Category Archives: Jon Anderson

Examiner.com Review – Anderson/Wakeman, ‘The Living Tree In Concert Part One’

Sterling Whitaker-

It’s not the easiest thing to re-imagine the complex music of Yes in stripped-down arrangements for guitar, voice and keyboards, but that’s exactly what former Yes lead vocalist Jon Anderson and keyboardist Rick Wakeman did for this live album, which documents a series of performances the pair gave in support of their duo album The Living Tree.

The album’s track listing consists of familiar Yes classics interspersed with deep cuts from the Yes catalog, as well as songs from Anderson and Wakeman’s duo album and solo work. It’s not much of a musical stretch for songs like “The Living Tree (Part 1)” or “23/24/11” to come off in this setting, since they were essentially tailor-written for this approach, and the pair delivers strong versions of those songs. But it is the Yes material that is the most challenging, and produces the most surprising results both pro and con.

“And You and I” is perhaps the best of that lot; it turns out that a piece of material that was fairly densely orchestrated as recorded has a strong enough chord progression and melody to stand up in a sparser arrangement. You wouldn’t mistake it for Yes . . . take away the drums, bass and guitars from the Yes recording, and that’s essentially what you have here. But it works surprisingly well, as does “South Side of the Sky,” a fan favorite from Fragile that also receives the stripped-down treatment.
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Anderson has performed “Long Distance Runaround” acoustically many times, so it’s not as much of a surprise that it works, but the duo’s quasi-reggae version of “Time and a Word” doesn’t serve the song as well as a straighter folk rendering probably would have.

It’s debatable whether this is actually progressive rock, per se; in the absence of most of the rhythmic arrangement elements, much of this material comes off more like progressive adult contemporary. But the dreamy atmosphere Anderson and Wakeman create proves a suitable showcase for the elements they brought to the music of Yes, and Anderson still possesses one of the most undeniably distinctive voices in rock music, even if he sings some of these songs in lower keys than the original recordings.

One very welcome addition is the closing song, “The Meeting,” a gorgeous performance of a mostly-overlooked song from the Anderson, Bruford, Wakeman and Howe project.

If you’re looking for Yes, you won’t find it here. But if you’re open to interesting new interpretations of the music of Yes, there’s still plenty to like about The Living Tree In Concert Part One.

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Lords of Metal review – Anderson / Wakeman – The Living Tree Live In Concert Part One

Anderson / Wakeman – The Living Tree Live In Concert Part One
Gonzo Multimedia
file under prog / metal sympho
Winston : When Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman in 2010 finally came to it, without the usual bustle and fuss of their former lord Yes bread to record an album showed once again how special their musical talents match. In “The Living Tree ‘are nine songs, though with only keyboards and vocals, still quite varied. Some songs are a candidate for treatment Yes, others breathe an intimate and warm atmosphere in the form in which they are cast. One year after the tour that the two together under names in the UK, now with ‘The Living Tree In Concert Part One, “a live album. Obviously much work of that particular album, but also some Yes songs in an acoustic and stripped jacket just as charming maintained. For example the song “And You And I”, the legendary ‘Close To The Edge “album in 2012 will celebrate its 40th anniversary, it continues to stand as majestic. Anderson, now 67, has some wear on his voice, even through a recent illness, he still knows that feeling across. Like a Peter Gabriel that still can. Wakeman has lost none of his virtuosity and melodic provides a platform for Anderson, who makes good use of.You just hear this prog veterans together to read and write. It may sound harsh, but this combination gives me as a fan more than the current Yes formation able to produce. Anderson currently touring solo with bijtitel “The Voice of Yes’ and on this live album, he makes it again twice over that. Now it is hoped that a second part may hopefully come up with songs from the tour that Anderson and Wakeman recently in America. According to reports (see interview with Anderson elsewhere in this theater), Europe this two man project also live at work and I look very forward to it. This CD is a nice souvenir and hopefully a warm-up time.

Rating: 85/100
http://www.jonanderson.com

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SoundPress.net Review – The Living Tree In Concert Part One

Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman of Yes Branch Out
with The Living Tree In Concert Part One!!
In 2009, Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman released The Living Tree. The stark yet stunning CD received rave reviews and the two former Yes bandmates toured in support of the album. The recorded concerts featured tracks from The Living Tree and reworked Yes classics. The Living Tree In Concert Part One was compiled and overseen by Jon and Rick with the two choosing highlights from their highly successful tour of 2010.

The end result was a dozen delicate yet dynamic songs that showcased Jon’s expressive vocals and Rick’s varied and vivid keys. SoundPress.net had the pleasure of seeing the pair in November of 2011 and The Living Tree In Concert Part One captured much of the magic and melody that we experienced at our show.

The CD starts with Anderson strumming an acoustic as Wakeman added atmospheric keys and sounds to “And You And I”. The piece was elegant and expansive and sets the tone for the rest of the chosen material. “Living Tree (Part 1)” was a vibrant and visionary tune filled with lyrics about love that meandered into the reflective “Morning Star”. The rearranged “Long Distance Runaround” was intriguing with Rick filling in the space and sound with intricate keys. “The Garden” and “Living Tree (Part 2)” were glowing and graceful.

The classic “Time And A Word” was a catchy combination of animated acoustic guitars and crafty keys countered by the stark and singular “Just One Man”. “23/24/11” was a serious song questioning war. “Southside” was mystical in its new form followed by the slower “House of Freedom” and closing with a memorizing “The Meeting”.

The Living Tree In Concert Part One is a warm live recording demonstrating that as Jon and Rick continue to branch out they still have a lot to offer fans from both their contemporary and classic catalogues. And, as the title part one implies, more may be forthcoming!
Tracks:
1. And You And I
2. Living Tree (Part 1)
3. Morning Star
4. Long Distance Runaround
5. Garden
6. Living Tree (Part 2)
7. Time And A Word
8. Just One Man
9. 23/24/11
10. Southside
11. House Of Freedom
12. The Meeting
• Info: — USA CA/2011: http://www.jonanderson.com (Laura Turner Lynch/SoundPress.net)

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Austrian review of The Living Tree In Concert Part One

The two legends YES Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman have been 2010, “The LivingTree” album released. Then it went tremendously reduced to pure minimalism if we like, on Anderson’s unique voice and Rick Wakeman piano, that’s it. Have except that the two also various YES Classics (four to be exact) installed in their 2010 live set recorded in Englandwith – not much different it is with “The Living Tree In Concert Part One”.

But even here only dominated the piano himself and Mr. Anderson, at times dreamy deep under the skin of two continuous progressive rock legends, two veterans, two exceptionalmusicians, who – as you said, at least – are blind. Apart from the “Living Tree” material (stand out in which the two great “Morning Star” and “23/24/11”), it is mainly the “Fragile”rag “Southside of the Sky,” which this deliberate reduction to the essentials did damn good.

By the way: On the basis of the subtitle may be speculated to a decoupling of this second live tour, rumored to be with material from the U.S. foray by Anderson / Wakeman.

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ANDERSON / WAKEMAN – THE LIVING TREE IN CONCERT PART ONE

Together in search of the truth, the key to happiness and the meaning of our existence, no simple sounding task, but when two hearts beat as you stand very far. This is certainly the case with the brilliant musical duo Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman. Already at the world famous prog-rock band Yes were alchemists as they left their words and sounds coalesce into songs such crawling under your skin like a cloud floated into another cosmos.Published in 2009 on their album “The Living Tree” you heard all that wear anything but sit on their formula. Today, they plunge us into a live edition of the tour accompanying the album, recorded under the name “The Living Tree In Concert Part One”. With only the unique timbre voice of Jon Anderson, a warm-sounding classical guitar and the master keys of Rick Wakeman, this sounds totally stripped down versions of old and recent songs very subtle. It’s a wonderful album full justice to in this Christmas period and puts more emphasis on inner strength that emanates from each song.

Since 1971, the masterpiece “Fragile” from Yes, strings together the duo Anderson / Wakeman successes together with gems like “Close To The Edge”, “Tales From Tropografic Oceans” and “Going For The One”. Despite the huge success it was not always Peis and quiet inside Yes and walked them so many times their own artistic paths, but the link was forged between the duo and united them in 2006 as a tour in which both his own work as Yes classics covered were. The crowning glory was put together with the release of their “The Living Tree” album, this live album actually and the unfulfilled promises that were made then. When the duo assured us some old Yes classics recast and placing on the album, but eventually it was decided to only new songs. Today, however, the fans of “The Living Tree in Concert Part One” to indulge a series of successful operations of their known work, without calling into the new songs, because there are again some highlights from that ensure highlights of the album. However, if you Jon Anderson’s delightful series of ascending guitar “And You And I” from their smash hit “Close To The Edge” is heard, and by the subtle play of Rick Wakeman synth, you are like old fan immediately sold. Almost seamlessly connect, new songs like “Living Tree” or the absolute top romantic waltzing “The Garden”, combined with piano and synth work, with the old classics. Surprises holds, the two also in store for us as a summer reggae adaptation of “Time And A Word”, a more subdued version of the otherwise strong “South Side Of The Sky”, where crackling voice of Jon Anderson some wear shows in the higher echelons voice, while in “Long Distance Runaround”, another classic of the same successful album “Fragile”, opt for a more sensitive, baroque editing.

Do you want something unique in your home to this peaceful Christmas day then you should look no further than “The Living Tree Live Part One” of the illustrious duo Anderson / Wakeman. Their timeless music brings you into this subtle musical framework immediately in the right atmosphere and many guest will be amazed at the Christmas table, overloaded and serenity. We look forward to the second part of this series.

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Jon Anderson (Citibank Hall, São Paulo, 13/12/11)

Birds chirping, a babbling tune squeaked easy to store, acoustic instruments, scented candles everywhere, lamps suspended in the half light … No, it will not deal with a store of esoteric products, dear reader, but the show’s British Jon Anderson, the eternal voice of YES, who came to our country for a brief tour in promotion of their album “Survival & Other Stories” . On Tuesday, 13, Whiplash.net could give his presentation in the state capital, when the musician was in the pleasant Citibank Hall. The moment was very special and you follow the details in the next lines.

Text: Durr Campos / Photo: Leandro Anhelli ( http://www.anhelli.com.br )

Alone, at 21:30, Jon kicks in lavishing sympathy and heartfelt applause. Without ado, holds one of the guitars available there and gives the first chords of “Yours Is No Disgrace”, one of many classics of his former band played during his performance. The following three, all ofYESProved that centuries may pass, and even then, good music will remain timeless. Or you can say the opposite of hymns flawless level of “Sweet Dreams,” “Long Distance Runaround” (belíssima!) and “Time and a Word”, the second self-titled album, released in 1970? Also, on this record somewhat obscure in the discography of the English group, it is noteworthy musical quality in each of the eight tracks present. Far ahead of his time, Time and a Word, disk , and one of my favorites, is indeed a work extremely well finished and worth more attentive hearing, including the fact marking the departure of the great guitarist Peter Banks ( Editor’s note: that formed the great Flash after his resignation from YES, A group widely recognized in Europe on behalf of their three excellent albums released ).
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After a brief joke interspersed with the previous song “She Loves You” by The Beatles , Jon explains that during the months he spent recovering from a surgery he had time to write enough material, much of having his wife Jane as inspiration. This season he chose “Under Heaven’s Door (Never Ever)” and “Everyday Love” actually good songs, but the reception only increased even when he announced “Find My Way Home”, probably the most famous partnership with the Greek musician Vangelis, present in the cult album The Friends on Mr. Cairo (1981). Anderson took the opportunity to recall a hilarious story of when they were invited to play the aforementioned music, which achieved excellent placement in the British charts, on TV. Vangelis initially refused because, according to Jon, did not support the “hype” of the industry of show business. However, it was just mentioning the word “black money” for the boy change his mind in the act!
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The unfailing “Starship Trooper” came next, with coladinha “America”, cover of the famous work of Paul Simon and Garfunkel, was one of the most sung. The requests from fans, “Ritual (Nous Sommer Du Soleil)”, the controversial – and wonderful – Tales From Topographic Oceans (1973), the sixth studio album YES , was included in the repertoire. I wondered how great it would be if there were an accompanying band. The following need not be announced: “Owner of a Lonely Heart,” the biggest hit YES if you look at the world level. Performed briefly, but well arranged, that remained intact close relationship between performer and audience that has always promoted since his first introduced back in 1983, when the multi-platinum album 90,125 fell into the graces of the public.
Jon then goes to the keyboard and starts a delicious medley containing “Set Sail” perfect “Close To the Edge” (much shortened, unfortunately), “Heart of Sunrise” and “The Revealing Science of God (Dance of the Dawn) “. The last letter of this is very complex and difficult to follow, however, the attentive audience did not seem intimidated and sang every verse in unison. “Marry Me Again With” kept the intimate atmosphere, and then return to the humorous side to “The Light of Love” and brought their unique reggae. “And You And I” was one of the points high, but could, it is one of the most beautiful things ever forged in the UK. Jon asks if anyone knows “Show Me”, which is played after the positive response of the majority. In the case I do not admire him, even this is a bonus The Ultimate Yes: 35th Anniversary Collection, released in 2003.
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Like most readers of this text may already know, in 1975 all the members of YES at the time decide to take a break from the band and releasing solo albums. Olias of Sunhillow what was left of the head of Jon Anderson after weeks locked inside a garage full of tools and many exotic megalomaniac ideas. From that classic album of the two most interesting were selected for this concert: “Flight of the Moorglade” and “To the Runner.” The regular part of the set even brought the obligatory “Your Move / I’ve Seen All Good People” and “Roundabout”, followed by standing for almost the entire house. A quick exit from the stage, and the encore was soon brought “State of Independence”, another partnership with Vangelis, the supernatural “Wonderous Stories” (another note from the Editor: Along with “Circus of Heaven”, my favorite YES) and sensational “Soon” section of the epic “The Gates of Delirium”, the insane and equally perfect Relayer, which featured Patrick Moraz on the keyboard after the rout of Rick Wakeman due to its dissatisfaction with the previous release, Tales From Topographic Oceans (more an editor’s note: Indian documentary YesYears for more details on the fact).
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The “one-man show” ended after 90 minutes of beautiful songs, smiles and tears. I could see how dear Jon Anderson is, regardless of age. Even amid the controversy after leaving YES , both have been incredibly well received by the Brazilians. Whether solo or with the band who designed the world, the fact is that time does not seem to move to this gentleman. At the height of its 67 years his voice remains intact and full of vigor, as well as the legion of fans who follow him.
Set-list
1. Yours Is No Disgrace (Yes)
2. Sweet Dreams (Yes)
3. Long Distance Runaround (Yes)
4. Time and a Word (Yes)
5. Under Heaven’s Door (Never Ever)
6. Everyday Love
7. Find My Way Home (Jon & Vangelis)
8. Starship Trooper (Yes)
9. America (Yes / original by Simon & Garfunkel)
10. Ritual (Nous Sommer Du Soleil) (Yes)
11. Owner of a Lonely Heart (Yes)
12. Piano Medley (Set Sail, Close to the Edge, Heart of the Sunnis, Set Sail reprise, The Revealing Science of God)
13. With Marry Me Again
14. The Light of Love
15. And You And I (Yes)
16. Show Me
17. Flight of the Moorglade / To the Runner
18. Tony And Me (Yes)
19. Your Move / I’ve Seen All Good People (Yes)
20. Roundabout (Yes)
Encore
21. State of Independence
22. Wonderous Stories (Yes)
23. Soon (Yes)

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Jon Anderson (formerly of Yes) (interview)

There is an audio interview of Jon Anderson up on the website Icon Fetch. Click the link below to hear it!

Jon Anderson (formerly of Yes) (interview)


Jon Anderson interview

Interview:

1. Jon, thank you very much for taking your time to make an interview with It’s Psychedelic Baby Magazine. You are just back from the road, performing with Rick Wakeman. How was the tour, did it meet your expectations?

The tour was wonderful on many levels, great audience, the music sounded good, and Rick is a joy to be with…and we did Awaken..

2. I would like to talk about your two latest albums. In 2010 you released Survival & Other Stories. Can you tell me a few words about the concept behind the album?

All the songs came from working with people around the world via the internet, I asked these musicians to send me new music that I could write melodies and lyrics over, I have lots of new friends via the interenet, it is a wonderful new modern way to make music..

3. On October 25 you released an epic musical work entitled “OPEN.” A return to the long-form composition that you have been working on. This is in a way- a return to a “Yes” sound, isn’t it?

It is in my D&A to write this kind of music , I always enjoy this kind of musical creation, I used to do this in Yes…

4. Can we expect your involvement in any other project similar to “OPEN”, in the future?

I’m working on the next ‘opus’ now, I love the idea of music without time…

5. As we all know you got back together with Rick in 2010 to record The Living Tree album, which is really amazing. How did you and Rick get back together to record this album? Did you have any similar ideas, that resulted as the Living Tree album?

We wrote these songs again via the Internet, it is as though we are on the same wave length, and we are on the same planet, so why not use the internet…as a studio…

6. Do you have any future plans regarding touring and album making? Can we expect another album with both of you?

We are started writing in the new year, we have a lot of new ideas to work on, and we enjoy each others music…so a new album should be coming…

7. If we go back in the 70’s. I’m sure you experienced many interesting things. Would you like to share some stories from the “Yes years” with It’s Psychedelic Baby Magazine readers?

Most of all was the willingness of our fans to follow us on musical journeys that had nothing to do with Radio, or Charts, or being popular in the ‘big sense’…

8. Let’s go a bit to the start of your career. Your first band was called The Electric Warriors and you released two singles for Decca. How do you remember those days with The Warriors, Jon?

It was a crazy dream to be in music, to be in a band, and travel all around Europe, playing long long shows in tiny smoky clubs, funny times, beautiful moments through the 60’s, peace signs, drinking too much, waiting for the next Beatle song to be released….such amazing music in the 60’s…

9. Later you also appeared with a band called Gun (I made an interview with Paul Gurvitz about it) and The Open Mind. Were you part of the 1969 album, that Open Mind released? In my humble opinion that’s a psychedelic masterpiece…

No… they had fired me from the band, before that album, I got the band a gig with the Who at the Marquee club , I said we would play for free, but the brothers didn’t like me for doing that…I just wanted the exposure for the Gun…but they wanted money, so the fired me…la la la

10. Mabel Greer’s Toyshop was another band known for having three future Yes members. How did the band transformed into later know Yes?

I joined a rehearsal of Chris’s band at that time , but 2 people left the first week to join other bands, so I suggested we find new people and find a shorter name…so we became YES

11. Jon, I’d like to thank you once again for taking the time and effort to answer my questions. Would you care to send a message to all of your fans and readers of It’s Psychedelic Baby Magazine?

Music is for good, Music is for having fun, Music is for life, Music is not just to make money…Jon

http://jonanderson.com/index.html

Interview made by Klemen Breznikar / 2011
© Copyright http://psychedelicbaby.blogspot.com/ 2011

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Jon Anderson still says Yes to touring

MONTREAL – Jon Anderson can never not create.

The former frontman for archetypal 1970s progressive rock band Yes, prolific solo artist and collaborator, survivor of a near-fatal illness, painter, spiritualist, and Lancashire working-class boy-turned-California dreamer, he’s currently out with former Yes keyboardist Rick Wakeman on a tour that brings the pair to Théâtre St. Denis on Saturday.

Yes songs will be played. Enduring Yes fans in this most resilient of prog-rock cities will be transported Close to the Edge, or thereabouts.

Despite having performed in Albany, N.Y., the night before, Anderson is on the phone at 10 a.m., bright-eyed and eager to talk about what’s on his plate right now. In the earliest going of the conversation, one enduring mystery is cleared up. Anderson’s singing voice is high enough to flush bats from a cave. His speaking voice is high. The two are a natural fit. Well, that’s one vexing question forever laid to rest.

Another is his most recent creation, the 21-minute musical work called Open, released as a digital download in late October. Legions of Yes men and several women will recall in its complex melodic and harmonic themes, classical framework and fairies-at-the-bottom-of-the-garden lyrics, the halcyon days of Yes. In those golden times there were the hits like Owner of a Lonely Heart, and an astonishing 18 album catalogue, beginning with the self-titled 1970 debut and including Close to the Edge in 1972, and Tales from Topographic Oceans one year later.

Despite band squabbles, defections, unfortunate lawyers’ fees and assorted creative differences, Yes albums continued until 2001 and may yet appear again. Unlike some people, and most rock critics, Anderson loves the old tunes and believes the 1970s were a wonderful time, allowing Yes and others like them to create music that would never find a home on mainstream radio today.

“Music is about magic. It’s not about money, it’s about creation.” says the affable lad from Northern England who now calls California home, and America his adopted country, citizenship and all.

“But when it’s all boiled down, (the music industry) has become such a factory, and that takes away from the potential for creation. TV shows like American Idol are dispiriting. There’s some real talent on display, but the format and the material discourage any originality. But it makes for good TV, I suppose. That’s life.”

Anderson in his more recent incarnations will never be accused of chasing the almighty dollar. He has embraced the Internet where so many of his analog-age cohorts fought it. Indeed, work like Open – begun when strumming his 19th-century guitar one day last year led to “songs pouring out of me for a week” – involved collaborations with musicians from the far-flung corners of the globe, all interacting over a digital platform.

It follows Survival & Other Stories, a solo album featuring similar Internet collaborations released in 2010, on the very day the germ of an idea for Open sprouted.

“I nearly died in 2008, twice,” he says by way of explaining the inspiration for Survival, Open and the drive to continue playing live. “It began as an asthma attack (the diminutive Anderson has always had a frail constitution) that led to respiratory failure and six operations. It was pretty bad. Hospitals are tough to hang around in. But the body is an engine – a soft machine to use the old term. When it breaks down it needs to be fixed. My amazing wife, Jane, kept me going. I survived and came out the other end twice as strong.”

One end result is Open, “a song about compassion. Your spirit has to hang tough in those situations, and let the divine guide you.”

Anderson has been on something of a tear ever since his close brush with the man who always knows the time. He toured Europe in 2009 as a solo act, and did the same in Canada and the U.S. the next year. He and Wakeman returned to the U.K. as a duo in 2010, and he sang Owner of a Lonely Heart with the Youth Orchestras of San Antonio Philharmonic in Texas.

“We’re out now, but will take a break for the holidays. There’s some talk about a peace concert on Christmas Day in Israel. Then there’s Mexico and South America in the new year. I’m enjoying playing concerts more than ever. I’m very interested in working with orchestras, especially youth orchestras. Their energy, enthusiasm and curiosity is inspiring.

“And there’s working with Rick, from all those years ago. He’s such a joy, and recreating those large-scale pieces from the ’70s remains a fascination. We got hammered by critics for them, but audiences stuck with us.

“Now I look out at the crowd and I see old fans, but I also see young faces. They must have been brainwashed with the music by their parents! And they’re all inspired by what we created. For some reason, I’m very creative. I’m dedicated to creating long-form pieces. It’s what I do. It’s who I am.”

Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman play at Théâtre St. Denis Saturday night. Tickets are $53.50 to $72 and are available via Ticketpro at (514) 790-1111 or http://www.ticketpro.ca

johngriffin@bell.net

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Jon Anderson of Yes stronger than ever

Jon Anderson of Yes stronger than ever
BMS chats with former Yes singer ahead of his show in Worcester
Jennifer Carney, Contributing Writer

It’s not so much that Jon Anderson is the voice of Yes. Or that he is a prolific songwriter. Or that he wrote some of the most iconic and esoteric music of the last 40 years. He’s too focused on music as he sees it now, through whatever lens is handy. This time, that lens is a stripped-down acoustic collaboration between Anderson and long-time, iconoclastic Yes keyboardist, Rick Wakeman. They will be mixing Yes classics, music from various solo projects, and songs off of their new collaboration, The Living Tree, this Tuesday at the Hanover Theatre in Worcester.

“People love the show,” Anderson tells Boston Music Spotlight from the road. “We put on a very entertaining show doing songs from Yes and songs from the new album, The Living Tree. Rick likes to tell jokes, and people just love the show. Obviously there’s one or two classic Yes songs that they go crazy about, but they’re responding very well to the new songs.

“I sing ‘Roundabout’ and it’s a lot of fun. I sing ‘Starship Trooper’ because I love singing it. I just love singing the songs, or I wouldn’t sing them. With Wakeman, I enjoy his accompaniment and with the new [and old] songs.”

While Anderson and Wakeman are on the road, Yes is touring Europe without them, touring and recording with a new frontman, tribute singer Benoit David. When asked how he feels about the band’s decision to go on without the “voice of Yes”, Anderson is candid.

“Life moves on, you know? You’ve got to get on with your career,” he says. “I’m very connected to the music that I love. I wrote all the songs for Yes, and I still sing them like when I first wrote them – sort of stripped-down, acoustic versions – and people [on this tour] just love listening; they sing along to everything, so that works for me.”

Anderson recently recorded a collaborative album with musicians from all over the world, Survival & Other Stories, and his most recent composition, Open, marks a return to the long-form songwriting for which he has been known for over forty years.

“It’s my nature to write music, whether it’s two-minute, seven-minute, ten-minute or twenty-minute song. I was always pushing the direction of the music towards the larger pieces because I think music isn’t just making ‘radio music’ or making money. Music is a very powerful energy, and you should go on a journey of music with great symphonies and long-form pieces because it takes you on a journey. I learned that many years ago, so I still carry that on with Open. Part of my DNA is to create long-form pieces so people could sit back and relax for twenty minutes and listen to something that takes them on an adventure musically.”

Playing in Massachusetts brings back especially fond memories for Anderson. When most Bostonians think of the old Garden, they think of obstructed views, uneven parquet flooring and sweltering rafter seats. Not Jon Anderson.

“The original Boston Garden was the best rock and roll arena in the world,” he proclaims. “It just had that sound because it was made of wood and whatever and the energy there was always amazing. But the sound in that room was unbelievable from the band’s point of view.”

Fans headed to the Hanover Theatre on Tuesday night can expect an intimate show – almost recital-like – from two prog-rock legends who have spent over forty years perfecting every note. As Anderson sees it, these performances with Rick Wakeman are all about the love of music and the love of a songbook that now spans generations.

“A good performance is to project how I am today, not how I was thirty years ago. I’m 67 now, and I’m still enjoying singing my songs, so that’s why I tour.”

Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman of Yes will perform at the Hanover Theatre in Worcester, Massachusetts on Tuesday, November 8. Tickets for the show, which range in price from $45 to $65, are now on sale through the venue’s website and box office.

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