Tales
From Topographic Oceans
Best
song: The Revealing Science of God (Dance of the Dawn)
Worst
song: The Ancient (Giants Under the Sun)
Overall
grade: 5
It
seems slightly twisted to write this on the same day as a Ramones review. I
feel like a traitor, like I’m betraying both bands equally by listening to and
enjoying the other one. But don’t listen to what people tell you about this
album – more than anything else, it’s an incredibly important protopunk record.
Sure, Iggy Pop was loud and Status Quo only knew three chords but it was this
album, more than any other, that really inspired the rage that punk musicians
felt, that really convinced them that speaking out against the musical climate
of the time was the only way to go.
But
despite it causing a whole musical movement three or four years after its
release, this album got quite a lot of hate from critics for quite a long time.
Its reputation seems to be improving somewhat throughout recent years, and I’ve
read quite a few positive reviews of it since George Starostin trashed it on
his old site. I guess I’ll be positive too – qualified positive. This could be
a single album and it might be one of my favourite Yes albums, and that could
either be these four songs each cut down to around twelve minutes, or it could
be just two of these songs (first and last, please) with a little more effort
put into each of them.
That
second option is because I think that even if these songs were perfect, this
album would still be too much. I have Soft Machine’s ‘Third’, another album
made up of four sidelongs, and it’s freaking hard work to listen to, as much as
I like it – and I say that as a lover of these extended compositions. But
overall I’d choose all four songs shortened, just so Jon Anderson can still
claim to be the only person to write an album based on ‘Autobiography of a Yogi’,
which is of course why he started this project in the first place.
So,
four songs to talk about, and how much I like each one directly correlates with
their interest to filler ratio, so if they WERE cut down (if I say it enough,
Jon might take the hint) it’s perfectly possible that ‘Ritual (Nous Sommes Du
Soleil)’ could be my favourite, because parts of that song are, in a word,
sublime. It’s the closest thing on the record to a traditional song and it
showcases Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman performing some of their best work.
However, it’s also the most drum-heavy track, and we’re had a lineup change in
the last year – Alan White is now behind the kit, and he’s very good, but he’s
not Bruford-good. So this is the only point where Bill’s missed. (Side note: I
now have his autobiography! Should I do a book review?)
I’ll
go backwards, then. This is preceded by The Ancient (Do I Have To Write These
Subtitles Every Time) which is the part that really drags. Half the band barely
make an appearance and so Steve Howe is left to hold up the fort on his own
which he does with some boring electric guitar and some awesome classical
guitar, and the song, especially the first half, is a lot more noisy and
experimental than you’d expect from Yes, and the style isn’t something they do
well. It’s a fair effort, though, and makes more sense if you’re following the
lyrics and/or concept. Interestingly, if my sources are right, Howe actually
contributed to these lyrics, making it not quite such an Anderson-dominated
affair as most think.
Further
back still, ‘The Remembering’ is laid back even in its interesting sections,
and in its dull parts I think that Jon Anderson should have composed ambient
music. I don’t really think that, it would have been a huge waste of his
talents, but he certainly COULD have done. Chris Squire plays excellently on
this song though; think ‘The Fish’ but bigger. If each band member really made
their mark on one section here, this is his, and if you’ve ever thought the
bass can’t be a lead instrument, here’s proof that it can. Oh, I also think
this song inspired the tranquil blue of the cover art: one of Roger Dean’s best
works, it was my desktop background for a while.
Lastly,
to begin with, ‘The Revealing Science of God’. A friend of mine once said
something like ‘When a song becomes longer than about eight minutes, it’s no
longer a regular song, it’s a symphony’. I’m not trying to be pretentious, but
I think that’s true here. This is great, great stuff the most fully formed
piece, the one with enough musical ideas to justify 22 minutes, that completes
the triumvirate of Yes sidelongs with ‘Close To The Edge’ and ‘Gates of
Delirium’. It defies the whole idea of a structure and seems to have beginnings
and endings in unexpected places. It’d be brilliant to see this one live.
Each
of these are worthwhile pieces to varying degrees, and you shouldn’t just
dismiss this album. At the same time, you might not want to listen to it all at
once. You could split it up and do a piece when you wake up, one in your lunch
break, one after you finish school/work for the day and one before you go to
bed… come to think of it, that actually sounds rather nice, doesn’t it? I might
do that next time instead of what I usually do, which is listen to it while I
perform mindless tasks like putting all my CDs onto iTunes.
Don’t
believe the controversy: say Yes to this album.
That
was by far and away the worst line I have ever written.
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