Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta 2004. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta 2004. Mostrar todas las entradas

miércoles, 22 de julio de 2020

1978 - Tormato (RM 2004 Rhino 8122-73794-2, Bonus Tracks)

1978 - Tormato (RM 2004 Rhino 8122-73794-2, Bonus Tracks)

Puede que no sea una coincidencia. Nunca toco este álbum de principio a fin. Dos razones para eso. Primero: 4 canciones más cortas a cada lado, lo cual es inusual para Sí; Segundo: algunas canciones parecen estar fuera de lugar en este disco. "Circus of heaven" es una canción de Jon Anderson, no una canción de Yes, una canción extraña que no está nada mal pero no tiene sentido en este álbum. "Release, release" es otra canción fuera de lugar en Tormato, un esfuerzo desesperado por adaptar su sonido al 78-rock. La balada "Adelante" es agradable pero no parece ir a ninguna parte. Cuando Rick Wakeman y Jon Anderson reúnen sus fuerzas, está sucediendo algo mágico. "Madrigal" es una pista con maravillosos sonidos del clavecín y la guitarra española de Steve Howe. Aunque sospecho que intentan volver a aparecer en las listas como lo hicieron con historias maravillosas. "Future Times and Rejoice" son canciones bastante decentes pero suenan como restos de "Going for the one". "Don't kill the whale" fue el primer sencillo. En esta canción, Sí, logra hacer una canción accesible de prog-pop, ¡bonita! También la letra de esta canción es genial, es una declaración contra la caza de ballenas. Está escrito en un período de tiempo cuando la conciencia del medio ambiente era nueva. Este tipo de letra era nueva para la banda, antes de que este álbum Jon Anderson solía cantar letras sobre elementos naturales abstractos y religión. "On the silent wings of freedom" es lo más destacado del álbum, esto comienza con misteriosas líneas de bajo, luego se convierte en una maravillosa canción atmosférica y luego cada músico le muestra sus habilidades al mismo tiempo, ¡típico Sí!
Cada remasterización de Rhino contiene varias pistas adicionales. Estas pistas adicionales son versiones tempranas de pistas de álbumes, versiones individuales, lados b o ideas generales para canciones. El remaster Tormato tiene 9 pistas adicionales. "Abilene" es el lado b de un sencillo. No está mal pero olvidable y completamente anticuado. "Money" debería haberse llamado Going por una parte 2. La versión Yes de "Some born" es bastante interesante, esto terminaría más tarde en el segundo álbum en solitario de Jon "Song of Seven". Pero se puede decir, no es una canción terminada. "Usted puede ser salvado" podría salvarse con una espléndida línea de guitarra que no está allí. Las primeras guitarras en "High" serían una buena introducción, pero el resto de la canción es basura. "Days" es solo una bonita letra de Anderson sin coro ni música. Lástima que no desarrollaron "Campiña", tiene algunas buenas melodías y armonías vocales. Esto podría haber sido fácilmente una canción decente. También vale la pena echarle un vistazo a "Everybody's song" por ser una versión temprana de "¿Realmente sucede?" Con Jon Anderson en la voz. Esos atascos son interesantes ya que puedes hacerte una idea del proceso de escritura. Lo más interesante del grupo es una pista oculta, una versión orquestal de "Onward" sin la voz. ¡Qué sorpresa todavía suena muy bien!

Para aquellos que no saben Sí, por favor no comiencen con este álbum, es posible que no quieran escuchar sus obras maestras de los setenta y eso sería una pena. No los juzgue en este caso, pueden hacerlo mejor. Este no es un álbum favorito para los fanáticos de Yes, pero tiene sus momentos. Es obvio que Tormato es uno de los álbumes más débiles de Yes de los años setenta y es difícil de creer que fue la misma banda que hizo "Going for the one", que es uno de mis álbumes favoritos de todos los tiempos, un año antes. Pero en comparación con algunas de las cosas que seguirían en los años 80 y 90, no está nada mal.

Studio Album, released in 1978

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Future Times/Rejoice (6:45)
2. Don't Kill The Whale (4:56)
3. Madrigal (2:23)
4. Release, Release (5:47)
5. Arriving UFO (6:03)
6. Circus of Heaven (4:30)
7. Onward (4:02)
8. On The Silent Wings of Freedom (7:47)

Total Time: 42:13

Bonus Tracks on Elektra 2004 remaster:
9. Abilene (1978 Single B-side) (4:02)
10. Money (3:14)
11. Picasso (2:12) *
12. Some Are Born (5:42) *
13. You Can Be Saved (4:20) *
14. High (4:30) *
15. Days (demo version) (1:00) *
16. Countryside (3:11) *
17. Everybody's Song (Early demo of "Does It Really Happen") (6:48) *
18. Onward (Demo - Hidden track) (3:06) *

* Previously unreleased

Line-up / Musicians

- Jon Anderson / lead vocals, 10 string guitar (1,5,8)
- Steve Howe / Spanish (3), electric & acoustic guitars, electric & acoustic mandolins (6), backing vocals
- Rick Wakeman / Hammond (1,4), harpsichord (3), piano (5), RMI Electra-piano (8), Birotron & Polymoog synths, strings arrangements (3)
- Chris Squire / basses, bass pedals (1,3,5), piano (2), backing vocals
- Alan White / drums, military snare (1), glockenspiel (1), bells tree & cymbal (3), percussion (4), gong (5), drum synth (5), vibes (7), crotales, vocals (4)

With:
- Andrew Pryce Jackman / orchestrations & arrangements (3,7)
- Damion Anderson / child vocals (6)

Releases information

Artwork: Hipgnosis with Roger Dean (logo)

LP Atlantic ‎- K 50518 (1978, UK)
LP Atlantic - TP 19202 (1978, US)

CD Atlantic ‎- 18P2-2889 (1989, Japan)
CD Atlantic ‎- 7567-82671-2 (1994, US) Remastered by George Marino @ Sterling Sound
CD Elektra - 73794 (2004, Europe) Remastered by Bill Inglot and Dan Hersch w/ 10 bonus tracks














ENLACES

https://mega.nz/file/QXpFTBqZ#AAAAAAAAAACwnikteQ7lEQAAAAAAAAAAsJ4pLXkO5RE

https://mega.nz/file/sDhDURBI#AAAAAAAAAABIkZsrrAHQSQAAAAAAAAAASJGbK6wB0Ek

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https://mega.nz/file/FWphjBJQ#AAAAAAAAAABqVJA8AW6W8AAAAAAAAAAAalSQPAFulvA


jueves, 9 de julio de 2020

2001 - Magnification (2004 Eagle ER 20062-2, Bonus CD) (RESUBIDO 320 KBPS HQ)

2001 - Magnification (2004 Eagle ER 20062-2, Bonus CD)

Antes que nada quiero decir que no se si soy la persona mas indicada para hacer esta reseña, y ello no solo por mi incapacidad para expresarme tecnicamente, sino sobre todo porque es un disco que no había escuchado hasta que me he decidido a hacer esta reseña (y eso que lo tenia en original). Y es que pienso que para hacer una reseña, uno debe sentir algo especial por el disco en cuestión, para poder transmitirlo a través de su comentario a los lectores. Con tan solo un par de semanas de escuchas, no se si voy a poder transmitir todo lo que este disco se merece. Pero dejémonos de lamentaciones y vamos a ello.

Estamos en el año 2001, han transcurrido tan solo 2 años desde su ultimo disco The Ladder , disco que nuestro compañero Lajarin califico de mediocre en su reseña, y que otros miembros del foro comparten. Yo no puedo opinar ya que es un disco que prácticamente no he escuchado.

Tras este disco, se produce la salida de Billy Sherwood y de Igor Khoroshev. De nuevo Yes se queda sin teclista, pero en mi opinión, en esta ocasión el grupo adopta una decisión acertadisima: prescinde de incorporar un nuevo teclista. El motivo lo explica Steve Howe en una entrevista: apenas disponían de teclistas, y si llamaban a uno nuevo no sabían donde se iban a meter (con estas palabras lo explica Howe). Por ello, deciden grabar el nuevo disco con una orquesta, y como he dicho antes la decisión fue muy acertada, pues el resultado fue bastante bueno. Para ello llaman a Larry Groupé, famoso arreglista, conocido sobre todo por sus trabajos dentro del mundo del cine. Como curiosidad decir que desde el disco 
Time and a Word, el grupo no habia grabado un disco de estudio con orquesta.

CD1

Bonus CD









ENLACES

https://mega.nz/file/BPhi3S5J#AAAAAAAAAACO_GE7Mzt9bgAAAAAAAAAAjvxhOzM7fW4
https://mega.nz/file/wH40kYIa#AAAAAAAAAAATdNA3HiZWOwAAAAAAAAAAE3TQNx4mVjs
https://mega.nz/file/EehCkIwR#AAAAAAAAAAB0xwHKx6jR4QAAAAAAAAAAdMcByseo0eE

lunes, 6 de julio de 2020

2004 - Topography - The Yes Anthology (RESUBIDO 320 KBPS HG)

2004 - Topography - The Yes Anthology

Esta es una compilación bastante extraña, y ciertamente no es la "Antología" que pretende ser. El álbum huele a un sello discográfico que inventa una mezcla de las pistas de Sí a las que pertenecen los derechos, e intenta presentarlas como una especie de resumen de la carrera.

La única razón por la que pueden llegar a esto es porque algunos de los álbumes fuente son grabaciones en vivo, que incluyen material clásico. Sin embargo, la realidad es que estas versiones provienen de colecciones en vivo más recientes como "Live from the House of Blues", "Yes-symphonic" y "Keys to ascension 2". En el lado positivo, esto significa que nos tratan clásicos como "Cerca del borde", "Las puertas del delirio" y "Y tú y yo". Lo malo es que ya los tenemos.

Las pistas de estudio provienen de los álbumes posteriores "The ladder", "Magnification" y "Open your eyes".

Si está buscando una razón para comprar este álbum, que generalmente se encuentra a un precio muy bajo, es por las piezas relativamente raras de Steve Howe "Extractos de los cuentos de los océanos topográficos" y "To be over", aunque Estos se pueden encontrar en sus álbumes en solitario y en otras compilaciones. Dado que "Yes-symphonic" solo está disponible en formato DVD, la inclusión en CD de las "Gates of Delirium" antes mencionadas también podría decirse que vale la pena.

Mientras esté preparado para tomar la etiqueta "Antología" con una gran pizca de sal, esta no es una mala manera de descubrir Sí si es nuevo en su música. Sin embargo, no leas demasiado en las nuevas pistas de estudio.

Boxset/Compilation, released in 2004

Songs / Tracks Listing

CD 1

1. Open Your Eyes (5:15)
2. Yours Is No Disgrace (Live) (12:59)
3. Your Move/I've Seen All Good People (Live) (7:25)
4. Homeworld (The Ladder) (9:32)
5. Close to the Edge: The Solid Time of Change/Total Mass Retain/I Get Up, (19:42)
6. And You and I (Live) (11:18)
7. Excerpts from Tales from Topographic Oceans: The Revealing Science of G (9:05)

CD 2 

1. Gates of Delerium (Live) (23:10)
2. To Be Over (6:11)
3. Awaken (Live) (17:04)
4. Cinema (Live) (1:57)
5. Owner of a Lonely Heart (Live) (6:01)
6. In the Presence Of: Deeper/Death of Ego/The Beginner/Turn Around and Re (10:25)
7. Roundabout (Live) (7:43)


Line-up / Musicians

- Rick Wakeman / keyboards
- Steve Howe / guitar (acoustic), banjo, vocals, guitar, guitar (electric), pedal steel, mandolin, bass
- Chris Squire / bass, keyboards, vocals, guitar (bass)
- Billy Sherwood / guitar, keyboards, vocals
- Igor Khoroshev / keyboards, vocals
- Dylan Howe / drums
- Tom Brislin / keyboards
- Andrew Jackman / piano, glockenspiel




ENLACES

https://mega.nz/file/4GBUnK4a#tx1ucerpSb-hWQNC-mrkY1GBjxuvoQOf0PNiE5Xbf0Q
https://mega.nz/file/sbAm3SIJ#p26b7VZNaZU8S2D1HSHKnyzJ1jbY53hRzdm9eD-D5vU
https://mega.nz/file/1fAmGCSY#V583z3jtFOD9ZWmZFFFXbTM0MC5qi3QqgRKNCBc-TFw
https://mega.nz/file/1fQQFQyJ#NaoxCtsAPYTpKxz9_yBv2VPl_ZGdhDSr310E2MI8wTs

domingo, 5 de julio de 2020

2004 - Monterrey Mexico 2004 Remastered (CQ)

2004-09-22 - Monterrey Mexico 2004 Remastered (CQ)

Vocals: Jon Anderson 
Bass: Chris Squire 
Guitar: Steve Howe 
Drums: Alan White
Keysboards: Rick Wakeman 

Setlist: 

cd1

1.01 Firebird Suite (2.18)
1.02 Going For The One (5.30)
1.03 Sweet Dreams (7.39)
1.04 I've Seen All Good People (7.03)
1.05 South Side Of The Sky (12.47)
1.06 Yours Is No Disgrace (12.37)
1.07 The Clap (4.28)
1.08 Long Distance Runaround (5.10)
1.09 Wonderous Stories (4.36)
1.10 Intro (2.25)
1.11 Roundabout (5.30)
1.12 Owner Of A Lonely Heart ~ The Meeting (7.27)

cd2

2.01 And You And I (12.34)
2.02 Awaken (23.41)
2.03 Starship Trooper (14.20)




ENLACES

https://mega.nz/file/GZ8X0CwB#AAAAAAAAAADXSKe8XKjKOAAAAAAAAAAA10invFyoyjg
https://mega.nz/file/SQtxSSSZ#AAAAAAAAAADzmsjMhTl5wAAAAAAAAAAA85rIzIU5ecA
https://mega.nz/file/zctFkSCI#AAAAAAAAAACf3_w1MXlQVwAAAAAAAAAAn9_8NTF5UFc

2004 - Red Rocks Of Colorado - Morrison

2004-09-10 - Red Rocks Of Colorado - Morrison

Vocals: Jon Anderson 
Bass: Chris Squire 
Guitar: Steve Howe 
Drums: Alan White
Keysboards: Rick Wakeman 

Setlist: 

cd1

1.01 Firebird Suite (1.25)
1.02 Going For The One (6.00)
1.03 Sweet Dreams (6.34)
1.04 I've Seen All Good People (7.49)
1.05 America (10.36)
1.06 South Side Of The Sky (10.45)
1.07 Close To The Edge (20.56)

cd2

2.01 The Clap (5.30)
2.02 Long Distance Runaround (4.52)
2.03 Wonderous Stories (6.16)
2.04 Roundabout (5.32)
2.05 Owner Of A Lonely Heart (6.43)
2.06 And You And I (12.19)
2.07 Awaken (21.30)
2.08 Starship Trooper (15.27)




ENLACES

https://mega.nz/file/zEs1QCxJ#AAAAAAAAAABqWmAIxghvSwAAAAAAAAAAalpgCMYIb0s
https://mega.nz/file/CJkjXYJI#AAAAAAAAAAADOWAfgtt6TgAAAAAAAAAAAzlgH4Lbek4
https://mega.nz/file/XB0BxQ5S#AAAAAAAAAACasfzn1zwvRgAAAAAAAAAAmrH859c8L0Y
https://mega.nz/file/rR0hCCqI#AAAAAAAAAAByD6WnbcaImwAAAAAAAAAAcg-lp23GiJs



2004 - Bright Side Of The Sky - Auburn Hills

2004-05-08 - Bright Side Of The Sky - Auburn Hills

The Palace of Auburn Hills
Auburn Hills, MI
8 May 2004

"Bright Side of the Sky"

Disc 1:
1.01 Firebird Suite (2.10)
1.02 Going For The One (5.30)
1.03 Sweet Dreams (6.47)
1.04 I've Seen All Good People (6.42)
1.05 Intro Mind Drive (0.46)
1.06 Mind Drive Part 1 (6.45)
1.07 South Side Of The Sky (10.27)
1.08 Turn Of The Century (8.02)
1.09 Foot Prints (1.13)
1.10 Mind Drive Part 2 (6.06)
1.11 Intro Yours Is No Disgrace (0.31)
1.12 Yours Is No Disgrace (12.12)
1.13 Elgin Mansions ~ The Meeting (4.02)
1.14 Long Distance Runaround (3.35)
1.15 Intro Wonderous Stories (0.44)


Disc 2:
2.01 Wonderous Stories (4.19)
2.02 Intro (0.43)
2.03 Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life (0.47)
2.04 Intro Time Is Time (0.22)
2.05 Time Is Time (2.39)
2.06 Intro Roundabout (2.05)
2.07 Roundabout (5.04)
2.08 Show Me (4.07)
2.09 Second Initial (3.09)
2.10 Rhythm Of Love (5.45)
2.11 Intro And You And I (0.27)
2.12 And You And I (11.27)
2.13 Intro Ritual (0.59)
2.14 Ritual (25.42)
2.15 Intro Every Little Thing (0.31)
2.16 Every Little Thing (5.11)
2.17 Soon (6.21)



ENLACES

https://mega.nz/file/LJ8TQI6I#AAAAAAAAAAAwYz5au7DcogAAAAAAAAAAMGM-Wruw3KI
https://mega.nz/file/uAtFlaqA#AAAAAAAAAAAkyADjdnBb6QAAAAAAAAAAJMgA43ZwW-k
https://mega.nz/file/iIkzDSKQ#AAAAAAAAAACXDCvnwj2SiQAAAAAAAAAAlwwr58I9kok
https://mega.nz/file/2JkhEQoZ#AAAAAAAAAAAo2w7ZqC8HwQAAAAAAAAAAKNsO2agvB8E


2004 - An Evening With Yes In San Diego

2004-04-18 - An Evening With Yes In San Diego

1.01 Firebird Suite (2.48)
1.02 Going For The One (5.37)
1.03 Sweet Dreams (7.08)
1.04 I've Seen All Good People (7.46)
1.05 Mind Drive Part 1 (6.35)
1.06 South Side Of The Sky (10.54)
1.07 Turn Of The Century (8.01)
1.08 Foot Prints (1.26)
1.09 Mind Drive Part 2 (6.38)
1.10 Yours Is No Disgrace (11.55)
1.11 The Meeting (2.56)
1.12 Long Distance Runaround (4.11)
1.13 Wonderous Stories (3.50)

2.01 Time Is Time (4.51)
2.02 Roundabout (5.00)
2.03 Show Me (4.11)
2.04 Second Initial (3.11)
2.05 Rhythm Of Love (6.32)
2.06 And You And I (11.33)
2.07 Ritual (26.52)
2.08 Every Little Thing (5.38)
2.09 Soon (6.48)



ENLACES

https://mega.nz/file/PctzSK4a#AAAAAAAAAACLoiMcLT3-ygAAAAAAAAAAi6IjHC09_so
https://mega.nz/file/bM0lFCCC#AAAAAAAAAACgcD6z0R60TwAAAAAAAAAAoHA-s9EetE8
https://mega.nz/file/uAsHXAJC#AAAAAAAAAABr1d9VnGMsMQAAAAAAAAAAa9XfVZxjLDE
https://mega.nz/file/fc9HjQDI#AAAAAAAAAABBUzo_CtChvAAAAAAAAAAAQVM6PwrQobw

martes, 30 de junio de 2020

2004 - Songs From Tsongas - Lowell (DVD-rip)

2004-05-15 - Songs From Tsongas - Lowell (DVD-rip)

1.01 Firebird Suite (2.13)
1.02 Going For The One (5.35)
1.03 Sweet Dreams (6.48)
1.04 I've Seen All Good People (7.11)
1.05 Mind Drive Parts 1 & 2 (7.31)
1.06 South Side Of The Sky (10.47)
1.07 Turn Of The Century (8.08)
1.08 My Eyes - Mind Drive Part 3 (7.45)
1.09 Yours Is No Disgrace (13.29)

2.01 The Meeting (3.36)
2.02 Long Distance Runaround (4.10)
2.03 Wonderous Stories (5.18)
2.04 Time Is Time (5.00)
2.05 Roundabout (5.18)
2.06 Show Me (4.42)
2.07 Owner Of A Lonely Heart (4.46)
2.08 Second Initial (3.26)
2.09 Rhythm Of Love (6.40)

3.01 And You And I (12.43)
3.02 Ritual (27.18)
3.03 Every Little Thing (5.54)
3.04 Starship Trooper (13.56)



ENLACES

https://mega.nz/file/WIlRWQLa#AAAAAAAAAAC--UHn7an_nwAAAAAAAAAAvvlB5-2p_58
https://mega.nz/file/XQ1DWSjY#AAAAAAAAAAAkgBy2FOu_vAAAAAAAAAAAJIActhTrv7w
https://mega.nz/file/TUsVESwD#AAAAAAAAAAC_JNhhORGqRQAAAAAAAAAAvyTYYTkRqkU
https://mega.nz/file/mA9FEKAT#AAAAAAAAAABNAhHpo6SnigAAAAAAAAAATQIR6aOkp4o

2004 - Yes & Dream Theater - Universal City

2004-09-19 - Yes & Dream Theater - Universal City

This was the last night of the tour. An amazing night by both bands. The recording is very high quality with hard tight bass, the mix was spectacular. Everything is very clear. There is almost no direct crowd noise.
Two minor problems.
1. In order not to make this a 4 disc set, I needed to make a kind of funky fade and dissolve after “Yours Is No Disgrace” nothing is cut, but JA was speaking all the way between the songs.
2. During “Awaken” there is an approx. 30 seconds missing for a tape change. I smoothed as best as possible. I was not anticipating this song, so I came up short on tape. Sorry folks.

Set lists:

DreamTheater:

1.01 Overture (1.37)
1.02 About To Crash (5.14)
1.03 Learning To Live (10.17)
1.04 Machine Messiah (3.19)
1.05 Trial Of Tears (13.12)
1.06 Stream Of Consciousness (10.35)
1.07 The Spirit Carries On (6.55)
1.08 Solitary Shell (5.39)
1.09 About To Crash (reprise) (4.10)
1.10 Losing Time ~ Grand Finale (6.12)

Yes:

2.01 Firebird Suite (2.51)
2.02 Going For The One (5.25)
2.03 Sweet Dreams (7.27)
2.04 I've Seen All Good People (8.11)
2.05 America (10.35)
2.06 South Side Of The Sky (11.56)
2.07 Yours Is No Disgrace (13.21)

Yes:

3.01 Steve Howe: The Clap (5.33)
3.02 Long Distance Runaround (5.16)
3.03 Wonderous Stories (7.21)
3.04 Roundabout (5.51)
3.05 Owner Of A Lonely Heart (6.46)
3.06 And You And I (13.29)
3.07 Awaken (19.13)
3.08 Starship Trooper (13.55)




ENLACES

https://mega.co.nz/#!Dd5QgaDL!AAAAAAAAAABhLOaKwhuZDwAAAAAAAAAAYSzmisIbmQ8



2004 - Helen House Benefit Concert - Oxford

2004-07-11 - Helen House Benefit Concert - Oxford

1.01 Rick Wakeman Solo: Nursery Rhyme Concerto (5.25)
1.02 Rick Wakeman Solo: Eleanor Rigby (5.55)
1.03 Rick Wakeman Anecdote: "Jesus Who?" (3.29)
1.04 Rick Wakeman And Alistair Craig: Death To All The Boys (4.17)
1.05 Bob Harris Introduction (2.43)
1.06 Anecdote: "Morning Has Broken" (4.03)
1.07 Rick Wakeman Solo: Morning Has Broken (3.39)
1.08 Steve Howe Solo: In The Course Of The Day (4.05)
1.09 Steve Howe Solo: Second Initial (3.51)
1.10 Steve Howe Solo: The Clap (4.00)

2.01 The Meeting (2.36)
2.02 Long Distance Runaround (4.19)
2.03 Wonderous Stories (5.50)
2.04 Time Is Time (3.39)
2.05 Nine Voices (3.38)
2.06 Show Me (4.25)
2.07 Owner Of A Lonely Heart (4.45)
2.08 South Side Of The Sky (10.28)
2.09 Roundabout (6.10)
2.10 Announcements (3.03)
2.11 I've Seen All Good People (9.28)



ENLACES

https://1drv.ms/u/s!AktVkmv9K4H8gQSSGRqPcnI_SBGB
https://1drv.ms/u/s!AktVkmv9K4H8gQWtIsJkJIu9BZ06
https://1drv.ms/u/s!AktVkmv9K4H8gQOaMdEsHFIJW98s


2004 - Yes Acoustic - DVD-rip

2004-01-26 - Yes Acoustic - DVD-rip

Tracks:
1.01 Intro (1.34)
1.02 Tiger Rag (4.31)
1.03 Long Distance Runaround (3.14)
1.04 South Side Of The Sky (6.24)
1.05 Show Me (4.11)
1.06 Roundabout (6.16)
1.07 Time Is Time (3.44)
1.08 I've Seen All Good People (7.57)

The Unseen Footage:
1.09 Part 1 (5.36)
1.10 Part 2 (6.56)
1.11 Part 3 (5.57)
1.12 Part 4 (4.39)

Trailers:
1.13 Yesspeak TV Trailer 1 (0.31)
1.14 Yesspeak TV Trailer 2 (2.33)
1.15 Yesspeak TV Trailer 3 (1.47)
1.16 Yesspeak TV Trailer 4 (1.40)
1.17 Yesspeak Cinema Trailer 1 (0.17)
1.18 Yesspeak Cinema Trailer 2 (0.31)



ENLACE

https://mega.co.nz/#!ec4B3QRC!AAAAAAAAAADgTkIqGP4sXAAAAAAAAAAA4E5CKhj-LFw

sábado, 30 de mayo de 2020

1974 - Atlantis 30th Anniversary Edition - Atlanta

Atlantis The Omni

Atlanta, GA

November 30, 1974

The Thirtieth Anniversary Edition


CD 1


1.01 Firebird Suite (1.46)

1.02 Sound Chaser (9.56)

1.03 Close to the Edge (19.30)

1.04 To Be Over (9.28)

1.05 The Gates of Delirium (22.33)



CD 2

2.01 And You And I (10.32)

2.02 Ritual (25.21)

2.03 Roundabout (8.44)


Yes:

Alan White

Chris Squire

Jon Anderson

Patrick Moraz

Steve Howe


Recorded, mastered, and remastered by TheTooleMan 1975, 2001 and 2004




Now that this recording has survived 30 years, I will try to document what I remember about the experience of the concert and making the recording, and the work I did on the tapes in the subsequent months and years and decades.

 

The Concert

 

The Omni in Atlanta is not a particularly great place to go to enjoy music. It is large, and holds lots of people. Yes was well-started on its arena-filling phase, and this show was early in their third tour as a headline act. The Omni was full, as I recall.

 

I bought the tickets late and wound up with nosebleed seats for my friends Mark, Barry, and me. From our seats we could see the entire stage, but it was pretty distant, and we used binoculars to see up close. At best, we could see two band members at the same time through the lenses. The large mechanical monsters on either side of the stage were both an aid and a distraction – they gave the audience more to look at from the distance, but they also lent the show a circus-like quality. Their wobbly motions and rounded design reminded me of characters in a Burger King commercial. These were not the same creatures that you see on-stage in the QPR video or any of the photos in the YesYears set, and perhaps they broke down and were replaced early on in the tour.

 

Moraz was new to me. As a die-hard Wakeman fan, Moraz had a lot to prove, and overall I thought he was a poor substitute, especially during the older songs where he played his own improvisations instead of the original keyboard parts.

 

 The Recording

 

I carried a Panasonic mono portable cassette recorder with automatic level control and an ElectroVoice microphone into the Omni in an army knapsack I purchased at a surplus store. I stashed the knapsack under a navy pea coat carried under my arm. It got some looks by the staff of the arena, but no inspections. The microphone was borrowed from a defunct radio station where Barry and I had worked. It probably accounts for the modicum of fidelity I was able to capture with this otherwise mediocre recorder.

 

I started out with the microphone in my hand, but later put it in the knapsack under my seat. This probably accounts for the reduced amount of conversation during the middle parts of the show.

 

I brought three BASF normal-bias cassettes with me in the knapsack. After Close to the Edge, I flipped the tape over and started rewinding. I was still fumbling with the machine when Jon made his first comments and introduced To Be Over. Only when Steve started playing the opening melody did I realize I needed to start taping again. This is why several seconds of the introduction of To Be Over are missing from the recording. I also missed Jon’s introduction of And You And I while changing from the first to second tape. I flipped sides of the second tape during the applause for the encore, so no music was lost, but the ovation was longer than the recording suggests.

 

Occasional flanging can be heard in some parts of the music, particularly in The Gates of Delirium and Ritual. This was produced by deliberately moving the microphone in a circular motion. It seemed like a good idea at the time, for any number of reasons.

 

We were pretty quiet most of the time, but you can hear me asking Barry, “Want a toke?” at 6:42 into Sound Chaser (I was shocked that he replied “Nah”). That’s me gasping at the end of the Firebird Suite, when the drums blasted like gunshots through the Omni. I ask Mark if I can see his binoculars during the introduction of To Be Over, and Barry talks about his camera and light meter ad nauseum during And You And I. Eventually the guys went for a closer look during Ritual. There are some bits of conversation from the people in front of me, but nothing too distracting or intelligible.

 

The sound in The Omni was not good. Bass notes rang off the ceiling, particularly some harmonic frequencies. You can hear this effect in the recording, where the dominating sound comes from the bass. When these peaks occurred, the automatic level control kicked in and the overall audio level dropped, leaving the bass very prominent.

 

The middle “war” section of The Gates of Delirium was painfully loud, with Jon’s crashing and bashing effects blasting off the ceiling. From where I sat, it looked like he was breaking glass in a garbage can and pounding on other objects. It was incredibly violent, and I think the recording captures most of this quality. Later performances do not seem to be this extreme.

 

 The Mastering

 

Most of the mastering of the recording was done in the first half of 1975 at the University of Georgia, both in my dorm room and the radio production studios of the Grady School of Journalism. Studio C was the largest, with room for a small orchestra or 25 students. It had an RCA two-track stereo recorder and an Ampex full-track mono recorder, mounted in a rack, another Ampex full-track in a stand with wheels, and an RCA board of older vintage, even for 1975. I patched the Panasonic recorder into the board and copied the cassettes onto the two reel-to-reel machines. I split up the tapes by track and cut out unwanted talking, added a few effects, and ran the output through the Blonder-Tongue equalizer Barry had liberated from a radio station junk pile. It was an old tube model with about 8 bands and a tube for each one, in a rack-ready configuration – in other words, a face plate and chassis, but no cabinet. The equalizer output ran into my Tandberg 3000X quarter-track stereo tape deck. I lugged the equalizer, the Tandberg, the Panasonic, a bundle of cables, and a copy of YesSongs in and out of my dorm room, down three flights of stairs, and into my VW Beetle. I drove to the “J-school” studios, lugged the equipment out of the car, up more stairs, and down a long hall to the basement studio. At the end of my allotted time in the studio, I retraced all my steps, equipment in tow. I repeated this process numerous times during the spring quarter of 1975.

 

In my dorm room, I used the Panasonic cassette recorder to process the signal from one track of the tape coming from the Tandberg, which was playing the product of my day at the studio. I would EQ the signal to favor the high end, and the Panasonic’s automatic level control would pull up the low-volume passages that the excessive bass had produced. This output was bounced back to the other track of the tape. I would then reverse the EQ and play it back again through this same signal path, hoping to fix the problems the previous loop had created. Even though I did this numerous times, I didn’t pick up much tape hiss – this speaks to the quality of the Tandberg, I guess. I believe I did pick up distortion from the equalizer, though, and the multiple passes probably compounded it.

 

I cross-faded the introductory sound effects from the YesSongs version of Close to the Edge with the ones from my recording to replace a lot of talking picked up by the tape. Sometime in the history of the tape, I hit the record button during Total Mass Retain and wiped out less than a second of the signal; I used an echo and some reverb to fill the hole. I went overboard with echo on this track. The monitors in studio C were at the other end of the room and did not reveal how much I put into the mix. The result is muddier than I would have liked in hindsight. Echo was also used in Ritual to cover some tape defects, most obviously in the passage before the bass solo, starting around 9:45.

 

The tape flanging effect from 2:30 to 2:48 in Sound Chaser is a product of the two recorders in studio C. The RCA deck ran just enough slower than the Ampex that it was easy to make a successful phasing sound on Moraz’ soaring Mellotron passage.

 

There is a cartoon sound effect buried in the mix during the Ritual drums. A tape cartridge with the sound was in studio C, and I added it on a whim. Other bizarre sounds were coming from the stage, but this was the only one I added myself. Listen carefully for it.

 

Ambient audio was mixed over the middle guitar bridge of And You And I, where Barry carried on about the lighting and photo opportunities. I cross-faded in and out of a couple of remarks made by Barry and me in Gates and Ritual, and made a splice at the end of the bass solo in Ritual to handle an abrupt change in EQ. With the reverb in The Omni, it was hard to hear much of anything going on in the bass solo even as it was happening. The drum part of Ritual is probably the least effected part of the entire recording – it seemed quite fine in its original form. Roundabout is also quite unprocessed, as the noise levels were so high that the poor Panasonic had all it could do to keep the audio below total distortion. The entire audience was standing and clapping during Roundabout, and I don’t recall whether I was holding the microphone or if it was stowed under my chair at this point.

 

At some point in the summer of 1975, I decided to shelve the project. Being in an “endless loop” of reprocessing the audio, and not being able to make further improvements, I ran some of the less-processed tapes through the equalizer one last time, recorded the output on track one of a BASF reel at 7-1/2 ips, and put everything away. To make the show fit on the reel, I moved To Be Over to the beginning of side two, followed by And You And I. During this dubbing session, as happened all too often in my efforts, one of the tubes in the old EQ unit emitted a high-pitched squeal. The decrepit device had ruined many takes with its unwelcome audio additions, forcing me to restart the process from the beginning and waste hours of time. At one point I whacked the EQ unit with my hand – you can hear this as a small burst of static during the ending minutes of Ritual. This apparently was exactly what was needed, as it did not squeal again during the rest of the final copying session.

 

I thought that some day I would be able to process the recording with the equipment I needed (which may not have existed at the time) to fix the audio distortion and abrupt level changes caused by the automatic level control. I had no idea it would be over 25 years until that came about.

 

 The Remastering

 

In 2001, after acquiring a Dell PC, Sound Forge 5, and a used Sony TC-366 reel-to-reel tape recorder, I started work on the remaster.

 

The tape was in good condition, having been stored in its original plastic case and the air-tight inner plastic shell in an air conditioned environment for over 25 years. The first playback revealed a bad 60 Hz hum throughout the recording, another artifact of the old tube equalizer. Volume levels were consistent, but some spots remained where the loud bass had overpowered the rest of the audio signal. There were no drop-outs or other signs of deterioration in the playback of the reel.

 

I used Sonic Foundry’s Paragraphic Equalizer to kill the 60 Hz hum, and its Multi-band Dynamics plug-in to divide the audible spectrum into four bands and apply compression to each. This allowed me to bring up the part of the music that had been smothered by the loud bass and midrange. After this processing, I went through the entire recording in Sound Forge, revamping the audio levels frame by frame to get rid of the remaining abrupt volume changes. Pitch was corrected in spots where the RCA deck of Studio C played back more slowly than the Ampex. The final output was divided into tracks, compressed with SHN, and distributed through YesSwap.

 

In 2004, I started with the 2001 remaster and reprocessed the frequency bands with Sony Sound Forge 7, adding additional compression and hand-tuning the levels. Sony Acoustic Mirror and Multi-tap Delay processing was added to give stereo depth to the audio. It now more closely recreates the audio experience in the Omni on that Sunday after Thanksgiving, 1974.

 

 

Final Thoughts

 

I still enjoy listening to this tape, and the images it invokes are still vivid. I toyed with a Dolby 5.1 mix of the program, but decided it would take too long with my obsolete PC. The lack of a surround monitor would make it a blind effort. Maybe that will be possible for the 35th or 40th anniversary edition.

 

Had I anything to do over, I would have kept the original recording on the cassettes, or dubbed them in their raw form onto a full-track reel before erasing them. But having the raw tapes made me nervous – I was afraid I would get “busted” by the RIAA or the Yes Police, and in order to destroy the evidence, I bulk erased the cassettes. I still have the tapes themselves, but their mechanisms broke and the tape wore out years ago; if I had kept the original Yes recordings, they would not play today. At least I was able to reason through my paranoia sufficiently to keep a final copy of the recording.

 

But what the hell... thirty years later, at least I still have the recording and someone to share it with!

 November, 2004


ENLACE

https://mega.nz/file/fAB2XK4J#AAAAAAAAAABTh4MbEyCQngAAAAAAAAAAU4eDGxMgkJ4