I miss him so much. He was/still is my favorite bass player of all time. His playing was so melodic and interesting, but he could also sing over those complex lines. His playing was impressive. The only player that comes close in terms of singing and playing at the same time is Geddy Lee, imho. At least for me. I’m a drummer, but he was the inspiration for me to pick up a bass and start to learn and I salute him for that and for what he did for other aspiring players. He will always be missed for the person and the musician he was. His music will live on. His first solo album Fish Out of Water is one of my favorites of all time.
90125: ¡Una obra de arte maravillosa! Doy gracias a estos tipos por ofrecernosla justo en ese tiempo. Uno de los discos que me formó como melómano y como músico. Agradezco también a Serú Giran y a Invisible... Dos bandas maravillosas de Argentina. Las recomiendo de corazón. ❤
these two 'pop' records (90125 and big G) include amazing tracks like this one. the arrangements and instrumentations are nothing short of spectacular.
💚💛💙HELL YES❣💙💛💚 #TrevorRabin and #ChrisSquire were absolute Beasts together❣ Magnificent compositions and musicianship❣💚💛💙💚💛💙 #AlanWhite devastated on drums--So highly underrated~💚💛💙
Trevor Rabin was probably pound for pound the best all around musician of his time. Writer, producer, player, looks, all bases covered. No weakness anywhere.
Just look at Jon's cool expression when he sings, effortless, reaching top pitch notes as like he"s simultanously sitting on the Coffee House enjoying a sip of Java..👍 Great musicians and great band from great decade of music
I have to smile every time I hear Chris sing “la, la, la, la-la... “ at the climax to this sonic masterpiece. Not to put any of the other members of this group down, but the older I get the more I keep listening to the “90125” version of this group.
The Rabin era was a great time for the band. He brought new energy into the band. He really reinvented the band and helped them survive the 80’s. I love 90125, but Big Generator and Talk are my favorite albums from this lineup.
Greatest! Sorry , I´m german... :the best version at since: the second guitar-solo part ... please hear... it takes the hair off my neck .. since 30 Years !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@sprucy434 I think Ralf is referring to his hair-on-neck metaphor-we say 'makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up,' but I'm guessing the German version transliterates closer to what he's got up there?
En esta época de canciones fáciles con autotoon y degradantes de la especie humana, es reconfortante volver a escuchar a estos grupos que marcaron una de las mejores épocas....gracias YES por haber existido.
Espetacular banda,excelente grupo vocal...Emociona ver esses caras fazendo a música ultrapassar as barreiras das gerações.Uma lágrima, um sorriso e uma paz que invade
When Yes transitioned into the 80s, they kept it all about the music. Excellence in all phases of the band. Was lucky enough to see them a few years back. Still, absolute perfection.
They sounded exactly the way they did in a studio recording. They made this song look easy. But, it was not easy to pull off. Keep in mind that they not only composed their own music, but had to of come up with hit after hit to stay relevant during a time when you couldn't rely as heavily on marketing and publicity as artists do, today. Your reward was in how well your tour went and the audience's evaluation of your group where you played. Not music videos; not ad copy hyping you up. The bottom line is that your career was dependent on live tours and audience feedback. This was the way you sold your albums. Currently, this is why its so hard to find groups who would want to do what rock musicians did in the past. There's just no demand for it and no money in it. Today, its about just the love of it and be broke doing it. While the fans have to be open to the transformation of electronic composers who may give forth something unique. Gone are the bands that exhaust themselves for years of touring to please the fans at the expense of their talent and life energy.
Wut? What are you talking about? I don't think you even know. You must be under 30 yrs old, because the old record co. / music bizz model was FM Radio / MTV & videos / Record Stores & chains , and yes tours, but tours were marketed via Radio , magazines and (to a degree) MTV. Record co.'s fronted marketing costs as an expense acct. (same with studio costs) for artists and their contracts. MTV worked with record co.'s to promote via videos, and radio marketed the albums via singles. Record sales & tour & merchandise - collectively - paid for the marketing, and the artists made percentages (much more back then) from album sales/units sold. NOW, there basically is NO recording industry model that reflects what it was back then. Only the classic acts make the bulk and negotiate contracts that benefit the artists . The MP3 killed the record co. industry model, for the most part. And NOW the industry relies much more on tours (thus the higher ticket prices - ex. $5K for front row for Eric Clapton a few yrs ago). It is easier for ind. artists to market today - the costs are much lower (social media etc.). but since the MP3 killed the pricing of the actual product (albums) artists - even major - don't hardly make anything on it. The publicity you mentioned was much more streamlined back then & easier to control. It's all over the damn place now, there are too many outlets for publicity- and we all know MTV is complete shit (same with VH1), so those 2 don't factor in hardly anymore. Also, satellite radio has taken away from broadcast radio - people cannot be a "captive audience" like they were with FM radio back then . Not sure where you came up with "audience feedback" , the "feedback" was hard numbers : i.e. record sales ....dollar bills. Rap music has killed the popularity of rock - which is why record co.'s will spend more on rap & hip hop artists in America. They don't promote RnR like they used to - and artists don't sign lengthy contracts like they used to bc record co.'s EXPECT that their popularity will be - at best - 2 years or so. The way you describe it , you have it backwards.
Trevor es uno de los reemplazos de howe...y viceversa...los dos son tan pero tan buenos que escuchar a YES con ambos es ir al paraíso.....complementando al los cerebros Jon y cris....Alan.. y el reemplazo de rick.todos son uffffff.. lo máximo.. esta música es de otra galaxia.
Love when a performance is live yet still like studio in sound and not tore all the hell up beyond conception , wish I could have been there, great as Yes always has been.
Thank You for posting these clips of Yes in Dortmund. I was at this concert (I was 16 way back then) and was always searching for the vid that was broadcasted at Rockpop. I lost it long time ago, now, once again, I can enjoy it! Great!
Part of 90125's power (both studio and live) comes from the prevalent mystical self-help lyrics (which came mostly from Jon Anderson adding to and revising other band members' lyrics, particularly those of Trevor Rabin) being delivered with such force and conviction. The band members act like they are delivering the most important message in the world to their listeners.
My first real concert at age 14, the 90125 tour. My parents dropped me and two friends off in the afternoon and picked us up at midnight. I guess things have changed a little bit.
Yes una banda para el más exquisito público en donde se mezclan sonidos únicos... Y yo los catalogo como los aristócratas del rock. Jhon Anderson es un ángel con su voz
bill smith Same here, saw Yes in Philadelphia Sept "84" AWESOME -And I can report when they did Starship Trooper, it was one of the greatest jams " and memory" I ever witnessed in my LIVE CONCERT goings history !!!
Yeah...it may well have been one of the best, if not the best concert I ever saw, as a fan, it was a privilege. Starship trooper, has long been my favorite tune of theirs. A great song to listen to on a car ride as well.
I'd say 'one reason' that artists don't make 'great songs', like this today, is 'because', of the 'immediacy' of using Loops, Beats, etc. It's 'always' Down to Creativity, but that said, when you are in a Band and you Write 'as a Band', a 'Cohesion' comes into play. You might have the 'bare bones' of the 'idea', and some 'demos', but then you go into Writing in the Group 'context' and 'new Ideas' Emerge, and you Build on that, so the Sum, is 'Greater' than the 'Original'. I like using DAWs, and Loops, and all that stuff, but then you 'end up' Conforming to that Existing 'bit', Loop, Beat, whatever. That's why a Real Drummer is SO NECESSARY, they 'create' the Rhythm, to the song as it Evolves, Supporting it, not 'Limiting' It. Still, Yes, has Always 'very much', Embraced, 'Cutting Edge' Technology, and even the Sounds of the Time.
Yikes, they're all so young (even though the band - at this point in their history - had already existed for 15-16 years)! Anyway, I caught them on this tour near Chicago at the now-defunct Poplar Creek Music Theater. What a show and what a summer!
This song is so relevant even 2024. 40 years later.
💯
The mighty Mr Squire slaying a Rickenbacker. RIP great player, great man, an inspiration to any young bassist
I miss him so much. He was/still is my favorite bass player of all time. His playing was so melodic and interesting, but he could also sing over those complex lines. His playing was impressive. The only player that comes close in terms of singing and playing at the same time is Geddy Lee, imho. At least for me. I’m a drummer, but he was the inspiration for me to pick up a bass and start to learn and I salute him for that and for what he did for other aspiring players. He will always be missed for the person and the musician he was. His music will live on. His first solo album Fish Out of Water is one of my favorites of all time.
0
Yx0r4e0
Ff7f777yty7ytyf7
D3
love hearing Jon , Trevor AND Chris singing together, such great vocal talents!
could not agree with you more,, EXCELLENT,,,,, ALMOST brought me to tears,, I miss this kind of music so much
4:28 to 5:12 or so: SO upliftingly cathartic!
Wondering of the band members see these youtube vids and are transported back. Like we are.
90125 is a rock masterpiece!
@XICODECOPA Jon is a LEGEND!
I agree, the musicianship is off the charts on that album, however I don't think the Yes purists, the die hards, seem to think so
I agree, the musicianship is off the charts on that album, however I don't think the Yes purists, the die hards seem to think so
90125: ¡Una obra de arte maravillosa!
Doy gracias a estos tipos por ofrecernosla justo en ese tiempo. Uno de los discos que me formó como melómano y como músico.
Agradezco también a Serú Giran y a Invisible... Dos bandas maravillosas de Argentina. Las recomiendo de corazón.
❤
Such a great tune!!
My favorite YES record! Trevor refreshed their sound!
This is one of the best live performances I've heard.....Fantastic!
Absolutely 💯🥁🎸🎹
these two 'pop' records (90125 and big G) include amazing tracks like this one. the arrangements and instrumentations are nothing short of spectacular.
💚💛💙HELL YES❣💙💛💚
#TrevorRabin and #ChrisSquire were absolute Beasts together❣
Magnificent compositions and musicianship❣💚💛💙💚💛💙
#AlanWhite devastated on drums--So highly underrated~💚💛💙
@@muzicaempathica6479 I agree. I take heat from purists when I say the Trevor years were the best, but I stand by this.
Trevor Rabin was probably pound for pound the best all around musician of his time.
Writer, producer, player, looks, all bases covered.
No weakness anywhere.
Rabin doesn't overplay the solos, just gives you enough, that's the way to do it.
Create anticipation.
THANK YOU YES FIR ALL THE GREAT TIMES!!!!!!
Real musicians playing real music..
A novelty today..
I was fortunate enough to see Yes in the early 2000's when they had both Howe and Rabin....it was one of the greatest shows I'd ever seen
We will miss you Alan!
So much talent. And Trevor is such a great/capable instrumentalist.
Thank YOU Rabin, a job well done
Impressed with this live performance.
Fucking BRILLIANT! I know that the 80's version of Yes is much different than the 70's version, but they still brought it.
Well All youngsters... watch and learn... This is how it should be done ... Live performance speaking to every fibre in your body
This rocks...!!!!!
This tour was Kaye's great comeback. Underrated for much of the 70s, here it is simply perfect
Alan White. So good. Great all around!
Rip allen white!
Just look at Jon's cool expression when he sings, effortless, reaching top pitch notes as like he"s simultanously sitting on the Coffee House enjoying a sip of Java..👍 Great musicians and great band from great decade of music
I have to smile every time I hear Chris sing “la, la, la, la-la... “ at the climax to this sonic masterpiece. Not to put any of the other members of this group down, but the older I get the more I keep listening to the “90125” version of this group.
The Rabin era was a great time for the band. He brought new energy into the band. He really reinvented the band and helped them survive the 80’s. I love 90125, but Big Generator and Talk are my favorite albums from this lineup.
one of the greatest songs ever written!
Every performance by YES of this song is slightly different yet still perfect.
Greatest! Sorry , I´m german... :the best version at since: the second guitar-solo part ... please hear... it takes the hair off my neck .. since 30 Years !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
It is simply Travor Rabin. So I am a fan of his.
Don't apologize for being German, mate. It's ok. No judgements here...
Jah...sort of like how my teeth go on edge every time Jon is bouncing around and just misses top of the pitch, but nicer...
@@sprucy434 I think Ralf is referring to his hair-on-neck metaphor-we say 'makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up,' but I'm guessing the German version transliterates closer to what he's got up there?
En esta época de canciones fáciles con autotoon y degradantes de la especie humana, es reconfortante volver a escuchar a estos grupos que marcaron una de las mejores épocas....gracias YES por haber existido.
Chris is outstanding, the best. I can't believe he could sing harmonies and play this bass line in the same moment, but he did it.
#ChrisSquire #BEASTMODE #rip
Have no words to describe it !
Man, it's so beautiful!
Espetacular banda,excelente grupo vocal...Emociona ver esses caras fazendo a música ultrapassar as barreiras das gerações.Uma lágrima, um sorriso e uma paz que invade
When Yes transitioned into the 80s, they kept it all about the music. Excellence in all phases of the band. Was lucky enough to see them a few years back. Still, absolute perfection.
Jon Anderson is one of my favorite lead singers.....I love harmonizing with him!
Simplesmente de mais!!!!🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Mend the wire my friend
Much love, Chris squire, i will never forget you
James Webster Nor will I...
They sounded so good.
Trevor Rabin is a bad ass!!!!! RIP Chris!!!!!!! One of my favorite prog rock songs!!!!!!
This is an awesome song, I'm so glad I "rediscovered" it. :) I could (and do) listen to this in a loop. YES!!!
They sounded exactly the way they did in a studio recording. They made this song look easy. But, it was not easy to pull off. Keep in mind that they not only composed their own music, but had to of come up with hit after hit to stay relevant during a time when you couldn't rely as heavily on marketing and publicity as artists do, today. Your reward was in how well your tour went and the audience's evaluation of your group where you played. Not music videos; not ad copy hyping you up. The bottom line is that your career was dependent on live tours and audience feedback. This was the way you sold your albums. Currently, this is why its so hard to find groups who would want to do what rock musicians did in the past. There's just no demand for it and no money in it. Today, its about just the love of it and be broke doing it. While the fans have to be open to the transformation of electronic composers who may give forth something unique. Gone are the bands that exhaust themselves for years of touring to please the fans at the expense of their talent and life energy.
+truvelocity under-rated :)
truvelocity
apart from Rush and Marillion, at least :-)
Wut? What are you talking about? I don't think you even know. You must be under 30 yrs old, because the old record co. / music bizz model was FM Radio / MTV & videos / Record Stores & chains , and yes tours, but tours were marketed via Radio , magazines and (to a degree) MTV. Record co.'s fronted marketing costs as an expense acct. (same with studio costs) for artists and their contracts. MTV worked with record co.'s to promote via videos, and radio marketed the albums via singles. Record sales & tour & merchandise - collectively - paid for the marketing, and the artists made percentages (much more back then) from album sales/units sold. NOW, there basically is NO recording industry model that reflects what it was back then. Only the classic acts make the bulk and negotiate contracts that benefit the artists . The MP3 killed the record co. industry model, for the most part. And NOW the industry relies much more on tours (thus the higher ticket prices - ex. $5K for front row for Eric Clapton a few yrs ago). It is easier for ind. artists to market today - the costs are much lower (social media etc.). but since the MP3 killed the pricing of the actual product (albums) artists - even major - don't hardly make anything on it. The publicity you mentioned was much more streamlined back then & easier to control. It's all over the damn place now, there are too many outlets for publicity- and we all know MTV is complete shit (same with VH1), so those 2 don't factor in hardly anymore. Also, satellite radio has taken away from broadcast radio - people cannot be a "captive audience" like they were with FM radio back then . Not sure where you came up with "audience feedback" , the "feedback" was hard numbers : i.e. record sales ....dollar bills. Rap music has killed the popularity of rock - which is why record co.'s will spend more on rap & hip hop artists in America. They don't promote RnR like they used to - and artists don't sign lengthy contracts like they used to bc record co.'s EXPECT that their popularity will be - at best - 2 years or so. The way you describe it , you have it backwards.
@@christopherwright8811 Agreed Rush were the best. This song from Yes though is simply sublime.
Yes they were talented still are Yes they were innovative still are Yes longevity in their music Yes they are Yes.
Incredible performance
Hot!!!
Squire not only plays the bass great....but the harmony vocals are extraordinary perfect!❤❤❤
No me canso de escuchar a este maravilloso grupo . Gracias por tanta buena Música Yes!!!
Great song, the best of Chris Squire in the aperture in the bass, RIP
My fav song EVER! My best friend would hang out and get so high while singing this song. You will be missed Peter!
So long ago…. Seen YES and Genesis so many times! Not once disappointed always phenomenal
Trevor es uno de los reemplazos de howe...y viceversa...los dos son tan pero tan buenos que escuchar a YES con ambos es ir al paraíso.....complementando al los cerebros Jon y cris....Alan.. y el reemplazo de rick.todos son uffffff.. lo máximo.. esta música es de otra galaxia.
I'm sorry but I'm enamored by the close ups of Trevors guitar. Trevor, thanks for making that sing!!
Love when a performance is live yet still like studio in sound and not tore all the hell up beyond conception , wish I could have been there, great as Yes always has been.
RiP Mr White....thank you for the amazing beats that drove YES and many other bands over the years..
Amazing!!!!
This is the Yes lineup I love...... Tony Kaye in it. Rabin, Anderson, Squire, White abd Kaye - 90125 is THE Yes Album!!!!!
Thank You for posting these clips of Yes in Dortmund. I was at this concert (I was 16 way back then) and was always searching for the vid that was broadcasted at Rockpop. I lost it long time ago, now, once again, I can enjoy it!
Great!
You have to love the eighties! There will never be a decade like it.......I grew up in it, and I'm starting to appreciate it more and more.
What an Amazing Song WOW
YES.. YES This Is One Of The Best Live Performances I've Ever Heard
You Are AMAZING Guys 🤘❤️🎸
Part of 90125's power (both studio and live) comes from the prevalent mystical self-help lyrics (which came mostly from Jon Anderson adding to and revising other band members' lyrics, particularly those of Trevor Rabin) being delivered with such force and conviction. The band members act like they are delivering the most important message in the world to their listeners.
Rabin did not disappoint in taking Howe's place. The guy can play the guitar.
Yeah. I love Howe, but Trevor was/is a great player and singer.
And played a lot of the keyboard parts on the album
@@kickdrum09 I did not know that
Rabin wrote this and many more
Rabin wrote a handful of good tunes…but Steve Howe he wasn’t…thank Gawd
"Look what you Have - Here it Comes - It's Here at Last - Reach Out - Mend the Wires - You've got the Power"
I had this video VHS......watched it over and over
Great live version of the song.Why don't many of the new artists make great songs like this one today?
Because they suck!!!!
get chills everytime i listen......
Outstanding
Die Frisur ist klasse! :-)
Und schon damals gab es tiefsinnige Texte! :-)
I saw yes on this tour in the state's great show you could hear Johns voice clear as day from the parking lot out door show
Rest in peace Chris the fish squire. For those of us that love progressive music. You will never be forgotten. 🐟
Love Tony Kaye on this performance and album.
My first real concert at age 14, the 90125 tour. My parents dropped me and two friends off in the afternoon and picked us up at midnight. I guess things have changed a little bit.
I always enjoy the behind the scenes stuff for this tour,because it showed of thier sense of humor,and Tony Kaye is hillarious.
Love this song 🙏
I was in the army stationed in hanau I was there Frankfurt festhall awesome
Thank you for your service and YES FOREVER!
It's amazing how good were some rock groups in the 60s 70s and even 80s
Manera de tocar este gran grupo, fantástico Yes.
Saw them live in 84 at the Forum in LA, epic stuff
Seen this show in Wuerzburg on the same tour and then seen them a couple of months later in Louisville on the U.S. tour. Same exact show.
Absolutely brilliant.
Saw them in 1984 in Berlin
Awesome show
..and on Rickenbacker 4000 series bass, Chris Squire. Yes!
Ladies and gentlemen, Chris Squire and YES, the greatest show on earth
Yes una banda para el más exquisito público en donde se mezclan sonidos únicos... Y yo los catalogo como los aristócratas del rock. Jhon Anderson es un ángel con su voz
What a flair for harmonies, Chris Squire had.
Hoy en día no se asoman grupos parecidos con exelente material musical.
Yes was never saved!They saved us!!
Yes forever ❤😊
Saw them in Hartford during this tour ✌️💜🎵
how awesome is this version ? completely excellent.
strawberry bricks indeed
I like this song since the very first time I ve heard it!!!! Brought me into YES
Only Alan White could come up with such a perfect drum part. The chorus: one two three four ANDone two three four SNAREone two three four....
he did a good job on the track Changes
Isotec1 yeah...and on the song Cinema as well. Great drummer.
musicas que lembram a minha juventude !
La belleza de Trevor Rabin es insuperable...
Awesome band...With Steve as well!
GRACIAS YES POR TAN MARAVILLOSA MÚSICA!!!! YES YES YES... FOREVER!!!
I was there!!! Love It!
I saw Yes perform this song during their North American tour.
Este som do Yes It Can Happen e uma verdadeira viaje me faz lembrar meus 8 anos
att: Fabio Metal
Congratulations for the video! Perfect!
I saw them with rabin, and it was absolutely awesome.
bill smith Same here, saw Yes in Philadelphia Sept "84" AWESOME -And I can report when they did Starship Trooper, it was one of the greatest jams " and memory" I ever witnessed in my LIVE CONCERT goings history !!!
Yeah...it may well have been one of the best, if not the best concert I ever saw, as a fan, it was a privilege. Starship trooper, has long been my favorite tune of theirs. A great song to listen to on a car ride as well.
love the bass track in the song
I'd say 'one reason' that artists don't make 'great songs', like this today, is 'because', of the 'immediacy' of using Loops, Beats, etc. It's 'always' Down to Creativity, but that said, when you are in a Band and you Write 'as a Band', a 'Cohesion' comes into play. You might have the 'bare bones' of the 'idea', and some 'demos', but then you go into Writing in the Group 'context' and 'new Ideas' Emerge, and you Build on that, so the Sum, is 'Greater' than the 'Original'. I like using DAWs, and Loops, and all that stuff, but then you 'end up' Conforming to that Existing 'bit', Loop, Beat, whatever. That's why a Real Drummer is SO NECESSARY, they 'create' the Rhythm, to the song as it Evolves, Supporting it, not 'Limiting' It. Still, Yes, has Always 'very much', Embraced, 'Cutting Edge' Technology, and even the Sounds of the Time.
They were amazing!
i love yes
Yikes, they're all so young (even though the band - at this point in their history - had already existed for 15-16 years)! Anyway, I caught them on this tour near Chicago at the now-defunct Poplar Creek Music Theater. What a show and what a summer!