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Total ratings: 817
Length: 10:28
Plays (last 30 days): 1
Lose one on to the Heart of the Sunrise
Sharp distance
How can the wind with its arms all around me
Lost on a wave and then after
Dream on on to the Heart of the Sunrise
Sharp distance
How can the wind with so many around me
Lost in the city
Lost in their eyes as you hurry by
Counting the broken ties they decide
Love comes to you and then after
Dream on on to the heart of the sunrise
Lost on a wave that you're dreaming
Dream on on to the Heart of the Sunrise
Sharp distance
How can the wind with its arms all around me
Sharp distance
How can the wind with so many around me
I feel lost in the city
Lost in their eyes as you hurry by
Counting the broken ties they decided
Straight light moving and removing
Sharpness of the colour sun shine
Straight light searching all the meanings of the song
Long last treatment of the telling that relates to all the words sung
Dreamer easy in the chair that really fits you
Love comes to you and then after
Dream on on to the Heart of the Sunrise
Sharp distance
How can the sun with its arms all around me
Sharp distance
How can the wind with so many around me
I feel lost in the city
A real PSD gift!! I mean these were real compositions. Just like the good old Genesis, Pink Floyd and some of that time...
You lucky duck!!
Ah, the thundering bass of the great Chris Squire.
Such a treat.
I agree!!
Such a treat.
A real PSD gift!! I mean these were real compositions. Just like the good old Genesis, Pink Floyd and some of that time...
Me too. This time in 2017. Must be in the PSD drawer. Came here avoiding PFloyd and got this overwrought piece.
Hahahah
I got this on PSD - June 2018 trying to avoid the Beatles.
More enjoyable this tune...
Once again, PSD gift
Me too. This time in 2017. Must be in the PSD drawer. Came here avoiding PFloyd and got this overwrought piece.
Me2. : )
Last play June 2010. (?)
And me. Here a yes fan giving a godlike punctuation. Perfect song for going to work on a spring day
Once again, PSD gift
Me2. : )
Last play June 2010. (?)
And me. Here a yes fan giving a godlike punctuation. Perfect song for going to work on a spring day
Me2. : )
Last play June 2010. (?)
This song here is actually the first time I don't stop listening, am intrigued, want to know how it evolves. Have listened to the whole thing although it's quite a lengthy tune.
So... it can take that long - 30 years in my case - to finally feel a connection with a certain band/music.
Thanks RP fo making that possible for me
A few years ago I went to see the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. After they finished their usual show, the front man gave a little speach praising Yes and thanked them for the influence they had on his musical preference. Then he introduced a special guest...Jon Anderson. Then they performed a kickass Roundabout!
You are so right! (and just ignore the crybabies who post that moronic puking emoticon)
Tell the Moon-dog, tell the March-hare
We...have...heaven...
I guess you just had to be there. Glad I was!
They were about to go on tour when Anderson had a respiratory problem and they had to postpone the tour. Then the rest of the band decided to get the tour going again without him (don't know why) and hired a tribute band singer. I find it very lame that they would tour without the heart and soul of the band. They are all very talented musicians yet Anderson is largely responsible for their success and over-all sound. Anderson is recovered and doing mini solo tours at this time.
In the early-80s they toured for a while with a replacement singer - Trevor Horn - one of the members of The Buggles (the other member - Downes - also played keyboards on that tour). I saw them on that tour. It wasn't bad but it wasn't Anderson.
I recently saw a broadcast on satellite TV of one of their concerts from just a couple years ago. I was surprised at how well Anderson sounded on it but I think they were careful which selections they used.
Given their many lineup changes over the years it is amazing how consistent they sound. Maybe not to quite the point of King Crimson, but getting there.
That's one thing he hated! The NOISE! NOISE! NOISE! NOISE!
... all the Whos down in Who-ville cry BOO-HOO-HOO !!!....
-Dr. Seuss
Squire! Howe!
They were about to go on tour when Anderson had a respiratory problem and they had to postpone the tour. Then the rest of the band decided to get the tour going again without him (don't know why) and hired a tribute band singer. I find it very lame that they would tour without the heart and soul of the band. They are all very talented musicians yet Anderson is largely responsible for their success and over-all sound. Anderson is recovered and doing mini solo tours at this time.
In outer space, no one can hear you ralph...
I'm a happy camper now
I'll Amen that.
I double dog amen that!
Could call. Yes might even be possibly a tad tighter than Zappa's band. (Ducking....)
This is from 1971 after all, before Zappa really got his stride and was handing the Black Page to auditioning drummers. Yes never really got any better than this. Zappa, though, just kept getting better and better
Kind of like a calculus lesson given by a screeching eunuch. Not that there's anything wrong with that.
Good call. Yes might even be possibly a tad tighter than Zappa's band. (Ducking....)
Agreed. This is the best cut of the LP.
A tad bombastic and self-important? Yes, perhaps. Jon Anderson's voice actually seems to work in this song. The writing is incredibly original. And I hum along through the whole song!
Yes!
Calling this excessive is a bit like saying "Lebron James scored 50 points last night, which is excessive." If you've got it, flaunt it. These guys can jam and the music is incredible.
I'll Amen that.
Calling this excessive is a bit like saying "Lebron James scored 50 points last night, which is excessive." If you've got it, flaunt it. These guys can jam and the music is incredible.
amen!
Roger Dean is the cover artist. Check him out and you'll see where James Cameron got a lot of his ideas for the imagery in the "Avatar" movie.
Absolutely. Avatarland felt like familiar territory thanks to the Yes cover art.
Enjoyed Avatar but wish it was not so misleading. Corporations do not cleanse folks; governments cleanse folks.
Is it just me or dose anyone else see Avatar as an animated Yes album sleeve. I hope Roger Dean is getting royalties
No question about it.
https://io9.com/5426120/did-prog-rocks-greatest-artist-inspire-avatar-all-signs-point-to-yes/gallery/
Is it just me or dose anyone else see Avatar as an animated Yes album sleeve. I hope Roger Dean is getting royalties.
Eveland wrote:
Why did they name this album Fragile?
Roger Dean is the cover artist. Check him out and you'll see where James Cameron got a lot of his ideas for the imagery in the "Avatar" movie.
Eveland wrote:
Why did they name this album Fragile?
It feels so good to hear this song... this is as good as it gets... Yes— I love it...
Yes it is....... as good as it gets.
Why did they name this album Fragile?
this is one of the few albums that i kept when i made the change to CD
great album cover too
the first time i ever saw them was in either '72 or '73, they were an opening act for Peter Frampton and then later on Mountain in a soccer stadium in the Bronx, NY. they played for 3 hours, did 3 encores, and basically kept Frampton and Mountain cooling their heels for a while. they were easily the best of the 3 bands that played that concert.
But it worth it wasn't it?
Yep, agree with the last sentence. PT is much better than Yes in the same way that a back rub by a bevy of beauties (pick your sex) is better than being dangled by your nuts with cheesewire over a scorpion pit. Say No! to Yes!
Hey! Yes is still good value. I must beg to disagree. Came to me at a time when I needed to run marathons with my brain.
This one is a tad bombastic but I like the build. One of my favourites. (Well, actually Relayer is the favourite CD.)
Like it or not, 70s prog rock played a critical part in opening doors to what a "rock group" could present to their audience, and contributed greatly to the sonic landscape of 21st century music. All these debates about whether Yes or Porcupine Tree is better just amuse me. Do you really think Porcupine Tree would be who they are, musically speaking, without Yes as forerunners? Even if a later band improves upon a genre, you still gotta give props to the folks who were the original pioneers!
But I guess telling everyong how you really really really hate this band keeps you in your warm, fuzzy comfort zone.
some new group,,,Yes , it was mind blowin,,not that my mind needed more blowin those days.Some one help me here,,name of the Club? M,,something? One # 1 spot 69 or 70
or later.
Distance!
To the end of this looooooooooooooooooong song
I loved it as an impressionable youth and I still love it as a curious old lady. However, I no longer feel lost in the city unless I want to.
What?!
excessive? Self indulgent? That is what all art is! pushing the envelope and/by indulging ones' creative impulses.
And you think F1 ISN'T self indulgent?
Go back to school.
If Yes is the answer, IMO you're asking the wrong question.
Agreed!
Love Yes!
Absolutely. Love Yes. Believe Porcupine Tree is much better.
While the debate to which is better: PT or Yes, will undoubtably continue here, I'd rather be lost in a Roger Dean Fantasy than one of Lasse Hoile's. One is full of wonder and beauty. The other, death and destruction, introspection.
I love Yes and did as a young man. But PT is my mainstay. So I like PT more.
Much better? That's a stretch. Jon Anderson certainly sings better than Steven. But I think that PT weaves music more cohesively. At least currently.
Great Segue, Bill. But you already knew that, oh Mr. Goldsmith.
Most of The Smiths and Neil Young's work.
Yep, agree with the last sentence. PT is much better than Yes in the same way that a back rub by a bevy of beauties (pick your sex) is better than being dangled by your nuts with cheesewire over a scorpion pit. Say No! to Yes!
I envy your way with words, Fred. Totally agree with ya, though.
me and the gritty boyz stuck to the Stones
in my high school some of us grooved to this and the Stones, sometimes even in the same day
Brings me back . . .
No make that 12.
Reminds me of reading Omni magazine and cheap polyester clothes.
me and the gritty boyz stuck to the Stones
guess not, to me its 10 points always been groovy to the max YES that isYES
Great album, great song. 10.
Yep, agree with the last sentence. PT is much better than Yes in the same way that a back rub by a bevy of beauties (pick your sex) is better than being dangled by your nuts with cheesewire over a scorpion pit. Say No! to Yes!
Now, this might have been a Yes album cover.
F1 wrote:
F1, your problem is trying to listen to this while sober!
You make it sound like that's a bad thing!
exactly.
Absolutely. Love Yes. Believe Porcupine Tree is much better.
Yep, agree with the last sentence. PT is much better than Yes in the same way that a back rub by a bevy of beauties (pick your sex) is better than being dangled by your nuts with cheesewire over a scorpion pit. Say No! to Yes!
They were contemporaries - I could see how they might lift ideas from each other (and probably did).
Wrong.
This is great.
You must be thinking of Styx' Mr. Roboto.
Don't like it? Mute your audio.
One of the best prog rock tunes ever!
Absolutely. Love Yes. Believe Porcupine Tree is much better.
True. But I still love it. One of the best off the Fragile album.
And I was just thinking how dated (synthgasm!) it sounds. The wonder of music and how it appeals differently to all! Glad you like this - I'm looking forward to the next song
brilliant turn up the bass so the floor shakes.
You bet!