1) I've Seen All the Good Time 2) Heart of the Sunrise 3) Love Will Find A Way 4) Sound Chaser 5) Six Wives of Henry 8 6) All Good People 7) The Clap 8) White Car 9) Shoot High Aim Low 10) And You and I 11) I'm Alive 12) Machine Messiah 13) I'm Running 14) Your Move 15) Long Distance Runaround 16) Owner of a Lonely Heart 17) Holy Lamb 18) Starship Trooper 19) Our Song 20) Almost Like Love 21) Silent Spring 22) Roundabout
Okay so this review was supposed to be in tribute to the recent death of Chris Squire but I’m not sure what type of tribute this will be, considering this might be the worst fucking album (figuratively, though even more so literally) I’ve ever heard.
To clarify, I
would love to hear an acoustic tribute album to Yes. To clarify my
clarification this is no such tribute album. The whole thing is synthesized! And
there’s drum machines! Alright when I was 12 I got this cheap midi keyboard
from a charity shop which could crudely synthesize other instruments. The sound
in this album still sounds quite superior but it has the same fake mechanical
feel. If I was lucky this is solely what I’d get- which shows my low opinion on
luck- but in addition to that on certain songs these horrendous sound effects show
up, like a jammed printer, or a group of avant-garde musicians jamming together
with printers.
Oh and it’s
two hours. Two hours of crappily synthesized pseudo-muzak.
However I do
not want this review to be another hatespew like The Beatles Barkers so I will
make some cursory observations. Okay so one of the things that I found
appealing about Yes is missing here. That was the way the instruments would
interact with each other, forming almost a dialogue. Now I honestly think with
some effort this could have been re-created but rather than various acoustic
guitars with different tones and timbres reacting to each other there’s two
lifeless fake acoustic guitars playing different melodies with a drum machine
underneath that sounds like it was programmed as music for robots to sleep to. Sometimes
the ‘acoustic guitars’ sound like harpsichords. Maybe they changed the concept
of the album halfway through.
Secondly the
album doesn’t really have a mood. I could use the word laconic but I consider
myself laconic and have no wish to compare myself with this album. It’s just so
dull and lifeless. It’s soulless, it feels almost nihilistic, like no human
being made this. To continue the robot theme- for my book of robot themed rock
reviews- it sounds like a computer was fed a bunch of Yes albums and made to
re-create them. Oh and it’s a broken computer and the CDs are scratched.
Okay I’ve
lapsed into hatespew again. Allow me one histrionic declaration and I will
continue the rest of the review properly. Alright:
THIS ALBUM IS
THE SOUND OF THE UNIVERSE’S HEART BEING BROKEN.
Okay, now to
concentrate on some individual songs. For the most part that’s pretty
impossible. They all sound the same. Personally I find Yes to have been excellent
melodicists so the album does contain the beautiful Yes melodies but in such an
amoral form. This is the album that a misanthropic ex-hippie army would march
to. It’s uniform. However some songs can be commented on. There’s three
versions of I’ve Seen All Good People, the first one called I’ve Seen All The
Good Time the second All Good People and the third Your Move. Did I say three
versions? Sorry they’re actually the same song. Half of Big Generator is
featured on this! Half!
One positive
thing. There’s actually a semi-semi-semi almost kind of somewhat decentish
cover of Machine Messiah. For the first half it almost manages to preserve the
creepy mood of the original whilst retaining the eerie mechanic laidback vibe
of the rest of the album, creating something of a contrast. It’s still awful
though.
I can’t
remember which but one of the songs me and Franco compared to video game music.
The type of game it would accompany would be one where you’d have to feed a
dragon every five seconds and that’s literally all the game was. No
progression. You’re feeding it screaming fruit and the graphics are awful 3D
with a black background. If you fail to feed it you go back to the beginning,
no saves.
Um….more
insights? Sure. Who the hell was this album made for? The lack of effort
suggests the amount of passion a teetotaller would have for Oktoberfest but at
the same time there’s no commercial appeal either. So really what’s the point?
Alright
that’s it, I’m going to end this by quoting some of the more entertaining
things I said to Franco on Facebook:
Here's my impression of this album: "hey, fuck you!"
The whole album is like a placid, calm river of blood.
This album is consistently....."um".......
This album is like being forced at gunpoint to read a book which is just the word teeth for one thousand pages and sometimes it's spelt wrong (paraphrased because at this point I'd lost interest in grammar).
This album is like being forced at gunpoint to read a book which is just the word teeth for one thousand pages and sometimes it's spelt wrong (paraphrased because at this point I'd lost interest in grammar).
And now from
a discussion of how this album could have been good with acoustic guitars and
effort here’s the wisdom of Mr. Micale:
“BUT NO THEY
DECIDED TO BE FUCKWARDS AND DO THIS PIECE OF SHIT FOR NO REASON GAAAHHH FUCK
THEM FUCK THEM FUCK THEM”