“When the mood took them, the prog legends of the 70s could write simple but catchy music with aplomb”: The 40 greatest Yes songs ever

20. Sound Chaser

What  Anderson describes in the lyrics as “electric freedom” finds expression in Relayer's truly frenetic, jazz-rock workout.  Moraz tells of how, on meeting the band, he was played work in progress from this track. “They blew my mind,” he said. Then he was thrown in the deep end: “Jon asked me to come up with some kind of introduction to the whole thing. So I kind of instant-composed the intro on the spot,” he told Yes biographer Tim Morse. 

The Swiss newcomer’s Moog solo later on was also nailed “in one or two takes,” while Telecaster work from Howe is equally mesmerising. He has referred to the track’s “indescribable mixture of Patrick's jazzy keyboards and my weird sort of flamenco electric guitar.” But Alan White – who singled out Relayer as his favourite Yes album – also stretches his drumming abilities to their limits in order to keep up.


19. Turn Of The Century

Few entries in the Yes catalogue compare with Turn Of The Century for sheer musical and lyrical unity. Written by Anderson, Howe and (in a major role) White, it’s an elaboration on the Ovidian/Greek myth of Pygmalion – a sculptor who fell in love with one of his sculptures. Here, an artist’s beloved wife dies, he makes a figure in her likeness and she is seemingly reincarnated. 

Howe’s minor-key acoustic intro sets the theme, guitars and voice intertwine, with  Wakeman’s piano and  Squire’s bass adding ravishing colour and movement to the romantic narrative. With Wakeman replacing the ousted Moraz, the song was recorded at Mountain Studios in Montreux, Switzerland (Wakeman would record his Criminal Record there later in ’77). 

Howe would revisit this on his 1995 album Tales From Yesterday, with a sublime vocal from Renaissance’s Annie Haslam. One of Yes’ truly transcendent storytelling moments.

Turn of the Century (2008 Remaster) - YouTube Turn of the Century (2008 Remaster) - YouTube
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18. Ritual (Nous Sommes Du Soleil)

One of the most cosmic things ever recorded in Willesden, Tales From Topographic Oceans is the point where Yes either went high into the stratosphere or up their own back passages – depending on your stance. It's certainly true that in recent years the herd mentality dismissal of the work has seemed less and less valid. 

Sides one and four, in particular, are winning fresh admirers for their ambition and charm. Ritual – the 21-and-a-half minute finale – sees the band strive to gather the threads together and bring it all on home with a bang, a vengeance and a sense of transcendence. Howe collates his guitar themes into something approaching a narrative, and the piano notes underscoring the 'nous sommes du soleil' refrain were actually the work of White, while Wakeman was AWOL. 

Wakeman has famously said he hates it – but as Anderson once said: “At least we tried.” And then some. 


17. The Revealing Science Of God (Dance Of Dawn)

ELP might have introduced classical compositions into the progressive rock sphere, but Tales From Topographic Oceans went several steps further. The Revealing Science Of God comprised the entirety of the first side. Artistically, it was a reaction to the success of Roundabout

“We weren't really that concerned about having a hit record,” Anderson told Songfacts. “I didn't feel we should ever try to make another Roundabout or make another Fragile. That's why within a space of time – three years – the record companies got very upset with us, because we were doing diverse music and Topographic Oceans.” 

The main concept was inspired when Anderson read about the guru Paramahansa Yogananda; and after his idea to record in a forest led to naught, he brought bales of hay and flowers to the recording studio.

The Revealing Science of God (Dance of the Dawn) (2003 Remaster) - YouTube The Revealing Science of God (Dance of the Dawn) (2003 Remaster) - YouTube
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16. Going For The One

The lyrical theme of the opening title track of the 1977 album – the quest for sporting excellence – seemed surprisingly unproggy. Yet it also symbolised a band in lean, fighting fit shape to meet the growing challenge of the punk revolution. Steve Howe’s broad strokes of Chuck Berry-style boogie and steel guitar twang usher in the track and resurface throughout, signalling a new songwriting style willing and able to embrace direct pop hooks without jettisoning heady experimentation. 

But this is no dumbed-down affair. The increasing dominance of dizzying synthesiser and guitar spirals and celestial harmonies turn this into an alternative chamber pop vision that is Yes, but not as you know them. 

“We felt marvellously fresh and excited, and the recording had a great feel about it,” Howe said in the liner notes of its 2003 reissue. As a statement of intent, this was a formidable opening salvo.

Going for the One (2008 Remaster) - YouTube Going for the One (2008 Remaster) - YouTube
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15. Perpetual Change

With the band line-up in constant flux over the years and their music ever-evolving, this song title is often used as a headline for articles about Yes. The track itself closes the embarrassment of riches that is their third outing The Yes Album, and from the opening stabs of guitar and keys to the triumphant instrumental fade, this Anderson/Squire co-composition left listeners in no doubt they were witnessing a unique new voice in rock music. 

Having replaced Banks,  Howe engages his full arsenal here: country picking, pedal steel-like swells, Wes Montgomery-style jazzy passages added to tough blues and fusion lines. Online you can find the isolated tracks of Squire and Bruford’s bass and drums – it’s potent stuff. At the 05:45 mark, one odd-metered section drifts to the left speaker while the right grinds out the song’s main theme, and we’re really not in Kansas any more. 

Anderson’s opening lines: ‘I see the cold mist in the night/And watch the hills roll out of sight’ were inspired by the Devon countryside where the writing sessions began, and this expands into a meditation on the nature of the universe, infinity and our place in it. This epic album coda pointed toward the musical adventures to come on Fragile and Close To The Edge.

Yes - Awaken (Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 2003) - YouTube Yes - Awaken (Live at Montreux Jazz Festival 2003) - YouTube
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14. Wonderous Stories

Although Yes had released singles, and to some acclaim in the States, the thought of them doing so went very much against the thinking of a large part of their fanbase. 

That all changed when they released the three minutes and 45 seconds of Wonderous Stories. The shortest track from Going For The One is a simple acoustic ballad credited solely to Anderson, emboldened by the rest of the band joining in on the music – and, according to  Howe, written during the singer’s “Renaissance period,” with the song portraying the simple pleasures of a beautiful day. 

The demo, along with Going For The One, were sent to Wakeman following Moraz’s departure, instigating his return when he liked what he heard. Yes made their first ever promotional video for the song (albeit one with them simply performing live). The single reached No. 7 in the UK charts; no mean feat given bands of their ilk were supposedly under fire from the threat of punk rock at the time. 

It was another fine example of the fact that, when the mood took them, the progressive legends of the 70s could turn their hand to writing simple but catchy music with aplomb.

Yes - Wonderous Stories (Official Music Video) - YouTube Yes - Wonderous Stories (Official Music Video) - YouTube
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13. Owner Of A Lonely Heart

First drafted by Rabin years previously, Yes' unlikely 80s comeback hit – an American No. 1 – was radically reimagined by Horn, who told a Red Bull Music Academy event in 2011: “I was convinced that if we didn't put loads of whizzbangs and gags all over the verse, nobody would listen to it.”

It was the producer who persuaded a reluctant band to record it, and Squire modified the music while Anderson added new lyrics. Its overall impact, however, relies on the blend of Rabin's heavy guitar and the Synclavier. Horn said that White – initially peeved by being displaced by a drum machine – eventually played a part in the programming, and played keyboards. 

It remains one of Horn's favourites among his own productions, and hip-hop artists have acknowledged that it pioneered the use of a sample as a breakbeat (yep, we're still talking about Yes!). 

Pushing the album to sales of three million in the US alone – by far their biggest – Owner gave Yes what Chris Squire described as “a phase two audience… what we call our 80s audience.”

Horn noted: “When I showed them what was possible, it was fun to watch them run with it.” 

YES - Owner of a Lonely Heart (Official Music Video) - YouTube YES - Owner of a Lonely Heart (Official Music Video) - YouTube
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12. South Side Of The Sky

Every so often Yes offered up a reminder that they could do heavy just as well as the Led Zeps and Deep Purples out there when the mood took them – and weave those textures into a bigger, more unorthodox tapestry. “This is a song about climbing mountains,” Anderson has said. “It's dangerous, but we all must climb mountains every day.” 

The howling wind that punctuates this eight-minute cornerstone of Fragile gives you a clue as to the theme – a failed, ultimately fatal mountaineering mission. But elsewhere there’s also a brilliantly impressionistic quality to the music. The knotty tangles of guitar and the insistent trudge of the tempo set the scene in some style, while there’s also that climbing pitch to the verse sections and a sense of mounting desperation. 

But this was also one of the tracks that showcased Wakeman’s skill as a player and (uncredited in this case) composer. His dramatic musical soliloquy, accompanied by  Bruford’s hesitant jazz percussion, offers a stark quasi-classical platform for warm harmonies and the lonely contemplations of a dying man – reflecting Anderson’s earlier musings on the 'warmth of the sky/of warmth when you die'.


11. Long Distance Runaround

One of the punchiest tracks from Fragile was sufficiently concise that it was able to serve as the B-side to the edited Roundabout single without the need for any topping and tailing. Despite its economy of length, it’s still packed full of bold ideas. It opens with one of Howe’s trademark classical-flavoured guitar introductions. Then there’s a polyrhythm with Bill Bruford accenting every fifth note against the steady 4/4 pulse of the keys, bass, and guitar to lend the verses an off-kilter lilt. 

The lyrics were born out of Anderson’s frustration with religion, growing up in the Christian faith. “It was how religion had seemed to confuse me totally,” he told Songfacts. “It was such a game that seemed to be played, and I was going around in circles looking for the sound of reality, the sound of God. 

“That was my interpretation of that song – that I was always confused. I could never understand the things that religion stood for. And that, throughout the years, has always popped its head up in the song I've been working with.”

A concert staple, the song appears on live releases including Yessongs, The Word Is Live, and Songs From Tsongas.

Jerry Ewing

Writer and broadcaster Jerry Ewing is the Editor of Prog Magazine which he founded for Future Publishing in 2009. He grew up in Sydney and began his writing career in London for Metal Forces magazine in 1989. He has since written for Metal Hammer, Maxim, Vox, Stuff and Bizarre magazines, among others. He created and edited Classic Rock Magazine for Dennis Publishing in 1998 and is the author of a variety of books on both music and sport, including Wonderous Stories; A Journey Through The Landscape Of Progressive Rock.