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Barnes and Noble

Going for the One

Current price: $9.99
Going for the One
Going for the One

Barnes and Noble

Going for the One

Current price: $9.99

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After two albums of increasingly diminishing returns,
Yes
bounced back from the brink with
Going for the One
, an album that might not, for the most part, have deviated too far from the band's traditional pastures but which, if you paid attention only to its attendant singles, at least suggested that
was over the worst. Both the almost-folky
"Wondrous Stories"
and the electric passion of the title track took steps that earlier incarnations of the band would never have braved -- stark simplicity on the one hand, unadulterated electricity on the other. And, if one skips the other five LP tracks that open the 2003 remaster of this album, it is clear that
was simply sparking with ideas and enthusiasm once again. The first three bonus tracks, the delicate
"Montreux's Theme"
and
"Vevey (Revisited)"
and a snorting bass blast through
"Amazing Grace,"
have all appeared aboard past
compilations, but how much more fun would it have been had they inserted all three into the original album, in the same way as sundry snippets were slipped into
Fragile
? Unanimously blessed with both humor and humility, they portray
as a band once again, as opposed to five virtuosos with too much time on their hands. Listeners then move into a series of studio rehearsals, including a surely early instrumental drive through
"Going for the One,"
effected with little technical expertise but positively gallons of energy. Similarly sourced versions of
"Parallels"
"Turn of the Century"
are less remarkable, but they, too, remain enjoyable snapshots of the band simply kicking back and enjoying itself. The highlight, however, has to be the CD closer, an early version of the album's own final track,
"Awaken,"
cut while it was still known as
"Eastern Number."
Bereft of the grandiose keyboard flourishes that establish the familiar version as a "traditional"
epic,
"Eastern Number"
has a delicate naivete that is more reminiscent of the group's earliest flowering than anything else. With the best
album in five years appended by the best bonus tracks in the series so far, it seems churlish to complain about any aspect of the reissue. However, it's worth pointing out that the slipcased digipack format that housed the last four of the group's earlier albums, and which brought a genuine sense of occasion to each of them, has been abandoned for a return to the unadorned jewel case employed for the first three reissues. It's a shame --
sounds so great, it's a shame it doesn't look good as well. ~ Dave Thompson

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