NOT SO FRAGILE AFTER ALL
Prog|Issue 140
As Yes achieve their quickest turnaround between studio album projects for more than half a century, Prog holds up a mirror to the soul of the seemingly unstoppable progressive giants as they consider their immediate – and long-term – future with Mirror To The Sky.
Paul Ging
NOT SO FRAGILE AFTER ALL

When a band have lasted as long as Yes, there are many entry points for fans. While some saw them at The Marquee and Blaises in 1968, picking up the debut album shortly afterwards, the rest of us have later jumping-on points: maybe Steve Howe’s debut with their crucial relaunch platter, The Yes Album; or Tales From Topographic Oceans, when Yes became a permanent byword for the prog genre. Perhaps one of the comeback albums: 1977’s Going For The One, a UK chart-topper at the height of the media’s obsession with punk, or maybe 1983’s stunningly successful 90125.

But 1980’s Drama surely brought in more than average. The surprising recruitment policy of Buggles synth duo Trevor Horn and Geoff Downes put the band’s name on the radar of much younger rock fans and established that it was possible for Yes to thrive creatively without their charismatic, talismanic original frontman, Jon Anderson. And rather than slavishly copying earlier albums, Drama sired the hard-edged likes of Machine Messiah and Does It Really Happen? – founding texts for the prog metal genre. Drama therefore established an important principle in terms of personnel and artistic reinvention that resonates ever louder in 2023. As stalwart guitarist and now producer Steve Howe says: “Drama is quite relevant to what we’re doing now, because there’s a tightness about it. There’s an approach to the dynamics of it, which we can’t help but follow.”

This story is from the Issue 140 edition of Prog.

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This story is from the Issue 140 edition of Prog.

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