Yes, “Fortune Seller” from ‘Open Your Eyes’ (1997): YESterdays
“Fortune Seller” features one of the best guitarist pairings of Billy Sherwood and Steve Howe in the Yes canon.
“Fortune Seller” features one of the best guitarist pairings of Billy Sherwood and Steve Howe in the Yes canon.
Despite good playing, Yes’ “No Way We Can Lose” never rises beyond the sum of its musical parts.
The initial three songs on Yes’ ‘Open Your Eyes’ find the world’s greatest progressive rock band at the top of their game.
Billy Sherwood always had a knack for melding traditional Yes elements with a contemporary sound. Same here.
‘Open Your Eyes’ is on my Top 5 list of favorite Yes albums, even if it had the misfortune of being one of their lowest-charting studio LPs.
A rare instrumental, “Sign Language” closes out arguably the best Yes album to that point since 1983’s ‘90125.’
Producer Billy Sherwood again shows his talent at blending the Yes tradition with a contemporary feel.
If ‘Keys to Ascension 2’ remains Rick Wakeman’s final Yes studio album, then this was a fine way to leave the band.
The fact that Yes’ ‘Keys to Ascension 2’ wasn’t a hit is more due to the changing music environment that the material.
“Mind Drive” was a deliberate attempt to recapture the epic feel of Yes’ main-sequence albums – and it worked brilliantly.