2015 - 08 - 30 Littleton - Colorado, USA 2015 - 08 - 30 Littleton - Colorado, USA Denver Botanic Gardens at Chatfield Download Audio 403.22 MB
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Recorded and posted on Dime by in_halen - Master recording 1.01 Onward (Video Tribute To Chris Squire) (3.37) 1.02 Firebuid Suite (1.20) 1.03 Don't Kill The Whale (4.14) 1.04 Tempus Fugit (6.46) 1.05 America (11.33) 1.06 Going For The One (5.47) 1.07 Time And A Word (6.33) 1.08 I've Seen All Good People (7.43) ============================== 2.01 Siberian Khatru (10.36) 2.02 Owner Of A Lonely Heart (6.00) 2.03 Roundabout (11.07) 2.04 Starship Trooper (11.18) ============================== Yes Denver Botanic Gardens at Chatfield Littleton, Colorado August 30, 2015 Lineage: Sony ECM-717 (mic) / Sony PCM-M10 24/96 > Audacity (downsampled to 16/44 wav) > CD Wav (track splitting) > Traders Little Helper (FLAC level 8) Steve Howe Alan White Geoff Downes Billy Sherwood John Davison Tracklist: 01 intro tape 02 Firebuid Suite excerpt 03 Don't Kill The Whale 04 Tempus Fugit 05 America 06 Going For The One 07 Time and a Word 08 I've Seen All Good People 09 Siberian Khatru 10 Owner of a Lonely Heart 11 Roundabout 12 Starship Trooper Notes: I felt uncertain about this show going in - without Chris Squire, would this feel like Yes? Does this make them their own tribute band? Certainly, on some levels, that's exactly how it feels - when Geoff Downes played a sloppy key-board lick at the beginning of OoaLH, you can hear a few people in the audience groan; there's a surrealistic feeling to this band playing TaaW, when nobody on stage played on the original recording; the longest tenured member of this band is the drummer. Is this still Yes? I attended this show with my wife and friend, who flew in from Texas to attend, as he has with past Yesshows. The venue is actually a large field in the foothills of the Denver metro area that appeared to be largely attended by members of the Gardens - by the time the show ended at 9:00 (!), most of the crowd had already vacated! Toto went on first, and they actually played a bit longer than Yes - which was a huge disappointment to me; this is easily the shortest Yesshow that I've seen. Plus, the sun was right in our faces for the entirety of Toto's performance - fortunately, the sun was going down when Yes took the stage shortly after 7:30. The tribute to Chris Squire did not really come off at this show, as the sun was still out and there was no video screen, Onward played in a sort of isoloation - most of the crowd did not realize that this was part of the show. This was followed by a shortened version of the Firebird Suite; the first thing I noticed was that Billy wore a long Squire-esque coat for his performance. The opening DKTW worked better in person than it had the other shows I had heard - it's still a weird choice for an opener. In fact, the crowd was obviously restless, as the first five songs were obscurities (to them) - it reminded me that, during Toto's set, they announced at one point 'we're playing something from our new album' and the crowd obviously exhaled in disappointment. To me, Tempus Fugit was the highlight - I've said it before and I'll say it again: if you don't have Jon Anderson in the band, you should emphasize the material that isn't associated with him. I'm jealous that Europe gets the Drama/Fragile tour in Spring 2016. The band got tighter as they worked their way through the set - you can feel a palpable sense of relief in the crowd once they get to ISAGP. Overall, the setlist is an odd, but, enjoyable bird - at 1 hour, 26 minutes, it feels like a partial performance, but, the music is magical, and there's a certain honor in these guys going on in Chris Squire's stead. Almost like he's there with them in spirit - he knew they'd be going on without him, so, it feels like they're honoring him, even if not explicitly so. My wife says this is the least enjoyable Yesshow that she has seen - for her, the best part was that it was short, and we were home at a reasonable hour. For my friend, as long as Steve Howe is there, it's worth seeing and he felt that Steve was on point and played well. To me, I was glad to see it, and will continue to patronage any band that can officially call itself Yes - Alan White sounded much better at this show (to me) than he had in a long time (perhaps he's laying off thesauce, in light of Chris' fate), Billy was fine as the hand picked replacement, Steve was really loud in the mix, but, did not disappoint (too bad we didn't get Clap), Downes is acceptable and Davison is a Jon Anderson clone for whom most of the crowd probably did not notice the difference. Not to mention, as I get older, I imagine more and more of the shows I see will likely be playing in similar venues, ending at earlier and earlier times - that's not necessarily bad! Please do not sell this recording, but, share, share, share! |