In many ways, the extravagance of this package equates the profligacy of the prog rock combo themselves. After all, how else but on a triple-LP collection could one hope to re-create -- or merely contain -- an adequate sampling of
Yes' live presentation? Especially since their tunes typically clocked in in excess of ten minutes. Although they had turned in five studio long-players, the vast majority of
Yessongs (1973) is drawn from their three most recent endeavors
The Yes Album (1970),
Fragile (1971), and
Close to the Edge (1972). There are two exceptions, the first being the "Opening (Excerpt from "Firebird Suite")" -- which comes from the 1969
Boston Symphony Orchestra's recording, conducted by
Seiji Ozawa. The other is
Rick Wakeman's keyboard solo "Excerpts from 'The Six Wives Of Henry VIII'."
Yes had just undergone a personnel change shortly after concluding work on
Close to the Edge as
Bill Bruford (percussion) left to join
King Crimson in July of 1972.
Bruford can be heard on "Perpetual Change," as well as the medley of "Long Distance Runaround" and "The Fish (Schindleria Praematurus)." Enthusiasts keen on various and arguably irrelevant minutia should note the spelling of "praimaturus" as credited on
Yessongs. It is slightly different from
Fragile, which is denoted as "praematurus." That bit of trivia aside, the new lineup finds
Alan White (drums), quite ably filling
Bruford's shoes, alongside
Jon Anderson (vocals),
Steve Howe (guitars),
Chris Squire (bass/vocals), and
Rick Wakeman (keyboards).