Вторая работа уже менее джазовая, с более жестким звучанием. Она по-прежнему прогрессивная и кое-где в ней чувствуется привкус хард-психоделии, гитарная работа Muck Groh более искренняя и она завораживает. Великолепные движения скрипки, мощные вмешательства саксофона, ритмичные движения флейты, фольклорные отсылки и несколько акустических текстур окружают очень энергичную ритм-секцию, в которой преобладают сложные басовые партии и ровный, но яростный барабанный бой. Отличный альбом в стиле краутрок, наполненный прогой, псих- хард-роковым звучанием. Peter Malinowski – Bass, Vocals Muck Groh – Guitar, Vocals Lucky Schmidt – Drums Klaus Kreuzeder - Soprano Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Flute Christoph Krieger – Violin Onkel Latzi - Baritone Saxophone
Статья автора «Фонотека в кармане» в Дзене ✍: В истории коллектива Fleetwood Mac принято выделять два пиковых периода, которые на общей хронологической шкале коллектива маркируются присутствием в...
This video is from the Deluxe Edition of the "Songs from Tsongas" bluray / CD package. It includes the bonus show of the Lugano Jazz Festival played on July 8th, 2004 that was originally a TV / Satellite Swiss/Italian TV broadcast from Lugano, Switzerland. The full Lugano show is only available on the Japanese version of the Deluxe Edition, which this video was taken from. The international version is missing 8 songs from the concert, many of which were some of the best of the show. The Japanese version is very difficult to find and can be quite expensive. I was lucky enough to find a dealer in Japan that had it and shipped it to me. The complete show is full on electric without the acoustic versions of some songs on the "Songs from Tsongas" bluray, which pleased me greatly!
The Lugano concert was recorded in standard definition with 720x480 resolution. I have upscaled the video to be in 1920x1080 resolution for a better viewing experience.
Yes were on their 35th anniversary tour in 2004, which was the last time they played with original singer Jon Anderson and classic-era keyboardist Rick Wakeman. They played their final show with Anderson and Wakeman in Monterrey, Mexico 3 months later.
“Mind Drive” is the first track from Disc 2 of Yes' fifth live and sixteenth studio album titled "Keys to Ascension 2", which was released as a double album in November 1997 by Essential Records as the successor to the previous live/studio album Keys to Ascension. After guitarist Steve Howe and keyboardist Rick Wakeman returned to the band in 1995, the group relocated to San Luis Obispo, California and started to write new material. The reunion of this particular line-up was promoted with three concerts at the city's Fremont Theater in March 1996, the five's first live performance together since 1979. Keys to Ascension 2 features the remaining half of the live set from the 1996 shows and five studio new tracks including two which marked a return to the group writing long-form pieces.
There was a level of internal questioning about this approach or the wisdom of again pairing live and studio tracks. Rick Wakeman, for one, felt this batch of new material so superior that it deserved its own independent identity. The two studio tracks from Keys to Ascension and the five studio tracks from Keys 2 were brought together to form Keystudio. *Keystudio is a compilation album released in May 2001 by Castle Music in the United Kingdom and by Sanctuary Records in the United States. It is formed of the studio tracks previously released on live/studio albums Keys to Ascension (1996) and Keys to Ascension 2 (1997). If you can find a copy of the compilation Keystudios, then you’ll get an idea of how a proper Yes album could have sounded, rather than the new songs being hidden away on second discs of the two Keys albums while live recordings took center stage.
“Mind Drive” from Keys to Ascension 2 has its origins (at least in part) in the short-lived and frustratingly unproductive XYZ project, which Chris Squire, Alan White and Jimmy Page attempted to get off the ground around 1980-81, and brings us back full circle to the ’70s line up of Jon Anderson, Alan White, Squire, Wakeman and Steve Howe. The full track is a world away from the XYZ version and, at more than 18-and-a-half minutes long, this was a deliberate attempt to recapture the epic structure and feel of Yes’ so-called main-sequence albums.
During this concert, the song "Mind Drive" was split into two sections, "Mind Drive Part 1" and "Mind Drive Part 2", separated by the songs "South Side of the Sky and "My Eyes". This video is Part 1.
#MysticRhythmsLive
Live at Montreux 2003 is a live album from the English progressive rock band Yes. It is a live recording of the group's headlining concert at the Montreux Jazz Festival on 14 July 2003. This is the first official album to feature the classic line-up of lead vocalist Jon Anderson, guitarist Steve Howe, keyboardist Rick Wakeman, bassist Chris Squire and drummer Alan White since the 1996/1997 Keys to Ascension live albums, along with a DVD also entitled Keys to Ascension. The album was released on September 3, 2007, during a hiatus in the band's activity following a tour ending in 2004.
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