Prog

YES

prog.reviews@futurenet.com

With every studio recording, live album or tour announcement, there’s always a faction of fans who will turn up on a corner of the internet waving their ‘No Jon Anderson, No Yes’ banners. Their zeal is only matched by the nearby counter-demonstration shaking their ‘No Peter Banks, No Yes’ placards.

But time and events have moved on and maybe the ‘No Anderson’ contingent should too. In the aftermath of the singer’s unceremonious too short to spend time grinding gears over something we have no control over. Rather than exercising well-worn prejudices and allowing expectations to become self-fulfilling prophecies, isn’t it better to approach a new album with an open mind?

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Prog

Prog2 min read
John Mitchell
VENUE THE CAMDEN CLUB, LONDON DATE 06/04/2024 SUPPORT STORM DEVA The last time John Mitchell played solo in London, last February at the Islington Assembly Hall, it probably wasn’t his best performance. Erroneously billed as ‘An Evening With John Mit
Prog5 min read
Soul Trader
Last year Oliver Wakeman’s record label politely pointed out that he hadn’t made an album of his own for a long, long time. He was taken aback; to him it felt like he’d barely stopped releasing music. There was Collaborations – the 2022 box set featu
Prog6 min read
Far From Normal
“I have to be honest with you, I’m not really a prog musician,” confesses Nick Beggs. That’s a disarming proclamation from a musician who has played with Steven Wilson, Steve Hackett, led the prog power trio The Mute Gods, and who recently filled in

Related Books & Audiobooks