STANLEY SNAIL "SIBERIAN KHATRU" (reaction)
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- Опубліковано 8 вер 2024
- Check out Sight After Dark reacting to “Siberian Khatru” by Stanley Snail!
This song was suggested by our Patron Paul Fenwick!
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Wow, never heard this before. Being a huge YES fan, I am shocked that I never heard this recording before...a fitting yet unique tribute. Fantastic interpretation and execution. Brooklyn here too!
Shout out! Thanks for watching!
It's from the "Tales Of Yesterday" tribute album from 1994 on Magna Carta. The whole album is pretty killer with a guest spot from Peter Banks playing "Astral Traveler" and Patrick Moraz doing a gorgeous piano solo of "Soon". They actually just reissued that album last year. Check it out. Worth your time.
@Mark Jacobsen, thanks. Will do!
Yes was total FIRE live in concert! They played just like their albums!!!🔥🔥🔥🔥
I saw them live around the early 2000s in a (globe-shaped) concert hall in Brussels. The acoustics are really great there. I was waiting for Khatru (my fav. song by them), and it was amazing. I could feel Squire's bass in my stomach. This WAS better than the studio version. It was the original CTTE line-up except White instead of Bruford on drums.
This is one of my favorite Yes songs. This band did an excellent cover. Loved how they ended it with a bit from another Yes song called Heart of the Sunrise, another great song. Thanks for reacting to this and sharing it.
Not to mention a Bruford tune cleverly inserted in there. The whole album is killer, which is a rare thing for a tribute album.
The actual lyric is "gold stainless nail"; the name Stanley Snail is a pun on that.
LOVE THIS!
good innit🙂
@@paulfenwick8767 Yes it is. : )
Yes, this recording brought me close to... I don't know, it's on the edge of my tongue.
😂
LO…L
Nice one!
❤️😆
They nailed it. Sounds almost exactly as Yes' original version. A bit more definition maybe. Definitely a great tribute to the musicianship of Yes. The original is from 1971, the flipside of (brace yourself) Close To The Edge.
@@TONE11111 -ish
I love early Yes and this is my favourite Yes track. Sifa got the voice of Jon Anderson right. This was a 1995 tribute album to Yes, each track by different artists. Stanley Snail was a one off, just doing this track. The Yes purists might not like it but I think it's even better than the original, more energy and verve, For ordinary Yes fans and neutrals, you're getting 3 in 1. The Wakeman solo is replaced by an exert from Bill Brufords 1979 Sahara of Snow and the last 10 seconds were from Heart of the sunrise and all fitted together seamlessly. The bassist is Bryan Beller of the Aristocrats. My first reaction request was Mike Keneally's Kedgeree and Bryan was on that.
Khatru means "as you wish"
Kudos must go to Yes for this classic but I think these 4 guys need praise for how the presented this.
Message to that Potter thing...This is how you do a tribute/cover!!!!!
Your reaction was good, thanks
Great pick Paul!!! I don't think I've heard this before.
@@chazblitz It's a tribute to Yes, from their Close to the edge album. Some have commented it's just a copy. They either never really listened to the original or they are musical spastics. Glad you liked it🙂
@@paulfenwick8767 Yeah I just looked it up. Anything that has Keneally and Bryan Beller involved isn't likely to suck.
@@chazblitz Correct!
This *is* a great pick!
I was never a YES fan until I got older, after having been a musician myself. Now I like to introduce them to younger generations.
Was sorry to hear this was a one-off. Band Geeks did a very good cover of this, but the Snail made it their own, all the while keeping true to the Spirit of the original. Bravo!
nice idea well-executed........
The version from Yessongs is still my Favorite.
I had no idea Mike Keneally and Kevin Gilbert - 2 of my favorite instrumentalists - recorded a song together. Nice!
EDIT - the phrase that sounds like "go Stanley Snail" is actually "gold stainless nail". LOL
if you like Keneally and Yes, you should seek out a track of his called "Faithful Axe." I forget when CD it originally came out on though! Some similar dedication, cover versions. Maybe on the Magna Carta label?
one of Yes' best ever songs, the best one on ctte imo, here in a very dense cover, i like it . But Yes itself did the master of this one on Yessongs!
they don't get it. This times we live. Great
💛💛💛
Not a copy, contains 3 different tracks for a start. Keneally much better than Howe. Beller pisses all over Squire. Yes purist 😂
The best part is the actual departure from the original where Wakeman's solo should be. Too bad they didn't take more chances with the rest, given how good that stuff is. Sorry, Anderson's vocals cannot be matched, but i would have gladly attended concert of Yes music by these guys - they sure sound better than the version of Yes that's been touring for many years.
@@benoitdesmarais2948 The Wakeman solo was replaced by an exert from Bill Bruford's Sahara of Snow. Personally, I think it is a clever and thoughtful tribute to Yes
Ooooh! Ouch!
Edit: Comment on the OP.
I really like the thumping bass and rapid fire drums. The vocals and overall arrangement are way to derivative tho.
You don't like Yes then?
Some.