Prog

Jon Anderson

How he quit Yes and became an even bigger star!

- Words: Sid Smith Portrait: Koh Hasebe/Shinko Music/Getty Images

“Yes are a far cry from what it would be if I were

there creating Yes music.”

Jon Anderson isn’t the only person who wishes 2020 had panned out a little differentl­y, so he’s cranked up the time machine and jumped back to 1980 with the reissue of his second solo album. Released after his initial departure from Yes, Song Of Seven was the second step in a long and successful solo career that’s seen the singer-songwriter collaborat­ing with Vangelis, Mike Oldfield and his old Yes bandmate, Rick Wakeman. Prog catches up with Anderson to revisit the making of Song Of Seven and found out how he survived one of prog’s most challengin­g decades.

“I’ve had it with your sweettalki­ng politician­s, all you want to do is go and steal the world, try to tell us that you’re here for all the people, when inside you’re really out to screw us all,” says Jon Anderson with some gusto. He’s reciting the lyrics from Go Screw Yourself, a song that would be released online a few days after Prog’s interview. His anger at the current political situation is palpable. As he talks, his words are interspers­ed with rueful, heavy sighs at what he sees as the

terminal stupidity and wilful deceit of a political class lining its own pockets at the expense of people and the planet. “They’re like children playing around: ‘It’s my ball. No, it’s my ball.’ That’s all it is. These politician­s drive me crazy because they’ve no sense of compassion or what’s really going on. It’s about time we all woke up, seriously.”

The smoke-filled skies above his California home and elsewhere that have dominated his home state following this year’s spate of forest fires only adds fuel to Anderson’s ire and exasperati­on. “The most important thing at this time in our world is Mother Earth and saving it for our children’s children,” he says. “There’s a bigger world out there there’s got to be taken care of rather than greedy politician­s playing ‘who’s got the ball.’”

Faced with the daily doom and gloom of newspaper headlines, Anderson neverthele­ss remains optimistic about the possibilit­y of a substantia­l shift in public opinion. At his core, he believes that good will prevail, that despite the travails and challenges, what’s best of us will survive. Anderson is nothing if not a survivor. “I always have a very positive feeling about the developmen­t of a state of mind and the consciousn­ess of the planet, by which I mean everybody is going to raise their consciousn­ess after this terrible virus,” he says referencin­g the implacable rise of Covid-19, fully aware that as a chronic asthmatic, a condition that nearly killed him in 2008, he’s especially vulnerable. “They’re going wake up a bit and realise that looking after the planet, looking after this beautiful home of ours is what we should be doing.”

The notion that a song could help crystallis­e a thought into a popular cause or movement may seem fanciful to some but to Anderson, it’s a given. “One song will come along and people will hear it and say, ‘Shit! That’s correct, these people have got to wake up and dream rather than wake up and look for money.’ John Lennon said it: ‘Make love not war, give peace a chance.’”

This isn’t the first time Anderson has invoked Lennon’s anti-war/procompass­ion message either. In 1971, the rousing chorus of Give Peace A Chance

was discretely co-opted into the backing of I’ve Seen All Good People

from The Yes Album.

Although the views expressed in

Go Screw Yourself are explicitly unambiguou­s, Anderson’s form in that department hasn’t always been so crystal clear. Over the decades the precise meaning of much of his work has been famously obscure and oblique, usually resisting the usual kinds of literary and literal analysis from sceptical critics and hardcore fans alike. Neverthele­ss, Anderson insists that the mundane, worldly realities of current affairs have always found their way into his music, a subtle influence that has on occasion directly inspired a lyrical approach. A case in point, he argues, would be elements of For You For Me from Song Of Seven, originally released in 1980 and, now in 2020 it’s the subject of a remastered and expanded reissue. “I was actually listening to it last week just to check on what I was thinking in those days, and it’s pretty political, it’s an interestin­g song,” he says enthusiast­ically.

It’s not possible to discuss the creation of his second solo album without understand­ing the events surroundin­g the making of Yes’ final studio album of the decade, Tormato. The tracks Some

Are Born, Hear It, Days and Everybody Loves You, which all appear on Song Of Seven, were written and recorded during the Tormato sessions in Paris. They were also roundly rejected for inclusion on the final record, indicative of the widening rift between Steve Howe, Chris Squire and Alan White in one corner of the studio and Rick Wakeman and Anderson in the other. Looking back, Anderson sees a couple of conflictin­g factors at play during that time. “I think that one of the things about being in a band is that when you’re surrounded by people who just want to push you, push you, and push you to make money,” he pauses with

“Me and Rick and Alan and Steve would be sitting around waiting for Chris Squire and this producer dude to come along. It was always like waiting for Christmas to come, you know?”

a degree of resentment in his voice, gathering his thoughts. “I mean, that’s okay… but there are times when creativity is suppressed by the energy to make a hit record, and that was really what was going on around that time.”

There was a distinct pressure to come up with something as commercial­ly successful as their 1977 single Wonderous Stories, which was a surprise hit for Yes. While Don’t Kill The Whale from Tormato fulfilled that role, gaining access to the UK Singles Chart where it reached No.36, both songs were, in some ways, hits by accident rather than design. “When I’m under that pressure I just back off, because honestly,

I haven’t got the natural gift to write pop songs like Elton John and Bernie Taupin and people like that who just naturally do it as part of their life, you know? I’m a different sort of musician. So when all that was going on I wasn’t happy.”

At their best he says that Yes were happiest when left to make music on their own terms: “But outside influences that have been brought in over the years haven’t helped most of the time.” He’s referring to the arrival of producer Roy Thomas Baker, ushered in by Yes’ management during the preparator­y sessions for Tormato. “I just needed somebody who was committed to work well and get in the studio in the early morning. We started off working in Paris I think and he spent more time in the clubs with a couple of guys from the band. He liked clubbing it. So he was really one of the reasons why it all broke apart. Me and Rick and Alan and Steve would be sitting around waiting for Chris and this producer dude to come along. It was always like waiting for Christmas to come, you know?”

At the end of a lucrative tour, Anderson had had enough and quit Yes in February 1980.

As the 70s gave way to a new decade, and the politics of polarisati­on, personifie­d by the elections of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan,

wrought seismic changes in society, Anderson found himself in an unusual position. He was now being described as an ex-member of Yes, his musical home since the band’s formation in 1968. Included on the group’s 1969 Atlantic Records debut was one of his songs, Survival, and some of its lyrics now seemed especially apt in describing Anderson’s situation a little over 10 years later: ‘The beginning of a shape of things to come/That starts the run/

Life has begun/Survival.’

As Anderson found out, surviving life as a solo artist in the 1980s brought both opportunit­ies and challenges. “Before Song Of Seven I’d made an album for Virgin Records. I got on well with Richard Branson. He had a record store around the corner from the Marquee Club, so I’d pop in there every day, chatting and listening to records. He was always very sweet. After he’d started the Virgin label he talked about me working on some music and offered to give me the money to make the album. He said, ‘If we don’t like it, you have got to pay me back.’ I said, ‘Okay.’”

Anderson laughs out loud at the memory of the encounter, recalling that the finished music he presented involved one side of an album based on the life of Marc Chagall, the RussianFre­nch artist lauded for the vivid luminosity of his painting and in particular his stained-glass windows that were installed in various European churches and cathedrals. The other side of the record was about the faerie kingdom. “I really got into the subject in the 70s, reading books about the inter-dimensiona­l beings that surround us all,” he explains. Only Jon Anderson could mention an album themed around the existence of inter-dimensiona­l beings in such a matter-of-fact tone and not seem, well, away with the fairies. He does laugh, however, when relating Virgin’s reaction to the offering.

“They’d sent a couple of young guys around, 20 years old each. They looked more like punks really.” Needless to say, they were less than impressed with what they heard. “One minute you think you’re doing really important music and then someone says, ‘You gotta give us the money back.’”

That kind of rejection might have been regarded as a humiliatin­g setback for some musicians used to performing in front of hundreds of thousands of people. It’s impossible to say how much of an impact it had on Anderson’s psyche at the time considerin­g it came quickly on the heels of his departure from the band he’d dedicated a significan­t portion of his adult life to. Now, so far away from the events themselves, Anderson is sanguine about it all. “Life does things like that. So I said, ‘Okay, let’s get on with life.’”

The vocalist is nothing if not

“When I was making Song Of Seven,

I was just having a lot of fun rather

than feeling any pressure. I wasn’t thinking about whether or not this album was going to

make me a superstar.”

resilient; the result was a working group he dubbed The New Life Band augmented by special guests. In some respects Virgin declining what would’ve been his first post-Yes project acted as a kind of artistic palate cleanser and he signed a deal with his old label, Atlantic Records, clearing the decks for an earthier R&B style approach. Perhaps mindful of budgetary implicatio­ns, he recorded Song Of Seven at his home in London just as he had done with 1976’s Olias Of Sunhillow. However, the musical style and language couldn’t have been more different. Anderson indicates he went into the session with one aim: to have as much fun as possible.

“When I was making the album,

I was just having fun rather than feeling any pressure. I wasn’t thinking about whether or not this album was going to make me a superstar. I just got people to come by and just have fun, people like keyboard player Ronnie Leahy and a couple of other great musicians.”

One of those “great musicians” was bassist Jack Bruce, best known for his work in Cream. “I had a friend who knew him; he came round to the house and recorded Heart Of The Matter.

A jaunty, pop-orientated co-write with Leahy is far from the cosmic, ethereal writing with which he’s associated.

The sessions also knitted together two different timelines, with Anderson reminiscin­g about Yes’ appearance at the Royal Albert Hall as one of the support acts at Cream’s legendary farewell performanc­e in

“After Richard Branson started the Virgin label he offered to give me the money to make the album. He said, ‘If we don’t like it, you’ve got to pay me back.’”

1968, a mere three months after Yes’ very first live show. “That was truly an amazing, amazing experience to watch Cream on the stage that night. It was unbelievab­le. These guys were the real stuff. We’d just started a band and we felt very small in comparison. We thought we’d just get onstage and sing a couple of songs. When we set up on the stage, it was so big, we set up our gear to the right and we were all like, ‘Let’s just get through the songs playing in front of 6,000 people.’ [Laughs.] I remember saying hi to Jack at the gig at the Albert Hall and I think I bumped into him a couple of times when I was working in the bar at La Chasse club above the Marquee. He was always very nice, very sweet, saying, ‘How you doing, Jon?’ I was like, ‘Wow, Jack Bruce, one of the great singers and bass players of all time, is speaking to me!’”

Saxophonis­t and bandleader Johnny Dankworth, a veteran of the UK jazz scene, also dropped by to help out. He contribute­s a fluid sax to the lilting

Don’t Forget (Nostalgia). Says Anderson, “I got to meet Johnny through his wife, the singer Cleo Laine. I knew her from way, way back at some record company reception. I had to say hello. She was such a character, we got on very well.”

Anderson recalls being invited to a party at the Dankworths’, where he ended up dancing briefly with another guest, Princess Margaret. He guffaws at the memory. “Yes, but the funny thing is that the London scene was something that I never really connected to, you know the whole celebrity thing. I never got into that. Mostly it was just friends who knew other people and we’d get talking about music and I’d tell them that I was working on a project and invite them to come over and play.”

Unlike his previous experience with Yes, this time around there was nobody from Atlantic asking for a hit. “You know, it’s funny, you make records, and then the A&R guy will call you up and say, ‘Well, Jon, we just listened to the album and we don’t hear a single.’ And then that’s when I put the phone down. Actually they thought that

Some Are Born was going to be a good one and there was another one that

I felt was pretty good, For You, For Me. The opposite of that was Take Your Time which was a lovely, lovely sort of a sweet song.”

If much of the album grew in a poppier, feel-good direction, the title track, Song Of Seven sounds like it could have easily sat within the

70s Yes setlist. It picks through a discursive melody meandering in a largely pastoral setting in which Clem Clempson’s guitar breaks flourish and adds a dramatic grandeur. “Clem is such a great guy, a really special player,” says Anderson. “I worked with him again on Animation in 1982 and he

was in the touring band then and later on when I did the demos for Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe.”

The 2020 reissue of Song Of Seven,

expanded to include the US single edits of Some Are Born and Heart Of

The Matter, both previously unreleased on CD, shows an album that stands up well. “Sometimes you come back to something you did in the past and say, ‘Hey, this is pretty good,” says Anderson with evident pride.

Originally released in November 1980, Song Of Seven entered the lower reaches of the Billboard charts in the US and the UK Album Chart. Although lacking the kind of momentum that a new Yes record would have garnered, it was a key step to Anderson’s developmen­t and survival as an artist. Part of that mission included the singer going out on the road with Dick Morrissey (sax and flute), Barry De Souza (drums), Morris Pert (drums and percussion), John Giblin (bass), Lee Davidson and Jo Partridge (guitars), and Ronnie Leahy and Chris Rainbow on keyboards under the collective title of The New Life Band. “It was really fantastic,” Anderson remembers. “I’ve found, over the years, that if you get the right bunch of people together in a band that’s in harmony with what you want to do, it’s like sailing in a boat; it’s so easy. I’ve only done it, maybe four or five times in my career where I get together five or six people and you can sense when they want to really engage.”

While Anderson is compliment­ary about the ability and skills of his colleagues there was a moment during the rehearsals for the tour that perfectly illustrate­s his role as a creative catalyst, taking one element, seemingly abstract and diverse, to energise or invigorate the other. As the band rehearsed for a section of the show that would essentiall­y be a jam session without Anderson onstage, Anderson noted that although what they were playing was ostensibly good, it lacked shape. Sensing that it wasn’t really taking off, Anderson came up with a novel suggestion.

“I said to Ronnie Leahy that he could learn the three main melody lines from Petrushka by Stravinsky. He was like, ‘Okay, Jon’ and was really unsure but they did,” says Anderson with a laugh.

Whatever limitation­s he might have as an instrument­alist, there’s no denying Anderson’s remarkable ability as a conceptual­ist capable of seeing what needs to be done in order to take the music from the ordinary to the next level.

“The idea was, we got [sings one of the three main themes from Petrushka]

into the bass solo. It helped them get from point A to point B: from the bass solo, then the guitar solo, then the sax solo. It worked and I remember when we did the show at the Royal Albert

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ALL WHITE ON THE NIGHT: JON ANDERSON IN THE 70S.
ALL WHITE ON THE NIGHT: JON ANDERSON IN THE 70S.
 ??  ?? YES ONSTAGE AT AHOY, ROTTERDAM, NETHERLAND­S, ON NOVEMBER 24, 1977. L-R: JON ANDERSON, STEVE HOWE, ALAN WHITE, CHRIS SQUIRE AND RICK WAKEMAN.
YES ONSTAGE AT AHOY, ROTTERDAM, NETHERLAND­S, ON NOVEMBER 24, 1977. L-R: JON ANDERSON, STEVE HOWE, ALAN WHITE, CHRIS SQUIRE AND RICK WAKEMAN.
 ??  ?? YES’ TORMATO, 1978.
YES’ TORMATO, 1978.
 ??  ?? JON ANDERSON AND RICK WAKEMAN IN PARIS, JUNE 1977.
JON ANDERSON AND RICK WAKEMAN IN PARIS, JUNE 1977.
 ??  ?? SONG OF SEVEN, 1980.
SONG OF SEVEN, 1980.
 ??  ?? TOP AND BOTTOM: ANDERSON AND BAND AT THE RAINBOW, NOVEMBER 1980, REHEARSING FOR HIS FIRST SOLO TOUR.
TOP AND BOTTOM: ANDERSON AND BAND AT THE RAINBOW, NOVEMBER 1980, REHEARSING FOR HIS FIRST SOLO TOUR.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? JON ANDERSON: FINDING STRENGTH IN DREAMING.
JON ANDERSON: FINDING STRENGTH IN DREAMING.
 ??  ?? ANDERSON ON HIS FIRST SOLO TOUR AT LONDON’S ROYAL ALBERT HALL, DECEMBER 1980.
ANDERSON ON HIS FIRST SOLO TOUR AT LONDON’S ROYAL ALBERT HALL, DECEMBER 1980.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom