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      • In September 1988, Anderson left Yes citing his growing dissatisfaction with the band's commercial direction.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anderson_Bruford_Wakeman_Howe
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  2. In September 1988, Anderson left Yes citing his growing dissatisfaction with the band's commercial direction. He had also felt sidelined from the creative process due to the machinations of other band members and producer Trevor Horn. [1] .

  3. May 17, 2021 · Howe refers darkly to “someone I’d rather leave out of this” as the figure who Anderson says “managed the situation”, and this was evidently erstwhile Yes, GTR and Rick Wakeman manager Brian Lane. Indeed, it was Lane who made the first phone call to Wakeman to request his participation.

  4. Jun 20, 2015 · Released June 20, 1989, Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe offered a decidedly old-school rebuttal to the progressively more produced sound Yes used throughout the '80s, leaning heavily on the...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Yes_(band)Yes (band) - Wikipedia

    In 1989, Anderson and former members Bruford, Wakeman, and Howe released the self-titled Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe album, after which they and the other then-current Yes members–Squire, Kaye, White, and Rabin–unified into an eight-piece line-up of Yes for the 1991 Union album and its subsequent tour. From 1994 to 2001, Yes regularly ...

    • History
    • Line-Ups
    • References

    1968–1981

    The band formed out of psychedelic rock band Mabel Greer's Toyshop in 1968, with the line-up of Anderson, Squire, Banks, Kaye and Bruford. In September, Bruford decided to quit performing to study at the University of Leeds. His replacement, Tony O'Reilly of the Koobas, struggled to perform with the rest of the group on stage and former Warriors and future King Crimson drummer Ian Wallace subbed for one gig on 5 November 1968. After Bruford was refused a year's sabbatical leave from Leeds, An...

    1982–1994

    At the beginning of 1982, Phil Carson of Atlantic Records introduced Squire and White to guitarist and singer Trevor Rabin, who had initially made his name with the South African supergroup Rabbitt, subsequently releasing three solo albums, working as a record producer and even briefly considered being a member of Asia. The three teamed up in a new band called Cinema, for which Squire also recruited the original Yes keyboard player Tony Kaye. Later in 1982, Cinema entered the studio to record...

    1995–present

    In November 1995, Anderson, Squire and White resurrected the "classic" 1970s lineup of Yes by inviting Wakeman and Howe back to the band, the Keys to Ascension album included three live shows at the Fremont Theater in San Luis Obispo, California which were recorded and released, along with the new studio tracks. The Keys to Ascension 2 included the same formatting. Disgruntled at the way a potential studio album had been sacrificed in favour of the Keys to Ascension releases, Wakeman left the...

    Bands closely related to Yes

    There have been two occasions when a line-up of former Yes members has competed with the official line-up of Yes. These bands included former Yes members, performed/perform Yes music and presented/present themselves within the context of Yes' history.

    Bibliography

    1. Welch, Chris (2008). Close to the Edge – The Story of Yes. Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-1-84772-132-7. 2. Chambers, Stuart (2002). Yes: An Endless Dream of '70s, '80s and '90s Rock Music: An Unauthorized Interpretative History in Three Phases. General Store Publishing House. ISBN 978-1-894-26347-4. 3. Howe, Steve (2021). All My Yesterdays. Omnibus Press. ISBN 9781785581793.

  6. Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe is the self-titled album by four alumni of YES: Jon Anderson, Bill Bruford, Rick Wakeman, and Steve Howe, released in 1989. The group was unable to use the name YES for legal reasons. However, the group did have Arista assign the catalog number of

  7. Jun 22, 2019 · Always one to stick to his intuition and heart, Anderson departed Yes for the second time and began a new project with three former bandmates—drummer Bill Bruford (who left in 1972), keyboardist Rick Wakeman (who left in 1980) and guitarist Steve How (who left in 1981)—as well as revered bassist Tony Levin.