Tuesday 5 November 2013

Steve Howe review

Steve Howe has probably never got the credit he deserved for his role in fashioning the legends of both Yes and Asia. The Homebrew series, whether intended or not, has done much to underscore his privotal role in the creative process of both.
Up to the fifth edition now, the series is now exploring demos and early takes on songs that, after some collaborative work with other bandmates, emerged on Yes’ Fly From Here andKeys to Ascension albums, Asia’s XXX and Omega projects, and his own 2005 solo effort Spectrum. What you hear is just how critical Howe’s contributions so often were. These early versions illustrate the way he created the structure from which everything else is built for many of these albums’ more memorable moments.
Homebrew 5 opens with “Bumpy Ride,” the gnarled riff that later showed up as Part 4 of the title track suite from Yes’ Fly From Here. “Yang” bookended the full-length version of “Hour of Need,” from the same 2011 album. “Solitaire,” in this far more baroque iteration, is filled out with a dueting keyboard element — whereas it was originally presented as a solo piece onFly From Here. The basic groove of “Into the Storm,” one of the more modern pieces from the album, can be found here with “Hairpin Bend,” as well.
Going further back, “Addicted to You” initially arrived as part of the 1996 Yes album Keys to Ascension. Fans of early Yes are directed to “Seven on Seven,” which evolved into the all-but-unknown 2010 import extra from Asia called “Drop a Stone.”
Read on...

CURRENTLY AVAILABLE FROM YES AT GONZO
Union (Standard DVD)
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Rock Of The 70's
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