Travels With Yes, March 1979
An essay concerned with the technical achievements of a Yes show should be prefaced by a few brief observations on the band itself and its history.
When at last in 1968 Jon Anderson met Chris Squire in a Soho drinking club, it seemed unlikely that the pair would father a genre of such singularity that it should qualify as suigeneris. Anderson, performing on the road since 1956, had whiled away a singing career in a regionally popular group known as the Warriors. Chris Squire, a bassist of urbane dispositions, had heretofore briefly been a part of the Syn. At the time, Anderson was 24 and Squire four years his junior, which meant, as far as musicians go, that both should have already begun their ascent. Now, more than ten years later, we look apon a vocalist at 35 and marvel at a voice of matchless dimension which fails to succumb to mounting years of strain, and a bass guitarist who transcends the normal limits of that mode of instrumental expression.
It is interesting to note that in 1969 when Yes released its first album that "techno-rock" was being born. Perhaps only Keith Emerson's keyboard compositions two years earlier as part of the Nice were the movements only predecessor synchronal with the advances of Pink Floyd experiments. As the Beatles were bringing their act to a close, popular music steeped in classical traditions was on the upswing.
The Yes debut album received much more attention than did the fledgling project by Genesis in that same year, but both were overshadowed by the epic Court of the Crimson King by King Crimson. Yes seemed to choose to play it safe by covering material by the Beatles, Byrds, Richie Havens and Stephen Stills on their first two LPs while others took added chances on popularizing their lyrical significance.
Instrumentally, Yes did not mature until as late as 1971 when guitarist Steve Howe replaced Peter Banks and Rick Wakeman arrived and soon after invented a new style of playing electronic keyboards. Wakemanm whose credits were as diverse as the Strawbs, Cat Stevens, T.Rex and David Bowie, attracted the critical acclaim that previously eluded the band. The Fragile Album featuring the theme song "Roundabout" generated sellouts for the first Yes tour.
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The design, staging and staffing of a Yes show is a fine science which has been nearly perfected by Clair Brothers Audio, Inc. during an association spanning over eight years. Clair Brothers has handled audio matters for Yes since its first tour and Roy Clair still travels on the road in his supervisory capacity. G. Michael Roth has spent eight of his nine years with Clair Brothers in the capacity of engineering stage sound for Yes.
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Thirty-two Phase Linear 7OOs grouped in stacks of four are bolted behind the stack they service.
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The speakers are constructed in eight small sections, each [section] powered by four Phase Linear 700s. Included in each stack are two large "W" boxes which house two l8Anch speakers each. On each side of these are two "Roy" (Clair) boxes which hold two 12-inch speakers. Above these units are four JBL horn boxes utilizing the 2482 2-inch driver, the 2440 60-watt driver and the 2405 ultra-hi driver. All speakers are made by JBL.
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source: Modern Recording Magazine ->
http://zenponies.com/yitp/1979/mar/mar_79.html