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Posted: 3:49 p.m. Friday, Oct. 26, 2012

Kaedy's Conversations - Trevor Rabin

Trevor Rabin and Chris Squire of Yes
Ebet Roberts / Getty Images
UNITED STATES - DECEMBER 01: Photo of Trevor RABIN and Chris SQUIRE and YES; Trevor Rabin and Chris Squire performing live onstage (Photo by Ebet Roberts/Redferns)

Kaedy interviewed guitarist Trevor Rabin in 1994, just as his last album recorded with Yes called “Talk” was released. Listen [2:05]

Trevor found a crummy guitar in the studio, so he tuned it and played live for Kaedy. Listen [1:20]

 


 

Far and away the longest lasting and the most successful of the '70s progressive rock groups, Yes proved to be one of the lingering success stories from that musical genre. The band, founded in 1968, overcame a generational shift in its audience and the departure of its most visible members at key points in its history to reach the end of the century as the definitiveprogressive rock band. Where rivals such as Emerson, Lake & Palmer withered away commercially after the mid-'70s, andGenesis and King Crimson altered their sounds so radically as to become unrecognizable to their original fans, Yes retained the same sound, and performed much of the same repertoire that they were doing in 1971, and for their trouble, they found themselves being taken seriously a quarter of a century later. Their audience remained huge because they had always attracted younger listeners drawn to their mix of daunting virtuosity, cosmic (often mystical) lyrics, complex musical textures, and powerful yet delicate lead vocals.

 
 
 

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