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Progland was founded by John Gabbard in 2005. It's purpose has been to provide you, the music community with the latest music and dvd reviews. It will continue to be your link to the most popular music reviews in the progressive world.

 

Yes - "Talk"

Label - Spitfire/Victory
Reviewed by: Ryle Shermatz
Genre: Prog Rock
Country: England/USA
Language: English
Length: Spitfire/Victory
Release Date: 1994/March 19, 2002
Label:
Spitfire/Victory
Band Members: Jon Anderson / vocals Chris Squire / bass and vocals
  Tony Kaye / keyboards Alan White / drums
  Trevor Rabin / guitars and vocals
     
Track Listing: 1.)- The Calling (6:52) 8.)-Silent Spring (1:56)
  2.)- I Am Waiting (7:22) 9.)- Talk (11:56)
  3.)- Real Love (8:42) 10.)-Endless Dream (1:50) (alternate version)
  4.)- State Of Play (4:58)  
  5.)- Walls (4:52)  
  6.)-Where Will You Be (6:03)  
  7.)- Endless Dream (15:41)
     
The Review

WALKING THE WALK…

My initial attempt at this review involved recounting the complex history of Yes up to this point in their career, but let's put all that aside in favor of the most important thing you need to know: THIS IS THE BEST YES ALBUM OF THEM ALL. After 25+ years together in various incarnations, this pioneering band's stars finally aligned to create surely the most consistent and powerful recording of their career, and to my ears at least, a defining moment in the still-unfolding history of progressive rock.

Surely intended as the CD's (first) hit single, "The Calling" gets things rolling immediately with an unusually simple F-C-G guitar chord sequence before the massed Yes vocal chorus enters: "Feel the calling of a miracle, in the presence of the word…" Alan White's characteristically muscular drums kick in, and we're off to a lively workout parading much of what "Talk" has to offer: high gloss production, brainy songwriting, the confidence of veteran musicians comfortable with each others' talents, and a GREAT deal of passion, particularly on the part of guitarist Trevor Rabin, who surely saw this as his crowning accomplishment with Yes (as indeed, it turned out to be).

My guess is that "The Calling" at its surface level, lyrically celebrates the ascendancy of an awakened third world, a notion clearly more optimistic than reality supports. Still, it's a sentiment few would deliberately take issue with, and at least one very memorable lyrical couplet is spun: "in the beginning is the future, and the future is at hand." Set to the propulsive beat of White's powerhouse drumming, the song arrives at a choppy instrumental mid-section with an escalating riff ratcheting up to an organ/guitar power-chord plateau, serving as launch pad for a mind-bending twisty electronically-processed guitar solo that then yields to a sunny little organ solo by the much-underrated Tony Kaye, followed by Rabin & Kaye swapping riffs to lead us back to the beginning, a repeat of the refrain, advancing to the track's full-circle return to the introductory chords as a solo voice (Anderson?) closes out the track, "in the beginning is the future…"

Interpreting Yes lyrics is always tricky, but it's also unnecessary; by the time "Talk" came out, I'd long concluded that when it came to Jon Anderson's twittery Yes lyrics, the juice basically wasn't worth the squeeze to try to wring some sense out of them. Much of the "point" of most (not all) Yes songs, I've come to believe, is just in the unusual ways some phrases mesh with the musical arrangements and compositional ideas being presented. For example, "Heart of the Sunrise" from "Fragile;" what the hell is the line "SHARP-DISTANCE-How can the wind with its arms all around me" supposed to mean? Or for that matter, what does the peculiar scrabble board of the entire song mean? Of course we all know it and love it as the brain-exploding centerpiece of "Fragile," and that its musical impact reduces such considerations to afterthoughts. And while I've occasionally wondered how much better Yes might have been with a more conventional lyricist, well, it wouldn't have really been Yes then, would it?

Which leads me back to "The Calling:" while it can be superficially read as a little one-world hymn, coupled with the brawny instrumental showcase it offers, it's REALLY a declarative statement by the band that "we're back, and we're serious." Or as the track itself declares, "there's a fire burning in my heart again." And, to my surprise, "Talk" ultimately does deliver considerable lyrical depth, as we shall explore shortly.

With but one minor exception, the same determined fury burns throughout "Talk." Allow me to share a few personal highlights:

"I Am Waiting:" I had never been aware of Rabin's skill as a slide guitar player before this CD, but boy, he can sure make that guitar scream. The main instrumental theme climbs one pinnacle, then goes even higher in pitch. As the original liner notes read, "caution-extreme digital dynamic range," and at this point you begin to REALLY experience the loud/soft peaks/valleys.

"Walls:" a tantalizing glimmer of "what if" here, in this track written by Trevor and Supertramp's Roger Hodgson, I believe this was a leftover from a stillborn collaboration between them before Trevor joined Yes and after Roger left Supertramp. Here is a quintessential "power ballad," and I certainly do not mean that in any derogatory sense. I always felt that Hodgson and Jon Anderson were kindred spirits in many ways, both in their temperament as well as their unbelievably high-pitched singing. I've long marveled at the unusual harmony voices doing the lead on "Walls;" what sort of harmonic interval IS that between the two lead singers (sounds like Trevor double tracking himself)? The words are an unusually straightforward plea for "love & protection," and while some shriveled souls might cringe at such bleeding-heart emoting, in this instance & from this source, I swallow it hook, line & sinker. This unofficially became my personal theme song of 1995 (not that I deliberately anoint one song annually in this way; "Walls" just made a BIG impression on me). After hearing this and "The Calling," I shake my head with amazement, "what in the world do these guys have to do to get a hit anymore? Why can't songs this good get any radio airplay?"

"Where Will You Be:" Jon takes the reins for this one selection, and contributes the weakest effort on the entire CD. Singing over a bubbling synthesizer sequence, we ponder the mystery of the possibility of life after this one along with Anderson. Compared to everything that has preceded this track, this is almost ridiculously superficial, though I hasten to add that it's NOT bad or unpleasant to listen to. In fact, Rabin contributes some extremely nimble acoustic lead guitar that certainly commands your attention even if Jon's musings inspire little reaction. Given that this track precedes the incredibly heavy "Endless Dream" I suspect a comparatively lightweight song was deliberately placed here.

All of which leads us to "Talk's" grand finale, "Endless Dream," Trevor Rabin's lone contribution to the Yes repertoire of cyclopean 10-20 minute plus prog-rock concept tracks. Really, this is Trevor's personal "Close to the Edge," and to my ears, in most respects, he tops "Close to the Edge" by a considerable margin.

The thing that really drew me to progressive rock initially was its ambition and willingness to "throw in everything including the kitchen sink." Yeah, over time, some of that approach has probably hardened into a new set of conventions that we just don't recognize as such. Even so, I still think "Endless Dream" is a brilliantly daring bit of out-there progressive rock. In many ways it makes its own rules and certainly to me, even at first hearing, everything made perfect sense and it really does resonate with a revelatory aura. I think it's not too much of a stretch to consider "Endless Dream" as a bigger bucket drawn from the same well that "A Day in the Life" was pulled from 37 years earlier.

"Endless Dream" leads with a shimmering synthesizer riff, punctuated abruptly with explosive bass/guitar chords triggering a furious riff attack by Rabin, White & Squire. Again, the confidence and swagger of the musicians as they storm through some quite complex musical figures is quite inspiring, even if the listener doesn't feel obliged to count out the tricky time signatures blazing past their ears. Concluding abruptly, really in a musical "flash of light," the first section gives way to Rabin at the electric piano, playing a probing, descending theme suggesting reflective introspection as the lyrics to follow confirm that musical impression: "temptation may come, hope your conscience doesn't hide, the longest trip you'll take is inside…

" Trevor then "tags out" to Jon as lead vocalist, and the remainder of this piece proves to be one of Anderson's most emotionally powerful performances ever. Unlike the usual "word salad" Jon usually proffers, this time he sounds like there's some true resignation and depth to the words he's singing in his usual pristine clarity: "it's the last chance, telling myself that I believe-your forever is mine, and all I need.

" Jon finishes his soliloquy and the band muscles in again; a power-chord transition leading to the real "meat" of this piece, which gets underway with the trademark Yes chorus overlaying a wild collage of electronic samples strobe-lighting between speakers. Depending on your set-up, this is especially effective with headphones, and those of us with Pro Logic II or some other surround matrix capability on our receivers can REALLY begin to "ventilate" with the extreme dynamic range and high-gloss production Rabin provided throughout this project. This section takes me back to "Yours is No Disgrace" from "The Yes Album" which I heard first as a young teenager. "Disgrace," (with its rapid panning between L-R speakers during Steve Howe's guitar breaks) was my first "now I get it" awakening to what stereo was for and what it could do. In the decades since I've wholeheartedly supported all succeeding multi-channel formats, up to and including SACD & DVD Audio; especially for us prog-rock fans, why would we not get behind the significant additional dimension to the sonic palette that multi-channel sound allows? Unfortunately each succeeding multi-channel format seems to never quite achieve commercial viability, and those of us who jump in with both feet are left to agonize over whether we're willing to swallow hard and buy a f*ck*ng Steely Dan remix just to have some surround sound to listen to (not me). I understand that 5.1 mixes of "The Lamb Lies Down" and "Foxtrot" have been completed, but may never be released because the record labels don't think they can recoup their costs.

But I digress; as "Endless Dream" continues, we get oceans of electronic sound (the opening synthesizer sample) punctuated by sharp bass/drum intrusions, with Anderson's processed voice announcing "coming through." The intention here, I think, is to musically represent the continuity of human life; the shimmering synthesizer is the thread of eternity, the bass/drum blasts are birth. My interpretation is of course totally personal, but it's consistent with the theme of the piece, and with one concept I took away from my liberal arts classes in college: "art rewards examination." The act of contemplation reveals greater depth than the surface reveals; the truth lies not in just experiencing with the senses but in absorbing with the mind.

This section resolves into another thunderous full band re-entry with crashing bass/drums setting up a portentious slide guitar/keyboard riff, concluding with a frantic full-band ramp up to the grand finale, with Anderson vocalizing over the chorus, "Talk-Talk-Listening-Like a first sound-you start to sing." Here the entire band pulls out all the stops, with every musician pulling hard to create a plaintive edifice for Jon's never-before-or-since emoting, "bring me back, bring me back again…" and the killer line, "I've waited so long." Simply printing the words here can hardly do justice to the explosive impact this has in the context of this piece. In a career with many triumphs, Anderson (or indeed the band) has never shaken me as hard as they did here.

"Talk" was not a commercial success, and I must confess that despite my own stunned admiration for this release I opted to see Pink Floyd in summer '95 instead of Yes when they toured with this album. I'll ALWAYS regret that. After the tour ended, Trevor Rabin was out of the band, and Yes hasn't come anywhere near to this level of excellence since then, although I dutifully buy and listen to each succeeding release. I hate to say it, but it appears to be all over for them since "Talk," but I personally will always be grateful that they peaked with such an incandescent flash of supernova brilliance. I read somewhere that Jon Anderson feels they're still capable of another "Close to the Edge" or "Fragile;" like Jon, I don't want to believe that's not possible. But I have to say that for me, those are the wrong targets to shoot for, and the pinnacle of the band's career came in '94 when they put aside their rock star egos to follow the muse of Rabin who had a better idea than they did of what the band was artistically capable of.

GRADE: A

 

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