These pieces are meticulously written and constructed. They are absolutely played live in studio and sound exactly like the recordings when played live. Phenomenal
They are mostly written in segments and recorded in segments. After they are recorded the band then learns how to play them as one piece of music. Jon Anderson has several interviews on UA-cam where he talks about this: ua-cam.com/video/mWib02yZmKc/v-deo.html
@@frankmarsh1159 I know they did that on The Yes Album. On Fragile, they wanted to record each song completely barring overdubbing instruments. They may have switched back fir Close to the Edge due to the amount of pedal steel Steve plays. You can't quickly swap in and out of that. He uses it a lot here as well.
@@johncampbell756 There are definitely overdubs on Fragile. Lots of layered guitars. Lots of layered vocal parts. Especially on "We have Heaven" Layers of keyboards, Organ, Synth and Mellotron. Chris even overdubbed guitar lines over some of his bass parts like in Roundabout.
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Guys they play all of this stuff live. With no overdubbing no extra band members just five band members they do it all period absolutely incredible live performances
Lars Henning Orsted Pederson (NHOP)? Chris is a great rock bassist, but not close to the greatest bassist. Watch this--the greatest jazz guitarist, Joe Pass, with the greatest jazz bassist, NHOP. His solo begins at about 2:34 if you want to jump ahead. This is improvised at the speed of light. Buckle up.: ua-cam.com/video/Q30bdy5b5-c/v-deo.html
YES was definitely musical geniuses. I saw them in concert twice in the mid 70’s and this song was on there playlist. There music wasn’t for dancing it was for sitting back and absorbing there masterpieces. They were masters of the instruments.
Have always loved that about their shows. You stand at end of Firebird Suite, then maybe beginning to Roundabout at encore. The rest relax, observe, feel.
This is the song with the most powerful message of YES. The composition of the song is perfect "Introduction to war → Start of war → Destruction → Prayer for peace". With the addition of a jazz keyboardist on this album, you can hear the improvisational interplay of sounds. They are a group of highly skilled musicians, carefully rehearsed and recorded. This is because the recording environment at that time was still in its infancy compared to today, and it was desirable to record even a large work of over 20 minutes in one shot. What is even more remarkable is that they were able to reproduce this complex music completely in a live performance. I recommend listening to the live albums "Yesshows" and "Yessongs".
I always had Close to the Edge as my favourite Yes track but at the age of 67 I’ve changed my mind. Didn’t listen to this enough when I was younger. Utter brilliance from the greatest prog band in history
Truly epic. One of my favorite Yes songs and albums, along with TFTO and CTTE. It is true that Yes did a lot of constructing songs in pieces when they wrote them, as well as recording and then cutting and splicing sections of multitrack tape together - that was the old school way, used by many many bands, studios, engineers, producers. Covered in detail in books and magazine articles, like Prog magazine. Yet they also totally played this and all of their other epic songs straight through in concert. It is not much different from today for songs that get recorded in pieces and put together in the DAW/computer, except much easier than cutting and splicing tape in an exacting way. Now you can cut and slice down to the individual sample at whatever sample rate you're using - as well as slide sections forward and backward. With tape it was usually cut/splice on a beat or fraction of the beat. But real bands still have to play their songs live.
"The other change, they can't do that" . . . but they do, live. I've seen them about 20 times, and my first concert was in 1975 when they did the Relayer Tour with Patrick Moraz. Pretty much the same as the album. Now, I'm sure in the studio they engineered the hell out of it, but in concert, they were so accurate.
Those of us who grew up with them in the 70’s all agree with that comment. Now add to that, those of us who found out back then that Steve said in an interview that he didn’t read or write musical notation. Wakeman was the Classically trained member of Yes at London’s Royal Academy. Insanely talented group to be sure.
I don't think there has ever been a more creative guitarist. In his own league. It's not just the nimbleness of his fingers, he has that unique gift to temper his dynamics to adjust and enhance the composition to sublime levels. He is uniquely amazing.
@@bellodrade He won the _Guitar Player Magazine_ Best Overall Guitarist 5 years in a row. They created their Hall of Fame for him, and then disqualified him from winning. Last I saw, only Eric Johnson and Steve Morse are in it, too.
I love hearing you guys try to understand what you are hearing and what instruments they are using. they used lots of unorthodox sounds and at times instruments. these guys are such huge monster musicians that it's hard to comprehend the work they put into playing these master piece's, often in one take because on tape you really couldn't do more than a few takes before you wear out the tape! these guys are ungodly players and musicians!
Although their music may sound like "disconnected sections", virtually every section they play is returned to and interwoven later in the song as themes are developed (like classical music). That's why their music requires multiple listenings. Also, though some sections may have been recorded separately, they play this piece live with all the tempo changes.
I think the tour that was ‘in the round’ was later than ‘77. I saw the revolving stage in the spring of 1979….and saw Yes with Donovan in 1977 - both shows at the same venue.
So happy you are listening to the genius of YES, Jon Anderson’s voice is from heaven,not just the genius music, the lyrics& the album covers were world of art, Jon Anderson is an angel sent to earth, I have been a fan for 50 yrs,no one can ever come near their utter masterpieces , the more you listen, the more you get it, enjoy the journey guys ❤💕🙏
Yes the greatest band on the planet play this live. Watch live shows. Amsterdam 2001 with the local youth orchestra is phenomenal and Yes they can play it live just like what your'e listening to. I like your two boys' enthusiasm. And with the greatest voice in music.
O yeah guys, those changes did happen. I saw this performed live on their first tour promoting this album Back in the 70s. You can believe it! There are plenty of U tube videos of the band performing this live, please check it out. Thanks for the reaction!
Over 40 years of listening to YES, their music still raises goose flesh. This band was so talented, definitely check out a live version of this song! You will not believe it possible but they play this all, just 5 guys.
Great reactions!!! Yes did about 4 tapes on this song. But they played the entire song through, especially in concert. Lol 😆 Hahaha. Played the whole song perfectly through all the transitions.....lol
I don't have the resource, but much of this was actually recorded live in a barn, if im not mistaken. Stuff like the crashing percussion and crazy sound fx were added later. This one was and has been a live staple for decades-they can totally do it seamlessly live, seen it happen. Keep it up, fellas, love the reactions.
The harmony within diversity of rhythms and tones; t's called counterpoint, guys ! 😉 There are 3 songs on this album. Gates of Delirium is one song, side A, and it inspired by War and Peace by Tolstoi. But wait till you listen to Sound Chaser and To Be Over on side B. And you're right regarding the composition of songs; they said themselves that they jammed a lot and then often built their songs from different sections and adding transitions here and there ! And by the way, classical composers work that way too; they create a theme and then develop chords progression for that theme and then transitions to other themes and so on...
Rick Wakeman was Classically trained at London’s Royal Academy. Makes sense, since I was blown away as a kid in the 70’s to find out Steve Howe didn’t read music. His mind and talents worked through a great ear.
@@davidreynolds6421 So, this was Pat Moraz if memory serves. Had the good fortune of meeting them both back in the day. Regardless of which albums Rick participated, his formal education was the issue, and so Yes did have a legitimate Classically trained composer in it’s midst for much of their work. I definitely thank you David for the correction.
I saw them perform this song live at Madison Square Garden in 1974 when they toured to promote the Relayer album. Both the Relayer and the Close To The Edge albums have only three tracks. The track on side one of each album take up the whole side. And two tracks are on side two of each album,
You need to watch them do this on stage if you haven’t already. The tour was for RELAYER. The concert was mind blowing. Patrick Moraz was on keyboard and did a fantastic job. Jon lead singer; Chris bass and harmonies; Steve lead guitar; Alan drums. No engineer tricks except for a bit of war sounds. The rest is all the genius of YES.
I love this but I still like Bill Bruford and Rick Wakeman better that's my favorite incarnation of Yes.I especially miss Bruford their music just swung and was even funky at times and he and Squire were like soul brothers.
They are just genius.. a lot of genius together with a lot of good engineers of course.. but live they can play the same notes in a set with 20 insane musics.. cheers to you guys for doing such a great job!
You do need to watch this live…just as good…and “that other change”, they can do perfectly live, over and over. Seeing this band live for the first time at 15, changed my life! ❤️❤️❤️
They can definitely make those transitions live.....I've seen it happen. As for the some of the sound effects that you noticed..... Alan White (drummer on this album and for many years after (RIP Alan)) explains in the liner notes of the 2003 remaster of the album. "The percussion on that song is pretty unusual," he says. "Jon and I used to travel together to Chris' home studio, where we recorded the album. We would stop at a junkyard along the way and pick up parts of cars. We'd just go there and bang on things. There were springs and pieces of metal, brake, and clutch plates. We'd buy them and bring them back to the studio. We built a rack and hung all these things off it, and we'd bang on them. During the recording I pushed the whole thing over. That crash is what you hear on the album."
You can find this live on the Symphonic Live video with an orchestra and yes, as others have said, it is composed like other pieces of music to depict War and Peace. Not random. Saw them in concert probably 40 times in as many years and yes, they really are that good.
You need to remember a lot of the tech we now take for granted just didn't exist back then. These guys had to play it straight, and they did (sorry; there was no 'click') Thank you for reminding me how lucky I was to be around when this was released.
All the insanely great musicianship aside, these are the kinds of songs that changed lives when they came out. This album had an enormous impact on me in my high school daze.
It takes many listens to even begin to try to figure out how thi song was put together. To see it s performed live is next level and then with an orchestra, it’s unforgettable. Great reaction. I love how you are confused and in awe at the same time. 😊
The live transitions are actually even tighter live sometimes than you hear on the album. The one you mention does seem like it's pieced together, yet I've heard them perform it live several times and the linkage between the two sections is seamless. Flawless. Also, some of what seems to be synth is actually guitar. Steve Howe uses a pedal steel guitar for many of those soaring high sustain themes. There are plenty of recurring themes within the song yet they are often orchestrated differently - example: when the lyrics go "Listen, Your friends have been broken, Kill them, burn their children's laughter on to hell," that musical theme is the same as the opening theme. All in all, one of the greatest compositions and recordings of the late 20th century. In my humble opinion...!
I am another one who saw them on the first tour backing this LP - (THE Loudest Concert in my life) - and I will testify that they pulled it off, and they did so every time I saw them. Close to 50 years later and this still sounds as fresh as the first time I heard it. I hope you are still listening to this in another 50 years, and still being as impressed.
Yes definitely recorded their songs on separate sessions because they were sequentially creating, recording and adding the parts as they went. Once they got to the end, and Eddie Offord had the final piece spliced on, they learned to play the whole song by listening to the finished reel. It takes high creativity and a leap of faith to record this way.. On stage they were unleashed and hit everything faster & harder like all those progressive bands in the 70s - Gentle Giant, Tull etc. No matter how challenging, everything was created to be played live.
This one is a wild ride that you have to hold on tight to enjoy ! Twists and turns with an epic war of music and then turns and turns again into the Majestic endingwhich I enjoyed most of all and not to SOON!😊❤
The live version from "YesShows" is the definitive version. They elevate this to another level on that. Take a listen. You can literally hear thousands of fans having their minds blown.
You're right, being a yes FREAK since the mid 70's the Gates recording on there is definitive...So perfectly done...Saw them do Gates live in 1976 at JFK stadium, here in philly, at night, 300,000 people...Three day concert! I think I'm still high...:)... I've owned Shows on vinyl and CD but, in moving I lost them...Just bought Show two weeks ago from Ebay...9 bucks...
I’ve heard them playing this one live, no engineer meddling 😊… they may have composed the pieces individually and then spliced them together for the record but if so they learned how to play the entire piece, no interruptions… hearing and seeing it was otherworldly… I heard them in a Tour around 2001 that they called the Masterworks where they played this one and Close to the Edge and The Revealing Science of God and Ritual and I believe Awaken and And you and I… flawless… magical…
I've been listening to them since the mid 70's, saw them live some times. No one touches them musically, they are on a level all there own. Still amazed, watch them live they do it all seamlessly.
Everything was possible to do for these musicians. I saw them live 5 times in the 70' and 80' and 90'. They played exactly what you hear on the studio versions, with more power and energy. it was amazing. Sound Chaser, nnext song on this album, is even more mad.
Great to watch you guys react to Yes. As for watching them live I'm afraid you've missed the boat. Yes still perform but only Steve Howe of the classic lineup in the group. Two have very sadly left the world. However all is not lost!! Jon Anderson is touring right now I think with Band Geek (headed by Richie Castellano of Blue Oyster Cult) and are performing several of their biggest numbers. Band Geek are phenomenal - look them up on UA-cam - to the extent that it was Jon Anderson idea to play together once he'd heard their playing of Yes music. Just praying they get over to the UK 🤞🤞🤞🙏
I have seen Anderson sing Soon live and Daltrey sing “see me, hear me ….” live both at the height of their powers and I they are tied for the most beautiful singing I’ve ever heard.
Musical poetry; both lyric and musical passages depict the build toward war, the justification for war, the jingoism, the build of hatred, the arming, the battles, death, and destruction; then the aftermath; the sadness, regret, and hope for the future. As to the the question of "punching in segments" through studio magic, I can only tell you that they've done this composition live, seamlessly. It is charted. I've had the joy of having seen them do this, along with "Close to the Edge" live and in person, many times-all of the time signature transitions and "soundscaping", in place and fluid.
You guys need to watch the Yes Symphonic version of this song live (2003 or 2004). A great version is available on UA-cam in 3 parts (from Mystic Rhythms channel I believe) and it is magnificent!
In the studio yes, they created often by putting pieces together but once they solidified their ideas into the final recording, they are such incredible musicians that they could (and still do) perform this music live.
Steve Howe: "There were some very difficult moments on "Gates of Delirium" where Jon was getting really excited and carried away with the battle ... the explosions and the amount of echo. I was hearing a tight group and Jon wanted to hear explosions of sound. To my ears Yes was going over the top ... and then we finished it and wanted to doctor it a bit. We were worrying about whether it was a bit too far gone or a bit too safe. One mix was safe and another was too far gone, it wasn't like there was any middle ground to get the battle. We pondered it there for a bit."
I love you guy's! They hit those transitions seamlessly and perfectly without the engineer. That was the early 70's! Great to watch your reactions it was an honor for me to see you both! 31
Running 21:55, this was a band composition credited to Jon Anderson, Steve Howe, Patrick Moraz, Chris Squire and Alan White. Anderson wrote the lyrics to go along with the music. The song describes a battle, with a prelude, a charge, a moment of victory, and a peace. "It's about the tribalism between warring factions, and who is the dominant country, the dominant energy at that time," Anderson explained in a Songfacts interview. "It was at the end of the Vietnam War. We were learning about the unbelievable destruction that was done to the Vietnamese, and for what?" The song was written with live performance in mind - the band admits that it didn't translate all that well to a recording. Jon Anderson mentioned it to Songfacts as one of his favorites to play live, and explained: "The record company didn't know what to do with it, but we did, because we were performing it on stage and that was our legacy, to be able to go on stage and perform this music that would never be heard on radio." A variety of homemade sound effects were used on this song, which is something their keyboard player Patrick Moraz encouraged, as it was something he did with his band Refugee. According to drummer Alan White, many of the sounds were made with items they picked up at a junkyard. Alan White and Jon Anderson built a tree of percussion made out of car parts from some of the pieces of metal they'd picked from the scrapyard. White recalled to Uncut magazine September 2014 of the battle between keyboards and drums that concludes the song: "When we were recording that live, it got to the point where it got really ridiculous, so I pushed the whole tree and it fell over in the studio - we kept that on the album."
This song, as is all their songs, is amazing live. You are getting into a long amazing journey with YES. Great reaction. Gates of Delerium is side one of the album. Side 2 is Sound Chaser and To Be Over.
@@johnwriter8234 Chris Squire: "After we played it on stage I was happy to put that version on the 'Yesshows' album, because by then it had taken on an identity. You could tell when we were playing the beginning that we knew where we were going!"
Its played like this LIVE too, they are so skilled they could do. Essentially it is rehearsed and played LIVE in the studio which means they can play it LIVE at a show and they can just do it! Even back then without click tracks, without in ear monitors and no backing tracks etc..
They played this live open air in the UK at a Football stadium to an outdoor audience with THOSE transitions! This is what bands as fine tuned as YES did and still can do. These are literally some of the best musicians in the world. Also this was Analogue recording no digital.
AMAZING thing about Chris Squier : he was able to play that crazy bass....and sing in a different key at same time : find someone else that can do it. reaction is amazing... but really, on stage, this is how they did. yes UNREAL !!!
Look dudes this is not studio these guys play this stuff live and they do it perfectly its just master musicianship
You are exactly right !
Been there heard it !
It’s done live with no dubbed in sound effects !
AMAZING ! 😱
they played live the same as the LP
They used to play this live, over and again. They could reproduce this live. Like them or not, they were an extraordindary live act.
Seen them live and did this perfectly
These pieces are meticulously written and constructed. They are absolutely played live in studio and sound exactly like the recordings when played live. Phenomenal
They are mostly written in segments and recorded in segments. After they are recorded the band then learns how to play them as one piece of music. Jon Anderson has several interviews on UA-cam where he talks about this: ua-cam.com/video/mWib02yZmKc/v-deo.html
@@frankmarsh1159 I know they did that on The Yes Album. On Fragile, they wanted to record each song completely barring overdubbing instruments. They may have switched back fir Close to the Edge due to the amount of pedal steel Steve plays. You can't quickly swap in and out of that. He uses it a lot here as well.
@@johncampbell756 There are definitely overdubs on Fragile. Lots of layered guitars. Lots of layered vocal parts. Especially on "We have Heaven" Layers of keyboards, Organ, Synth and Mellotron. Chris even overdubbed guitar lines over some of his bass parts like in Roundabout.
You’re absolutely right !!
Gentlemen this is all planned out, all written out and played live.
ARE YOU GUYS SERIOUS? YOU TOOK THE ULTIMATE JOURNEY into the deepest dimensions of YESdom! CONGRATULATIONS 🎊! You have arrived on Planet YES! Where no band has gone before or after! Welcome home! 😅
Not the engineer, but the band. I have seen them perform this live a few times and they hit these transitions seemlessly and perfectly!
Exactly
Live they can do it , but in this studio version I think he is right: the engeneering sound is not exactly the same at the transition.
Yeah dude... Incredible band!
Guys they play all of this stuff live. With no overdubbing no extra band members just five band members they do it all period absolutely incredible live performances
You are listening to the greatest bass player to ever live...R.I.P. Chris Squire.
Lars Henning Orsted Pederson (NHOP)? Chris is a great rock bassist, but not close to the greatest bassist. Watch this--the greatest jazz guitarist, Joe Pass, with the greatest jazz bassist, NHOP. His solo begins at about 2:34 if you want to jump ahead. This is improvised at the speed of light. Buckle up.: ua-cam.com/video/Q30bdy5b5-c/v-deo.html
You can see the band do this live. It's not clips. They play it all at one time. No piecing it together. Love it!!
YES was definitely musical geniuses. I saw them in concert twice in the mid 70’s and this song was on there playlist. There music wasn’t for dancing it was for sitting back and absorbing there masterpieces. They were masters of the instruments.
Have always loved that about their shows. You stand at end of Firebird Suite, then maybe beginning to Roundabout at encore. The rest relax, observe, feel.
The “Soon” coda is one of the most beautiful melodies ever written in human history.
This is the song with the most powerful message of YES.
The composition of the song is perfect "Introduction to war → Start of war → Destruction → Prayer for peace". With the addition of a jazz keyboardist on this album, you can hear the improvisational interplay of sounds.
They are a group of highly skilled musicians, carefully rehearsed and recorded. This is because the recording environment at that time was still in its infancy compared to today, and it was desirable to record even a large work of over 20 minutes in one shot. What is even more remarkable is that they were able to reproduce this complex music completely in a live performance. I recommend listening to the live albums "Yesshows" and "Yessongs".
YESSONGS ❤🎉
The yeshows version is THE version of GoD.
I always had Close to the Edge as my favourite Yes track but at the age of 67 I’ve changed my mind. Didn’t listen to this enough when I was younger. Utter brilliance from the greatest prog band in history
This is a straight through masterpiece!!! Don't be confused!!! There is only one "Yes", there is no other!!! YES FOREVER!!!!!!
Truly epic. One of my favorite Yes songs and albums, along with TFTO and CTTE. It is true that Yes did a lot of constructing songs in pieces when they wrote them, as well as recording and then cutting and splicing sections of multitrack tape together - that was the old school way, used by many many bands, studios, engineers, producers. Covered in detail in books and magazine articles, like Prog magazine. Yet they also totally played this and all of their other epic songs straight through in concert. It is not much different from today for songs that get recorded in pieces and put together in the DAW/computer, except much easier than cutting and splicing tape in an exacting way. Now you can cut and slice down to the individual sample at whatever sample rate you're using - as well as slide sections forward and backward. With tape it was usually cut/splice on a beat or fraction of the beat. But real bands still have to play their songs live.
"The other change, they can't do that" . . . but they do, live. I've seen them about 20 times, and my first concert was in 1975 when they did the Relayer Tour with Patrick Moraz. Pretty much the same as the album. Now, I'm sure in the studio they engineered the hell out of it, but in concert, they were so accurate.
I saw them on that tour, too. Houston Astrodome Dec 1975. Mahavishnu Orchestra was the warm up. Fantastic!
Hard to imagine but they play this live, and it was incredible. Actually, seen them play this live several times. They were fantastic live!!
Jon Anderson said in Yes' prime they put everything together with how it would be in a live show in mind.
Steve Howe was a Genius in my eyes.
Those of us who grew up with them in the 70’s all agree with that comment. Now add to that, those of us who found out back then that Steve said in an interview that he didn’t read or write musical notation. Wakeman was the Classically trained member of Yes at London’s Royal Academy. Insanely talented group to be sure.
That’s an understatement✌️❤️
I don't think there has ever been a more creative guitarist. In his own league. It's not just the nimbleness of his fingers, he has that unique gift to temper his dynamics to adjust and enhance the composition to sublime levels. He is uniquely amazing.
@@bellodrade He won the _Guitar Player Magazine_ Best Overall Guitarist 5 years in a row. They created their Hall of Fame for him, and then disqualified him from winning. Last I saw, only Eric Johnson and Steve Morse are in it, too.
@@davep8221 He's in the Pantheon. He's the most creative guitarist I have ever heard. I would only put Hendrix and Van Halen in his company.
I love hearing you guys try to understand what you are hearing and what instruments they are using. they used lots of unorthodox sounds and at times instruments. these guys are such huge monster musicians that it's hard to comprehend the work they put into playing these master piece's, often in one take because on tape you really couldn't do more than a few takes before you wear out the tape! these guys are ungodly players and musicians!
Although their music may sound like "disconnected sections", virtually every section they play is returned to and interwoven later in the song as themes are developed (like classical music). That's why their music requires multiple listenings. Also, though some sections may have been recorded separately, they play this piece live with all the tempo changes.
Especially this song. The 2 melodies coming together at the end is spectacular. You can hear both constantly throughout each part.
I saw Yes in the round (stage slowly spins) at age 14 in 1977 and it was an unbelievable show. The musicianship is unparalleled.
Me too, round stage. Think it was the Going for the One tour. Steve played both Clap and Mood for a Day, just awesome.
@@stevemd6488 - Yes, it was. Loved Parallels.
Anderson singing the Soon part on the elevated stage center under a spot was awesome!!
I think the tour that was ‘in the round’ was later than ‘77. I saw the revolving stage in the spring of 1979….and saw Yes with Donovan in 1977 - both shows at the same venue.
@@hklinker I saw them in ‘77 with Donovan also.You’re right,in the round was ‘79.I still remember what a great show that was!
It is absolutely them. I have seen this live and it was phenomenal!
So happy you are listening to the genius of YES, Jon Anderson’s voice is from heaven,not just the genius music, the lyrics& the album covers were world of art, Jon Anderson is an angel sent to earth, I have been a fan for 50 yrs,no one can ever come near their utter masterpieces , the more you listen, the more you get it, enjoy the journey guys ❤💕🙏
Yes the greatest band on the planet play this live. Watch live shows. Amsterdam 2001 with the local youth orchestra is phenomenal and Yes they can play it live just like what your'e listening to. I like your two boys' enthusiasm. And with the greatest voice in music.
O yeah guys, those changes did happen. I saw this performed live on their first tour promoting this album Back in the 70s. You can believe it! There are plenty of U tube videos of the band performing this live, please check it out. Thanks for the reaction!
Me too, Patrick Moraz was awesome on keyboards, no surprise there, whether him, Rick Wakeman or Tony Kaye, you were always amazed!
@@vicprovost2561 saw them perform this in Detroit 1976!!
@@johnwriter8234 Saw hem the same year but in San Diego.... or maybe Phoenix... been so long I'm not sure. haha
@@IYAMNI we ain't sure .. cause we OLD!!! (LOL!) ...(or..."I don't remember; I was drunk/high at the time") ... ( DARK SIDE MOON reference!)
@@johnwriter8234 😆
Side two will need your attention. Amazing album!
Two words sound chaser😊
Three words: to be over.
Over 40 years of listening to YES, their music still raises goose flesh.
This band was so talented, definitely check out a live version of this song! You will not believe it possible but they play this all, just 5 guys.
Masters level of musicianship
Eddy Offord(Producer) was the sixth member of Yes. The work he did on Close to the Edge is legendary. G.O.D was definitely done in several sections.
The battle, the crescendo, and the peaceful aftermath. They made all those changes seamlessly live. Brilliance.
YES, They Did, Powerhouse!🎉❤
Great reactions!!! Yes did about 4 tapes on this song. But they played the entire song through, especially in concert. Lol 😆 Hahaha. Played the whole song perfectly through all the transitions.....lol
I don't have the resource, but much of this was actually recorded live in a barn, if im not mistaken. Stuff like the crashing percussion and crazy sound fx were added later. This one was and has been a live staple for decades-they can totally do it seamlessly live, seen it happen. Keep it up, fellas, love the reactions.
The harmony within diversity of rhythms and tones; t's called counterpoint, guys ! 😉 There are 3 songs on this album. Gates of Delirium is one song, side A, and it inspired by War and Peace by Tolstoi. But wait till you listen to Sound Chaser and To Be Over on side B. And you're right regarding the composition of songs; they said themselves that they jammed a lot and then often built their songs from different sections and adding transitions here and there ! And by the way, classical composers work that way too; they create a theme and then develop chords progression for that theme and then transitions to other themes and so on...
Rick Wakeman was Classically trained at London’s Royal Academy. Makes sense, since I was blown away as a kid in the 70’s to find out Steve Howe didn’t read music. His mind and talents worked through a great ear.
@@ronaldelliott4373 o
@@ronaldelliott4373 Rick Wakeman left Yes before this was written
@@davidreynolds6421 So, this was Pat Moraz if memory serves. Had the good fortune of meeting them both back in the day. Regardless of which albums Rick participated, his formal education was the issue, and so Yes did have a legitimate Classically trained composer in it’s midst for much of their work. I definitely thank you David for the correction.
I saw them perform this song live at Madison Square Garden in 1974 when they toured to promote the Relayer album. Both the Relayer and the Close To The Edge albums have only three tracks. The track on side one of each album take up the whole side. And two tracks are on side two of each album,
I've seen YES at LEAST 15 times and they can ABSOLUTELY do this live!
You need to watch them do this on stage if you haven’t already. The tour was for RELAYER. The concert was mind blowing. Patrick Moraz was on keyboard and did a fantastic job. Jon lead singer; Chris bass and harmonies; Steve lead guitar; Alan drums. No engineer tricks except for a bit of war sounds. The rest is all the genius of YES.
I love this but I still like Bill Bruford and Rick Wakeman better that's my favorite incarnation of Yes.I especially miss Bruford their music just swung and was even funky at times and he and Squire were like soul brothers.
A N A L O G .. no computer- digitized "auto- tune" programs!!
They are just genius.. a lot of genius together with a lot of good engineers of course.. but live they can play the same notes in a set with 20 insane musics.. cheers to you guys for doing such a great job!
You do need to watch this live…just as good…and “that other change”, they can do perfectly live, over and over. Seeing this band live for the first time at 15, changed my life! ❤️❤️❤️
They can definitely make those transitions live.....I've seen it happen.
As for the some of the sound effects that you noticed..... Alan White (drummer on this album and for many years after (RIP Alan)) explains in the liner notes of the 2003 remaster of the album.
"The percussion on that song is pretty unusual," he says. "Jon and I used to travel together to Chris' home studio, where we recorded the album. We would stop at a junkyard along the way and pick up parts of cars. We'd just go there and bang on things. There were springs and pieces of metal, brake, and clutch plates. We'd buy them and bring them back to the studio. We built a rack and hung all these things off it, and we'd bang on them. During the recording I pushed the whole thing over. That crash is what you hear on the album."
You need to see it live! I have and they transition seamlessly!
You can find this live on the Symphonic Live video with an orchestra and yes, as others have said, it is composed like other pieces of music to depict War and Peace. Not random. Saw them in concert probably 40 times in as many years and yes, they really are that good.
You need to remember a lot of the tech we now take for granted just didn't exist back then. These guys had to play it straight, and they did (sorry; there was no 'click')
Thank you for reminding me how lucky I was to be around when this was released.
All the insanely great musicianship aside, these are the kinds of songs that changed lives when they came out. This album had an enormous impact on me in my high school daze.
It takes many listens to even begin to try to figure out how thi song was put together. To see it s performed live is next level and then with an orchestra, it’s unforgettable. Great reaction. I love how you are confused and in awe at the same time. 😊
The live transitions are actually even tighter live sometimes than you hear on the album. The one you mention does seem like it's pieced together, yet I've heard them perform it live several times and the linkage between the two sections is seamless. Flawless. Also, some of what seems to be synth is actually guitar. Steve Howe uses a pedal steel guitar for many of those soaring high sustain themes. There are plenty of recurring themes within the song yet they are often orchestrated differently - example: when the lyrics go "Listen, Your friends have been broken, Kill them, burn their children's laughter on to hell," that musical theme is the same as the opening theme. All in all, one of the greatest compositions and recordings of the late 20th century. In my humble opinion...!
That's what always amazed me when I grew up listening to them. Every song is so unique.
I am another one who saw them on the first tour backing this LP - (THE Loudest Concert in my life) - and I will testify that they pulled it off, and they did so every time I saw them. Close to 50 years later and this still sounds as fresh as the first time I heard it. I hope you are still listening to this in another 50 years, and still being as impressed.
They played all of this in concert.
If you listen to Jon Anderson's interview with Rick Beato you'll hear how they recorded "Close to the Edge." They do play Gates of Delirium live.
Neither will ever be in the 'Easy Listening' category! BUT you are oh so lucky when you do listen. 🎵
I have seen this played live many times. They transition from "part to part" seamlessly.
Un des génis d'Yes, Steve Howe a eu 76 ans hier
Such a masterpiece!!! Thanks, guys. ❤️❤️
Yes definitely recorded their songs on separate sessions because they were sequentially creating, recording and adding the parts as they went. Once they got to the end, and Eddie Offord had the final piece spliced on, they learned to play the whole song by listening to the finished reel. It takes high creativity and a leap of faith to record this way.. On stage they were unleashed and hit everything faster & harder like all those progressive bands in the 70s - Gentle Giant, Tull etc. No matter how challenging, everything was created to be played live.
Yes is the best! Please do the song Awaken!
2nd that ❤
@@docnflossie73513rd that!
YES has 30 masterpieces like Gates, they’ve been my favorite since 1969.
Simply the best music of the 20th century. Nothing compares to The gates of delirium
Gentleman I love the way there no musical snobbery just two open minds on a musical quest for inspiration an enlightenment fantastic channel 👏
This one is a wild ride that you have to hold on tight to enjoy ! Twists and turns with an epic war of music and then turns and turns again into the Majestic endingwhich I enjoyed most of all and not to SOON!😊❤
The live version from "YesShows" is the definitive version. They elevate this to another level on that. Take a listen. You can literally hear thousands of fans having their minds blown.
Steve’s mindblowing guitar solo at the end of the ‘battle’.
@@tubefreeeasy Indeed
You're right, being a yes FREAK since the mid 70's the Gates recording on there is definitive...So perfectly done...Saw them do Gates live in 1976 at JFK stadium, here in philly, at night, 300,000 people...Three day concert! I think I'm still high...:)... I've owned Shows on vinyl and CD but, in moving I lost them...Just bought Show two weeks ago from Ebay...9 bucks...
The yesshows GoD reigns Supreme.
I’ve heard them playing this one live, no engineer meddling 😊… they may have composed the pieces individually and then spliced them together for the record but if so they learned how to play the entire piece, no interruptions… hearing and seeing it was otherworldly… I heard them in a Tour around 2001 that they called the Masterworks where they played this one and Close to the Edge and The Revealing Science of God and Ritual and I believe Awaken and And you and I… flawless… magical…
Can never not expect the unexpected with this group .
"Sound Chaser" from this album similarly shows out .
Saw this Tour . Didn't disappoint .
YES is my fav. Love your input. Spread the love 🎸
I've been listening to them since the mid 70's, saw them live some times. No one touches them musically, they are on a level all there own. Still amazed, watch them live they do it all seamlessly.
A couple different guitars, bass, keyboards, drums, that's pretty much it to make this masterpiece! Amazing stuff!
Everything was possible to do for these musicians. I saw them live 5 times in the 70' and 80' and 90'. They played exactly what you hear on the studio versions, with more power and energy. it was amazing. Sound Chaser, nnext song on this album, is even more mad.
I saw them do it in Detroit... 1976
Great to watch you guys react to Yes. As for watching them live I'm afraid you've missed the boat. Yes still perform but only Steve Howe of the classic lineup in the group. Two have very sadly left the world. However all is not lost!! Jon Anderson is touring right now I think with Band Geek (headed by Richie Castellano of Blue Oyster Cult) and are performing several of their biggest numbers. Band Geek are phenomenal - look them up on UA-cam - to the extent that it was Jon Anderson idea to play together once he'd heard their playing of Yes music. Just praying they get over to the UK 🤞🤞🤞🙏
Actually 3 have left this world, don’t forget Peter Banks.
Yes could play this stuff live! Sounded great. I saw them twice.
Watch, Heart of the Sunrise, live from the Apollo! You’ll see how they do it live. Mind blowing!
Bravo....you're broadening your music ears with this band
Steve Howe was Guitar Player Magazine s player of the year multiple years in a row for a reason
I have seen Anderson sing Soon live and Daltrey sing “see me, hear me ….” live both at the height of their powers and I they are tied for the most beautiful singing I’ve ever heard.
Those voices will be heard forever, I can still remember them live as if yesterday. Off the charts great!
Musical poetry; both lyric and musical passages depict the build toward war, the justification for war, the jingoism, the build of hatred, the arming, the battles, death, and destruction; then the aftermath; the sadness, regret, and hope for the future. As to the the question of "punching in segments" through studio magic, I can only tell you that they've done this composition live, seamlessly. It is charted. I've had the joy of having seen them do this, along with "Close to the Edge" live and in person, many times-all of the time signature transitions and "soundscaping", in place and fluid.
PS: Thank you for reacting to this! Great job!
You guys need to watch the Yes Symphonic version of this song live (2003 or 2004). A great version is available on UA-cam in 3 parts (from Mystic Rhythms channel I believe) and it is magnificent!
So glad you’re wanting to watch them live. Especially the early 70s live performances. Unreal.❤️
I've Seen them live about 4 times--It Is Worth IT!
Love your choices and sensibilities. Great channel guys. 🤘😎
In the studio yes, they created often by putting pieces together but once they solidified their ideas into the final recording, they are such incredible musicians that they could (and still do) perform this music live.
That ascending sequence features Steve Howe on pedal steel as well as the electric guitar.
Incredibly gifted musicians.
This was played live straight through no breaks in time change.
They was as Great Live!!Saw them @16,Blew My Mind!!Yes Yessongs is Live!!Dig it!Ya'll make this ol Lincolnvillian Mainiac the Some Proud o what Ya Do.
I saw them a few times on that tour and these songs sounded even better live. I miss that sound! No digital back then All done on tape.
Best band, ever. Period.
Amazing track from my fav band. Brilliant
Absolutely done exactly the same live this band is on another level
Saw them with 3 different orchestras in California. Mind blowing.
You should watch some of the live versions of the songs you have heard …various eras of the band available live…you will enjoy the musicianship
Steve Howe: "There were some very difficult moments on "Gates of Delirium" where Jon was getting really excited and carried away with the battle ... the explosions and the amount of echo. I was hearing a tight group and Jon wanted to hear explosions of sound. To my ears Yes was going over the top ... and then we finished it and wanted to doctor it a bit. We were worrying about whether it was a bit too far gone or a bit too safe. One mix was safe and another was too far gone, it wasn't like there was any middle ground to get the battle. We pondered it there for a bit."
Sounds like an inclusion on a remix/remaster/extended/etc release. If they still have it around.
Where's that interview? I'd love to hear/read it all.
@@davep8221 It's from the book Yesstories by Tim Morse.
@@bookhouseboy280Thank you, sir. "Book." A seldom used word these days.
I love you guy's! They hit those transitions seamlessly and perfectly without the engineer. That was the early 70's! Great to watch your reactions it was an honor for me to see you both!
31
Running 21:55, this was a band composition credited to Jon Anderson, Steve Howe, Patrick Moraz, Chris Squire and Alan White. Anderson wrote the lyrics to go along with the music. The song describes a battle, with a prelude, a charge, a moment of victory, and a peace.
"It's about the tribalism between warring factions, and who is the dominant country, the dominant energy at that time," Anderson explained in a Songfacts interview. "It was at the end of the Vietnam War. We were learning about the unbelievable destruction that was done to the Vietnamese, and for what?"
The song was written with live performance in mind - the band admits that it didn't translate all that well to a recording. Jon Anderson mentioned it to Songfacts as one of his favorites to play live, and explained: "The record company didn't know what to do with it, but we did, because we were performing it on stage and that was our legacy, to be able to go on stage and perform this music that would never be heard on radio."
A variety of homemade sound effects were used on this song, which is something their keyboard player Patrick Moraz encouraged, as it was something he did with his band Refugee. According to drummer Alan White, many of the sounds were made with items they picked up at a junkyard.
Alan White and Jon Anderson built a tree of percussion made out of car parts from some of the pieces of metal they'd picked from the scrapyard. White recalled to Uncut magazine September 2014 of the battle between keyboards and drums that concludes the song: "When we were recording that live, it got to the point where it got really ridiculous, so I pushed the whole tree and it fell over in the studio - we kept that on the album."
They played this live perfectly and with ease. Even the vocals.
This song, as is all their songs, is amazing live. You are getting into a long amazing journey with YES. Great reaction. Gates of Delerium is side one of the album. Side 2 is Sound Chaser and To Be Over.
Dude! I saw them do this LIVE in Detroit 1976!
@@johnwriter8234 Chris Squire: "After we played it on stage I was happy to put that version on the 'Yesshows' album, because by then it had taken on an identity. You could tell when we were playing the beginning that we knew where we were going!"
Its played like this LIVE too, they are so skilled they could do. Essentially it is rehearsed and played LIVE in the studio which means they can play it LIVE at a show and they can just do it! Even back then without click tracks, without in ear monitors and no backing tracks etc..
They played this live open air in the UK at a Football stadium to an outdoor audience with THOSE transitions! This is what bands as fine tuned as YES did and still can do. These are literally some of the best musicians in the world. Also this was Analogue recording no digital.
They do this live and it will blow your minds!
Pay Attention to the album cover art. It was always part of my fascination with YES
“Like they all got their backs to each other but they’re all in harmony” well said
I have seen Yes play this album live a few times, amazing musicians.
I've heard it live. It's incredible live and believe me, they played it.
The passage "soon" sounds like music that would greet you as you walk into the gates of heaven.
I am glad I lived to hear this.
Me too
@@AirplayBeats Yes 😊
Best live version of this song is from YES Symphonic Live with a full ochestra. Mind blowing
I LOVE this song YES!
AMAZING thing about Chris Squier :
he was able to play that crazy bass....and sing in a different key at same time : find someone else that can do it.
reaction is amazing... but really, on stage, this is how they did. yes UNREAL !!!