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Eventhough I do suspect them to try to get in the charts again like they did with wonderous stories. "Madrigal" is a track with wonderful sounds of the harpsichord and the Spanish guitar of Steve Howe. When Rick Wakeman and Jon Anderson gather their forces, there's something magical going on. The ballad "Onward" is nice but doesn't seems to go anywhere. "Release, release" is another misplaced song on Tormato, a desperate effort to adapt their sound to 78-rock. "Circus of heaven" is a Jon Anderson song, not a Yes song, an odd track which isn't bad at all but pointless on this album. First : 4 shorter songs on either side which is unusual for Yes Second : some songs seem out of place on this record. It may not be a coincidence I never play this album from beginning to end. Damion Anderson / child vocals (6) Releases informationĪrtwork: Hipgnosis with Roger Dean (logo)ĬD Atlantic - 7567-82671-2 (1994, US) Remastered by George Marino Sterling SoundĬD Elektra - 73794 (2004, Europe) Remastered by Bill Inglot and Dan Hersch w/ 10 bonus tracks

Andrew Pryce Jackman / orchestrations & arrangements (3,7) Alan White / drums, military snare (1), glockenspiel (1), bells tree & cymbal (3), percussion (4), gong (5), drum synth (5), vibes (7), crotales, vocals (4) Chris Squire / basses, bass pedals (1,3,5), piano (2), backing vocals Rick Wakeman / Hammond (1,4), harpsichord (3), piano (5), RMI Electra-Piano (8), Birotron & Polymoog synths, strings arrangements (3) Steve Howe / Spanish (3), electric & acoustic guitars, electric & acoustic mandolins (6), backing vocals Jon Anderson / lead vocals, 10 string guitar (1,5,8) * Previously unreleased Line-up / Musicians Everybody's Song (early demo of "Does It Really Happen") (6:48) *ġ8. The concert was repeated on several occasions on the Friday Rock Show and their music were constantly played on the Friday Rock Session. The first ever episode of the Friday Rock Show (some consider the second episode as the real debut, because the first featured only a concert) was not a programme where Tommy Vance played different musicians, but was in fact a concert performance from Yes, recorded in Wembley in October 1978.
