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Tales from Topographic Oceans is the sixth studio album by English progressive rock band Yes, released in the UK on 7 December 1973 [1] and in the US on 9 January 1974 [2] [3] by Atlantic Records. It is their first studio album to feature drummer Alan White , who had replaced Bill Bruford the previous year.
Members of Yes have collaborated in a number of other albums and singles. The list includes releases with at least three (current or former) Yes members, and excludes releases by the Yes offshoots Yes Featuring Jon Anderson, Trevor Rabin, Rick Wakeman and Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe.
"Ocean Song" (Anderson) from Jon Anderson's 1976 solo album Olias of Sunhillow (Recording preceded "Apocalypse" on 26 June 1976) "Wonderous Stories" (Anderson) (Played on 6 June 1976) "Close to the Edge" (Anderson, Howe) (Replaced "Ritual" on 23 July and 28 July 1976) "In the Midnight Hour" (Wilson Pickett, Steve Cropper) (Played on 3 August 1976)
Relayer is the seventh studio album by the English progressive rock band Yes, released in November 1974 by Atlantic Records.After keyboardist Rick Wakeman left the group in May 1974 over disagreements with the band's direction following their double concept album Tales from Topographic Oceans (1973), Yes entered rehearsals as a four-piece in Buckinghamshire.
Yessongs is the first live album by the English progressive rock band Yes, released as a triple album in May 1973 on Atlantic Records.After completing their Close to the Edge Tour in April 1973, the band selected live recordings between February and December 1972 on their tours supporting Fragile (1971) and Close to the Edge (1972) for a live album release.
In October 2023, in honor of the special’s 50th anniversary, Lee Mendelson Film Productions (LMFP) released the special’s full soundtrack on vinyl and CD, including the thirteen song cues and ...
Tales from Topographic Oceans was the band's sixth studio album, released on 7 December 1973. [13] Wakeman left the band after the 1973–1974 tour; his solo album Journey to the Centre of the Earth topped the UK charts in May 1974. [14]
In 2018, she even dropped a song named after Pete Davidson, her then-fiancé. And on a blunter note, she clapped back at public scrutiny with “Shut Up,” the opening track of her album Positions .