a mix of the new and usual arrangements. In practice, this meant a strings-heavy first half sung by Chase, seguing into the usual funky version, but with vocals shared between Chase and Matt Cardle.
Former X-Factor winner Cardle sings regularly with the Trevor Horn Band. One of the highlights of the show for me was his “The Power of Love”. This was a new arrangement compared to past shows, using the string section, presumably matching the new album's version. Next up we got a solid performance of “Plastic Age”, again with added strings. Molloy was back for “What's Love Got to Do With It?”. He wasn't always as strong a frontman as Cardle or Hogarth, and I felt his performance too theatrical here. Writing that, it seems an odd thing to say given how Tina Turner does the original, but Molloy had better songs in the evening.
Horn introduced the next number, explaining how it “seemed like a good idea after a couple of joints and a few pints of beer”. He imagined Il Divo doing “Take on Me”, but they weren't available, so it was Horn, Molloy and Cardle 'doing' Il Divo doing “Take on Me”, with additional vocals form Holmes and Chase, Hinton on piano, and the string section.
Horn announced the next track, saying, “If I go up to Manchester, I'll be lynched.” Yes, it was a version of “Blue Monday”, all driving strings and techno rhythms, with Jimmie Wood growling through the vocal (after missing a cue).
There was a false start for “I'm Not in Love” as Crème's keyboard didn't work, but once they had re-started, this was a familiar performance for a song long in their set.
Horn having teased that the band would play an excerpt from “Gates of Delirium” next, it was of course time for “Owner”. Horn had a jacket brought out that he claimed he hadn't worn since being in Yes, and he explained that, as he'd written a verse of the song, he had the right to sing it! In the past, Chris Braide or Cardle has sung “Owner”, but I believe Horn first sung it himself at the band's private gig in July. He was fine on the song, but he was better on his own Buggles material. Clark then Palmer took the solo.
Back for a third Frankie Goes to Hollywood song and Molloy prowled all over the stage during an energetic performance of “Relax”. Horn then explained that there were too many of them to leave the stage and come back for an encore, so we would have to pretend that had happened. The night then ended with “Money for Nothing”, another high energy performance, Palmer enjoying playing the classic riff.
![]() |
From L-R: Cardle, Holmes, ?, Chase, Clark, Palmer, Ferrone, Horn, Crème, Wood, Molloy, Gower Poole, Bloor, string section with Hinton behind |
Merchandise was just T-shirts and mugs. The show was being filmed, with multiple cameras, although I don't know for what purpose.
Thursday, 1 November 2018
REV: Steve Howe, The Albany, Deptford, 31 Oct 2018
On a cold Hallowe'en, Steve Howe performed his only solo show of 2018. He had given freely of his time to help raise funds for the Ed Renshaw Music Award, set up in memory of guitarist Edward Renshaw, who died in 2011. The charity is supported by Peter Conway Management, who manage Howe's solo career. They support a number of young musicians each year, financially, through mentoring and other support.
The Albany is a lovely venue in Deptford. The audience was around 120-150 in size. Most of the front row were familiar Yes fans (hi everyone): I don't know how many of the rest of the audience were there for Howe or to support the An Evening for Ed series.
The first set consisted of three award winners, all singer-songwriters, each playing three songs. The first, and most impressive, was Jay Johnson, who won the award two years ago and has gone on to bigger things. He performed "Bliss", "Vanity" and "The Void" (the latter two are on his EP The Dark Matters). His was a lively performance with intriguing lyrics. Also impressive was Sasha Thomas, one of this year's four winners. Finally, after two performers on acoustic guitar, we had Jack Patchett on electric guitar, another of this year's winners.
After an interval was the main event. Howe was in good spirits, chatting between pieces. He began on the Martin MC38 Steve Howe edition guitar, playing "In the Course of the Day", "Bareback", Chet Atkins' "Trambone", "Masquerade", excerpt from "Provence", and "Cactus Boogie". He then switched to Spanish guitar for the 2nd movement of Vivaldi's lute concerto in D and "The Little Galliard".
Next up was "Leaves of Green", which he also sang, but only after a long introduction in which he, lightheartedly, noted how Yes only did one concept album, yet a member, not named, criticised it while going on to do eight concept albums of his own. He also talked about how much he loved London and the UK, where Yes did all their music until they "scarpered to LA" in the eighties.
Next came "Classical Gas", which he wished he'd written himself. This was followed by "Corkscrew"; Howe mentioned he first wrote this back in 1970, although it was only first released on 1991's Turbulence. He then started talking about his second album with Yes, carefully noting this was Yes's fourth album, they having done two before he joined, "which I love very, very much," he said, particularly Time and a Word. He then moved on to talk about how they each had a solo piece on Fragile, which led to an impromptu performance of "5% for Nothing" and snippets of "The Fish" and "We Have Heaven", and even an attempt to sing "Cans & Brahms". But of course this was all a prelude to "Mood for a Day".
Back to the Martin acoustic, he played "Solitaire" after an intro talking about Fly from Here with a shout-out for Trevor Horn. Next came "To be Over", a piece that Yes haven't played for many years, as Howe subsequently explained. But they will "change some of that next year", so that sounds like confirmation of Relayer in the set, except he then continued "maybe not that song but" something else that's not been played in a long time. So does that mean not Relayer next year, or rather some but not all of it?
Howe then talked about tragedy, alluding to the death of his son Virgil, but also about others who had suffered loss, like Geoff Downes, who lost a daughter, and the mother of Ed Renshaw. He then played "Second Initial", written for Virgil. The set finished with "Clap".
An encore consisted of an abbreviated "Roundabout", Howe also singing, and then, for me the highlight of the evening, a fiery performance of "Sketches in the Sun". Howe thanked Ric French, doing FOH sound, and it was off to the train and the tube to gawp at people's fancy dress costumes.
The Albany is a lovely venue in Deptford. The audience was around 120-150 in size. Most of the front row were familiar Yes fans (hi everyone): I don't know how many of the rest of the audience were there for Howe or to support the An Evening for Ed series.
The first set consisted of three award winners, all singer-songwriters, each playing three songs. The first, and most impressive, was Jay Johnson, who won the award two years ago and has gone on to bigger things. He performed "Bliss", "Vanity" and "The Void" (the latter two are on his EP The Dark Matters). His was a lively performance with intriguing lyrics. Also impressive was Sasha Thomas, one of this year's four winners. Finally, after two performers on acoustic guitar, we had Jack Patchett on electric guitar, another of this year's winners.
After an interval was the main event. Howe was in good spirits, chatting between pieces. He began on the Martin MC38 Steve Howe edition guitar, playing "In the Course of the Day", "Bareback", Chet Atkins' "Trambone", "Masquerade", excerpt from "Provence", and "Cactus Boogie". He then switched to Spanish guitar for the 2nd movement of Vivaldi's lute concerto in D and "The Little Galliard".
Next up was "Leaves of Green", which he also sang, but only after a long introduction in which he, lightheartedly, noted how Yes only did one concept album, yet a member, not named, criticised it while going on to do eight concept albums of his own. He also talked about how much he loved London and the UK, where Yes did all their music until they "scarpered to LA" in the eighties.
Next came "Classical Gas", which he wished he'd written himself. This was followed by "Corkscrew"; Howe mentioned he first wrote this back in 1970, although it was only first released on 1991's Turbulence. He then started talking about his second album with Yes, carefully noting this was Yes's fourth album, they having done two before he joined, "which I love very, very much," he said, particularly Time and a Word. He then moved on to talk about how they each had a solo piece on Fragile, which led to an impromptu performance of "5% for Nothing" and snippets of "The Fish" and "We Have Heaven", and even an attempt to sing "Cans & Brahms". But of course this was all a prelude to "Mood for a Day".
Back to the Martin acoustic, he played "Solitaire" after an intro talking about Fly from Here with a shout-out for Trevor Horn. Next came "To be Over", a piece that Yes haven't played for many years, as Howe subsequently explained. But they will "change some of that next year", so that sounds like confirmation of Relayer in the set, except he then continued "maybe not that song but" something else that's not been played in a long time. So does that mean not Relayer next year, or rather some but not all of it?
Howe then talked about tragedy, alluding to the death of his son Virgil, but also about others who had suffered loss, like Geoff Downes, who lost a daughter, and the mother of Ed Renshaw. He then played "Second Initial", written for Virgil. The set finished with "Clap".
An encore consisted of an abbreviated "Roundabout", Howe also singing, and then, for me the highlight of the evening, a fiery performance of "Sketches in the Sun". Howe thanked Ric French, doing FOH sound, and it was off to the train and the tube to gawp at people's fancy dress costumes.
Friday, 7 September 2018
Interview with Andrew Booker of Peter Banks's Harmony in Diversity, Tim Bowness and Sanguine Hum
Drummer Andrew Booker was one third of Harmony in Diversity with Peter Banks
and bassist Nick Cottam. He currently plays in Tim Bowness's solo
band and on associated projects, and has also worked with Sanguine
Hum. Andrew kindly answered some questions for me about Harmony in
Diversity's The
Complete Recordings and
some of his other work. Background on The
Complete Recordings can be read on the news
site here and there's a video sampler of the album by Andrew here.
My thanks to Andrew for being easy to interview. You can follow Andrew's work at his Facebook
page here. You can buy The Complete Recordings by Peter Banks's Harmony in Diversity here.
We
all originally met in 1996. I met Peter and Nick independently after
making my Ahead
mini-album.
The three of us met up for a jam with Gerard Johnson (St Etienne
keyboardist) towards the end of that year, but nothing else happened
between the three of us together until summer 2004. I had been in
bands with Nick the whole time, and he and I had formed a bass and
drums duo called Pulse
Engine.
I bumped into Peter at the Royal Festival Hall, and invited him to a
Pulse Engine gig the following week. I knew he’d like it, and I
suspected this might be a good way into working with him. Up until
then I’d only ever listened to records and drunk brandy in his
living room or gone to gigs with him, and had then lost touch with
him completely for about three years. He was very impressed with
Pulse Engine, and we were all keen for him to start adding some
guitar. We invited him to join us for our next gig, and that was the
beginning.
We
now have this 6 CD release imminent: can you talk through what the
different sessions were that led to this material?
The
entire package is a condensation of everything we recorded, at least
everything that we can reasonably access without spending a lot of
money recovering old ADAT tapes that we are sure have nothing useful
on them, i.e. they are of attempts to rehearse things, rather than
improvise. The sessions were just our normal band activities. In the
early days we were trying to learn Pulse Engine material, then we set
about improvising, interspersed with the occasional attempt to learn
a couple of Peter’s things (like "Knights",
from his Two
Sides
album).
We seldom did anything without recording it. Even if we weren’t
trying to make an album, it was always good to record just to capture
good ideas to develop later, plus recording was easy because I was
mostly using electronic drums. We used ADAT tapes for multitrack some
of the time, but it was quite cumbersome to do so, so we often just
put stuff down onto minidiscs.
CD
1—Struggles Discontinued: where do these come from?
There’s
quite a mixture on here. It was the last disc to be made, and only
came about because we had all sorts of spare bits and offcuts. Some
of it comes from jams recorded to ADAT, where I took the best bits of
Peter’s playing (actually most of it) and either looped up drums
and bass, or recorded new parts entirely. That makes this record
something of an odd-one-out in the set as it’s the only one where
we recorded new parts (except for some vocal bits I added to Try
Again).
Besides the ADAT material, there are some rearrangements of live
sections that didn’t make it onto Hitting
The Fans [Live],
again with new bass and drum parts. Plus there’s a duo piece with a
very long and ridiculous title ("On
the 6th Attempt…")
that Peter and I made after compiling What
Is This?
onto which I got Nick to add some bass. In a couple of cases I used
drum parts that I had leftover from other things. For example, the
freeform drumming on the two "Harmogeny"
pieces
is actually a spare take from one of my youtube videos called "Free
As In Fall".
CD
2—What is This? I understand there are 2005 sessions with
just you and Banks. There was talk of splitting the band into a set
of three duos...?
Yep,
What
Is This?
is
the duo album I made with Peter. The aim was to release What
Is This?
at
the time. I’m not sure why we didn’t, but it’s likely to have
been a combination of (a) Peter wanting to add more guitar parts to
it, (b) trying to find a decent label via which to release it, which
was shelved by (c) Nick enrolling us into the 3-Of-The-Essence gigs
with The David Cross Band and Nick May’s Whimwise.
I
did find more duo recordings from later in the year after we’d put
the album together. The one good piece I found is on Struggles
Discontinued, as is the one to which Nick added a bass part. It
has some pretty electric playing on it by Peter. The rest seems to be
just rehearsing stuff, and didn’t having anything like the pizazz.
CD4—Try
Again: where do these come from?
Most
of it comes from minidiscs from one session on 28 September 2004.
I’ve long forgotten it of course, but it seems to have been a good
evening. It makes up the bulk of this album, plus there’s something
on Trying
from
that session as well ["Sods at Odds"]. I say a good one,
the trouble was that most of the material needed some serious editing
to turn it into music. Trying
was
an album we had to make fairly quickly in time to sell at the
3-Of-The-Essence gigs, therefore any candidate material had to have
as few duff sections as possible. The pieces on Try
Again
were a lot of work, but worth it I think. There’s a lot of variety
on there, and they show that we were quite an inventive unit.
CD5—Hitting
the Fans (Live): Is this still you or over to Speight?
All
me, it’s stuff from the first four trio gigs, namely Peter’s
guest appearance with Pulse Engine in October 2004, the gig at the
Klinker on 3 June 2005, and the first two 3-Of-The-Essence gigs in
March 2006. Sadly the third wasn’t recorded, a shame because it was
my favourite by a long way. Although it looks like we’re billing
this as the (only) live disc in the set, there’s also live material
on Struggles
Discontinued
(tracks
2 and 6) and Trying
(track
5 plus the bonus track 6), and Nick made Spontaneous
Creation
largely
out of live recordings from the David Speight era.
You
were re-visiting material that you hadn't heard for some years. What
were your feelings on coming back to it?
Generally
good ones, I’m happy to say. For me and Nick, a significant element
of the Pulse Engine workflow had been capturing jams onto tape, and
then putting the tapes away. We felt that music preserved in this way
had a magical wine-like property of maturing, as if we would enjoy it
more the longer we left it. That ethos definitely carried over into
Harmony In Diversity. I had put all my minidiscs in a box and left
them there, and for many years after my swift departure I had no
intention of ever going back to them. Having eventually dug the discs
out again to make this record, I definitely feel a lot more positive
about the material than I did at the time, or for years afterwards.
At least from the studio sessions, anyway! Once I’d got past all
the boring technical stuff, I started to really enjoy working on the
Try
Again
material
and turn it into end results that I can listen to now with pleasure
and some fondness for that period. As for Struggles
Discontinued,
I really love it and had great time putting it together. Whereas
working through the originals for Trying
Again
required
diligence, the ADAT-sourced material for Struggles
Discontinued
meant
I could be a lot more brutal with it. That was gratifying in a
different way: the luxury of being able to use only the best of what
we recorded. Anything crap was cut. Anything low-yield I probably
also cut.
What
did you do to the material to turn it into a release? How much is
this edited or processed compared to the original recordings?
A
lot. The only thing we left completely alone was Trying
(besides
the remaster, though even then it gets a bonus track).
I
rebuilt What
Is This?
Completely.
The pieces are (mostly) composed from the same recorded sections but
I did all the edits again, being a bit better at it these days than I
was then. Track 4 is a new version, it has a section that is not in
the original, and vice versa. Nick’s Spontaneous
Creation
album
was a lot of work for him at time, even then he went back and made
several updates for this release. For the rest: extensive listening
back through old material and editing down into some semblance of
musical form. I didn’t really use too many effects or treatment, at
least not with with later efforts, though the opening to Try
Again
("Prelusion")
is a bit of a knob-twiddler. I have, I’m not ashamed to say,
allowed myself some hefty reams of artistic license in doubling up
and looping bits where the source material was stereo minidisc, to
thicken the sound or improve the structure. I genuinely think Peter
would have liked the result. I still remember him raving about the
first Fatboy Slim and DJ Shadow albums at the time. I sort of think
of Try
Again
as
HiD does Fatboy Slim. When it came to the ADAT-based stuff on
Struggles
Discontinued,
I kept a lot of guitar soloing, kept a few good bass and drum loops
to build up the form and slung out the rest. I applied new drum parts
liberally, and even a few synth embellishments here and there,
whatever helped make another record that I would want to listen to.
You
joined Sanguine Hum for their second studio album, The Weight of
the World. How did you get involved with the band, and can you
talk about your role in the band?
Their
original drummer Paul Mallyon left, and Carl Glover suggested they
try me. Carl knew me from the No-Man live band (he also did the
graphic design for the HiD
Complete
Recordings).
The Hummies found an old web page, probably a decade old now, where
I’d posted some recordings of my polyrhythmic practice patterns,
mixing 3s and 5s, or 3s and 7s and so on, all in a way that was right
up their alley, so they sensed I’d be a good fit. I got them to
send me some songs to learn, which was a week’s work in just
figuring out the arrangements on paper, never mind learning how to
play the stuff. Then we met up, and got on really well. They
immediately enlisted me for their warm-up gig in London and then the
RoSfest date. I saw my role as helping their band continue and
helping them realise their vision, something they had in spades by
the way: they had at least three albums demoed. That was a major
attraction for me: being able to muscle-up on some nice difficult
drumming without having to agonise for months on end over
collaborative songwriting. Their music seemed intensely prepared, yet
I was more-or-less free to play how I saw fit - they didn’t expect
me to exactly mimic what Paul had done. There were a few bits of
their catalogue where I had to toe the line, for example "Diving
Bell".
I probably practiced that song more than any other Hum piece. After
the RoSfest date, then came the Weight
Of The World
recording. Matt Baber (keyboardist) had specced out the drum parts,
so I was following his guidance, sometimes doing pretty much exactly
what he wanted (for example as on "From
The Ground Up"),
otherwise coming up with what I felt sounded good. The clattering
roto-tom on "System
For Solution"
was my shout, as were "In
Code"
and "Day
Of Release".
I absolutely loved playing those two things live. "Day
Of Release"
was powerful but with a really relaxed groove that was a great way to
start a live set. "In
Code"
was very complicated, full of twists and turns and very little
repetition, yet once I knew my way around that piece I never got lost
in it. Much easier than playing 512 bars of the same thing.
You
are not on the next Sanguine Hum album, but are there plans for you
to be involved again in the future?
I
don’t know of any plans. Then again I’m not really sure what the
band will do next. I know in theory there is a final installment to
their epic Buttered Cat series. If they approached me again I would
be keen, but I have no expectations of that happening. While they’ve
got Paul back in the frame, they don’t need me. I still keep in
touch with Matt, though. He is prolific in his own solo work, and
continues to send me awesome things. It was nice to involve him in
the Piko Cloud Booker live show last year with his piano and
electronics set.
Another
recent album you played on that got strong reviews was Tim Bowness'
Lost in the Ghost Light. Can you talk about that session? Did
you have much leeway in what you played?
So,
this is the third of three solo Tim albums that I’ve been on, and
comes in at #2 in the pecking order of how much I enjoyed being
involved! #1 was the album before it, Stupid
Things That Mean The World,
and as with that one, I recorded all my drum parts in my practice
room in South Woodford. As far as I could tell, the bulk of the
source material for LITGL
had
come from Stephen Bennett, and was mostly a body of work I already
knew, because he had intended it for another Henry Fool album. Also
for the most part he was the one soliciting me for drum parts. I
recorded lots of drums for several pieces, but in many cases either
the material was dropped, or I was dropped. In the end I’m only on
four things, and two of those were from the STTMTW
sessions
("Nowhere
Good To Go"
and
"Kill
The Pain").
I like to feel that I have leeway with Tim, I did on STTMTW
at
any rate, but on this record I probably didn’t. I either persevered
with my ideas (e.g. on "You
Wanted To Be Seen")
or gave up ("You’ll
Be The Silence",
which went to Hux Nettermalm). For "Nowhere
Good To Go",
which I think was the first thing I recorded for the previous album,
I just played what I thought fitted the demo, and it sounded really
nice just with Stephen’s keyboards and no orchestral overlays. The
toms outro came instinctively. I like how the drums can enhance the
atmosphere of a piece a great deal by shutting up with all the
cymbals and swishiness, and giving the more subtle elements of other
instruments some space. For "Kill
The Pain",
I dug out my Bill Bruford Discipline-era
influence and went for the kind of rototom clatter that I used to
love messing about with, playing a drum on all four limbs, and tuned
the rototoms and the snare pretty much to the key of the song. Pity
we’ve never played it live, it would be terrific. For the last
track,
"Distant
Summers",
Stephen had come up with the original song structure, and said he
wanted it in the style of "The
Great Electric Teenage Dream"
from STTMTW.
I banged away at various takes, handed over something respectable,
and Tim just couldn’t get into the song at all. So he re-assembled
it as a jazz piece with some demo GarageBand drums and got Ian
Anderson to do a flute solo in the middle. I then had a really nice
time putting some jazz drumming onto it. My original takes were
therefore now spare. They happened to be exactly the tempo and feel
(once shifted by a beat or so) of "Everything
Ends In Nothing"
(from Struggles
Discontinued).
So on they went.
Can
I jump back to another favourite of mine, Henry Fool's Men
Singing? How was this album made?
One
day of improvised ensemble playing, and about 8 years of editing and
adding of auxiliary bits and pieces. A lot in common with The Harmony
In Diversity Complete
Recordings,
then! The recording day was in a barn in Lenwade in Norfolk, either
in the summer of 2005 or 2006, I have pretty much forgotten it. It
was an improvisation session with Tim Bowness, Mike Bearpark, Stephen
Bennett, Peter Chilvers and Myke Clifford - essentially Tim’s live
band with one swap-out (Myke instead of Pete Morgan). Apparently we
recorded about five hours of material. Some of it I do actually
remember playing, e.g. the funk groove of "Man
Singing".
Relatively soon after, within a year or so, Tim had taken one of the
decent sections and turned it into a song called "Schoolyard
Ghosts".
With a lot of re-arrangement by Steven Wilson it became "Mixtaped"
on the No-Man album Schoolyard
Ghosts
from
2008. We now always play "Mixtaped" in Tim’s live band.
His original version turned up as a bit of an anomaly on his Memories
Of Machines
album,
mixed by Steven. I really like it, and it’s worth a listen if only
to hear what the drums should have sounded like on Men
Singing.
Besides that track, I didn’t tune in much to what Tim and Stephen
were doing with the material. I occasionally heard they were working
on it, by way of a few mixes here and there from Stephen, but in
general progress seemed to be slow. For me, the penny didn’t drop
that the album was a thing until they were just about to release it.
Suddenly I found out Jarrod Gosling (who now does Tim’s artwork)
and Phil Manzanera had contributed parts. I still cannot believe they
pushed it out the door with that boxy mono drum sound. I mean, guys,
come
on.
You
recently formed Piko Cloud Booker with guitarist Cameron Piko (of
Montresor) and bassist/violinist Gaz Cloud (of Cloud & Owl).
Is there any more news on this project?
Not
much from me! My main interest these days is in playing live. Cameron
moved back to Australia last year, so that put an end to any gigging
prospects for the foreseeable future. Plus, the vast Harmony In
Diversity Complete
Recordings
effort
was soaking up quite a bit of my time, so I stepped out. I’d
happily step back in again if it led to gigs. Anyway, Cameron is
prolific, he’s always writing stuff, so I expect we’ll all be
hearing from him soon one way or another.
Monday, 13 August 2018
Poll: What was the best Yes-related album of the first half of 2018?
I closed this poll a bit early because the news site is taking a short summer break, so just 43 votes, but the results had mostly stabilised.
1. Peter Banks: Be Well, Be Safe, Be Lucky... The Anthology (w/ Kaye, Sherwood): 17 votes (40%)
2. The Sea Within: The Sea Within (w/ Anderson): 12 votes (28%)
3= John Holden: Capture Light (w/ Sherwood, O Wakeman): 6 votes (14%)
3= Moraz & Friends: Random Kingdom: 6 votes (14%)
5. Rick Wakeman: Live Portraits: 2 votes (5%)
6. Derek Smalls: Smalls Change (Meditations Upon Ageing) (w/ R Wakeman): 0 votes (0%)
A good win for the Pete Banks anthology, which included a number of previously unreleased tracks. Definitely a recommended release and at a budget price. I am also enjoying the runner-up, The Sea Within, with Tom Brislin teaming up with Roine Stolt, Marco Minnemann and others, plus a brief guest vocal from Anderson. I actually voted for equal third placed Capture Light, John Holden's great debut album, which I've talked about previously.
I've not heard Random Kingdom, although it has had good reviews. It wasn't a great result for Rick Wakeman. Live Portraits is an oddly low-key release that hasn't received much attention, despite the big marketing push for Piano Portraits and Piano Odyssey. The Spinal Tap spin-off album from 'Derek Smalls' (actor Harry Shearer) I have heard and is pretty good for what is meant to be comedy.
All in all, while fewer releases than either half of 2017, a strong set of releases. Let's see what the rest of the year brings. My three tips for the period so far would be Harmony in Diversity's The Complete Recordings, the debut album from Kilty Town (Wakeman guests) and the Trevor Horn project, The Eighties Reimagined.
1. Peter Banks: Be Well, Be Safe, Be Lucky... The Anthology (w/ Kaye, Sherwood): 17 votes (40%)
2. The Sea Within: The Sea Within (w/ Anderson): 12 votes (28%)
3= John Holden: Capture Light (w/ Sherwood, O Wakeman): 6 votes (14%)
3= Moraz & Friends: Random Kingdom: 6 votes (14%)
5. Rick Wakeman: Live Portraits: 2 votes (5%)
6. Derek Smalls: Smalls Change (Meditations Upon Ageing) (w/ R Wakeman): 0 votes (0%)
A good win for the Pete Banks anthology, which included a number of previously unreleased tracks. Definitely a recommended release and at a budget price. I am also enjoying the runner-up, The Sea Within, with Tom Brislin teaming up with Roine Stolt, Marco Minnemann and others, plus a brief guest vocal from Anderson. I actually voted for equal third placed Capture Light, John Holden's great debut album, which I've talked about previously.
I've not heard Random Kingdom, although it has had good reviews. It wasn't a great result for Rick Wakeman. Live Portraits is an oddly low-key release that hasn't received much attention, despite the big marketing push for Piano Portraits and Piano Odyssey. The Spinal Tap spin-off album from 'Derek Smalls' (actor Harry Shearer) I have heard and is pretty good for what is meant to be comedy.
All in all, while fewer releases than either half of 2017, a strong set of releases. Let's see what the rest of the year brings. My three tips for the period so far would be Harmony in Diversity's The Complete Recordings, the debut album from Kilty Town (Wakeman guests) and the Trevor Horn project, The Eighties Reimagined.
Friday, 3 August 2018
Yes 50th anniversary Soho plaque
On 3 August 1968, Yes played their first show under that name, having evolved from a succession of Mabel Greer's Toyshop line-ups. Before that first show, they hired a basement room under The Lucky Horseshoe Café in Soho (now the Wildwood restaurant) and it was from there they set off for their debut.
50 years later, Bill Bruford returned to that room to unveil a plaque on the wall commemorating the event, organised by David Watkinson with YesWorld. About 40 of us gathered to celebrate the moment, including David, Chris Squire's brother and sister (the latter of whom was there on 3 August 1968), journalist and long-time Yes supporter Chris Welch, Yes book author Simon Barrow, Yes Music Podcast's Kevin Mulryne, and many fans, including one who started following the band when they were still Mabel Greer's!
After a few minutes while everyone tried to cool down, David began proceedings.
Squire's brother spoke first, telling the Jimi Hendrix anecdote, and asked all to raise a glass to Chris Squire and to Peter Banks. His sister said a few words next, followed by Chris Welch, who talked about how he was introduced to the band.
Next, Bruford talked about those beginnings, rehearsing in the room in a fug of cigarette smoke, the bass drum filling up with empty cigarette packets. And the many disagreements! In one row, Squire asked Bruford how long he had been a professional musician: Bruford said one year, to which Squire pointed out he had been doing it for three years, which seemed a lot at the time! Bruford then took a few questions from the audience and it was on to the unveiling.
Bruford talked to fans afterwards, before leaving, while the rest of us retired for a pleasant lunch, to chat about the issues of the day ("Fragile", can Yes continue forever, why do some Yes fans get to aggressive online).
The art in the restaurant had some odd hints of the venue's significance...
("The Heart of the Sunset" was a popular 1920s piece by Horatio Nicholls. I wonder whether it was an influence when naming "Heart of the Sunrise".)
50 years later, Bill Bruford returned to that room to unveil a plaque on the wall commemorating the event, organised by David Watkinson with YesWorld. About 40 of us gathered to celebrate the moment, including David, Chris Squire's brother and sister (the latter of whom was there on 3 August 1968), journalist and long-time Yes supporter Chris Welch, Yes book author Simon Barrow, Yes Music Podcast's Kevin Mulryne, and many fans, including one who started following the band when they were still Mabel Greer's!
(l.-r. Simon Barrow, Bill Bruford, Chris Squire's brother, Chris Welch)
After a few minutes while everyone tried to cool down, David began proceedings.
(l.-r. Kevin Mulryne filming, Bill Bruford, David Watkinson, Squire's brother and sister, Chris Welch)
Squire's brother spoke first, telling the Jimi Hendrix anecdote, and asked all to raise a glass to Chris Squire and to Peter Banks. His sister said a few words next, followed by Chris Welch, who talked about how he was introduced to the band.
Next, Bruford talked about those beginnings, rehearsing in the room in a fug of cigarette smoke, the bass drum filling up with empty cigarette packets. And the many disagreements! In one row, Squire asked Bruford how long he had been a professional musician: Bruford said one year, to which Squire pointed out he had been doing it for three years, which seemed a lot at the time! Bruford then took a few questions from the audience and it was on to the unveiling.
Bruford talked to fans afterwards, before leaving, while the rest of us retired for a pleasant lunch, to chat about the issues of the day ("Fragile", can Yes continue forever, why do some Yes fans get to aggressive online).
The art in the restaurant had some odd hints of the venue's significance...
("The Heart of the Sunset" was a popular 1920s piece by Horatio Nicholls. I wonder whether it was an influence when naming "Heart of the Sunrise".)
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