Prog

STEVE HOWE

Motif Volume 2 HOWESOUND

- JAMES MCNAIR

THIS IS HOWE TIGHTROPE-WALKING WITHOUT A NET.

The Yes man brings solo guitar tunes old and new.

It takes inspiratio­n and real compositio­nal flair to make a solo guitar piece fly, but Steve Howe has done it time and time again. From The Yes Album’s live gem Clap to Surface Tension from his 1979 solo record, The Steve Howe Album and beyond, the versatile musician with the sizeable instrument collection frequently come up trumps. Howe revisits both the aforementi­oned tunes – plus such similarly cherished pieces as Mood For A Day and All’s A Chord – on the home-recorded Motif Volume 2. This collection comes

15 years after the conceptual­ly similar Motif Volume 1, and once again Howe spreads his bases between deft, Chet Atkins/Merle Travis-style fingerpick­ing, classical, jazz, bluegrass, folk and more.

Though no acoustic version of Frankie Goes To Hollywood’s Welcome To The Pleasuredo­me is forthcomin­g (Howe played session Dobro on the 1984 original at the request of producer/former Yes bandmate Trevor Horn), there’s neverthele­ss loads to enjoy. We get late 50s-style slap-back echo-treated electric guitar nuggets such as Tailpiece and Cactus Boogie (the original recording of the latter had a more fleshed-out arrangemen­t when it appeared on

The Steve Howe Album). We also get warming Spanish guitar pieces such as Oceans Cadenza and The Little Galliard, which is named after a kind of lively triple-time that originated centuries ago.

It’s testament to the strength of Howe’s writing that, even without the lead vocal and complex full-band arrangemen­t which graced the original version of All’s A Chord, the piece still stands up. Likewise on Beginnings, the title track of Howe’s 1975 solo debut, here divested of Patrick Moraz’s baroque arrangemen­t for strings, harpsichor­d and woodwind. On Motif Volume 2 we see the bare bones of Howe’s writing, and those bones are strong.

Beautifull­y recorded, and modest in its use of guitar effects processing, this is Howe tightrope-walking without a net. Listening to it feels a bit like having him play a solo up close and personal, and who (other than certain former members of Yes, perhaps!) wouldn’t want that? It’s also an LP likely to make those of a certain age pine for a time when a solo guitar interlude was almost contractua­l for any prog or rock axe hero worth their Saxa.

As Motif Volume 2 reminds us, Steve Howe’s Mood For

A Day and Clap remain a vital part of a select and ingenious canon that includes Steve Hackett’s Horizons, Jimmy Page’s Bron-Y-Aur, and Alex Lifeson’s classical intro to A Farewell To Kings. Long may he strum.

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