Yes Time and Time Again Lyrics

"I've Seen All Good People"
Song by Yes
from the anthology The Yes Anthology
Released 1971
Recorded 1970
Genre
  • Progressive stone[1]
  • folk rock[2]
Length
  • 6:56
  • 3:35 (Your Move)
  • 3:21 (All Adept People)
Label Atlantic
Songwriter(s)
  • Jon Anderson
  • Chris Squire
Producer(south)
  • Yes
  • Eddy Offord
"Your Movement"
Your Move cover.jpg
Unmarried past Aye
from the anthology The Aye Anthology
B-side
  • "Clap"
Released July 1971 (U.s.) [3]
Recorded 1970 (1970)
Studio Advision, London
Length 3:00
Label Atlantic
Songwriter(south) Jon Anderson
Yes singles chronology
"Sweet Dreams"
(1970)
"Your Move"
(1971)
"Roundabout"
(1972)

"I've Seen All Good People" is a song performed past the English language progressive rock band Yeah. Written past Yes members Jon Anderson and Chris Squire, it was first included on 1971's The Yep Anthology and has appeared on several later albums. As with many progressive rock songs, the track consists of multiple singled-out movements spliced together to form a cohesive longer work. The starting time movement, titled "Your Motion", was released equally a single. Information technology became a elevation 40 hit in the United States, which helped the group build momentum.[iv] Later, album-oriented stone stations would ofttimes play the entire nearly 7-minute track, including both "Your Move" and the 2nd movement titled "All Adept People"; this version has remained a staple of classic stone stations to today.

The melody uses chess every bit a lyrical metaphor for navigating interpersonal relationships,[v] and contains several allusions to the music of John Lennon. It has received positive reviews from several critics and has been considered 1 of Yeah's all-time-known songs, with AllMusic's Mike DeGagne stating that "the harmonies are resilient from first to finish" and that the rails "still stands equally one of their well-nigh appealing" works.[4] Music critic Robert Christgau has as well singled information technology out for praise.[6]

Lyrics [edit]

The first part of the song, "Your Movement", alludes to the game of chess as a metaphor for male–female person relationships.[v] Examples include the phrases "movement me onto any black square", "brand the white queen run so fast", and "the goal is for united states all to capture only i".

A reference to John Lennon's work is in the lyric "send an instant karma to me", with "Instant Karma!" being a single released by Lennon in 1970. Another reference occurs simply earlier the iii-infinitesimal mark of the song, in the closing moments of "Your Move", where the chorus of Lennon's vocal "Give Peace a Risk" is sung by the backing vocalists under the main melody.[vii] [viii] [9] [x] More than generally, Anderson has stated that the line "'cause it'due south time, information technology'due south time in time with your time" was an attempt to say that he would "do anything that is required of me to reach God" and that he wants the listener to feel "in tune and in fourth dimension with God."[11]

Limerick and legacy [edit]

In the studio recording on The Yes Album, the song opens with Jon Anderson, Chris Squire and Steve Howe singing the sentence "I've seen all expert people turn their heads each day then satisfied I'm on my mode" twice a cappella, in 3-part harmony. This is followed by a solo intro by Steve Howe on a Portuguese 12-string guitar. Howe too sometimes plays the solo on a standard audio-visual guitar. As the 12-cord begins a repeated iv-bar phrase, it is joined by bass pulsate as Anderson resumes singing the lyrics, solo and in three-part harmony. Dual recorders enter on the third verse. Finally, a Hammond organ joins them, playing the same chords as the laúd until the get-go office of the vocal ends on a loudly sustained and unresolved organ chord.

The second part, "All Proficient People", consists of many repetitions of the sentence "I've seen all expert people plow their heads each mean solar day so satisfied I'm on my way" sung to the aforementioned tune as earlier, just over a driving state rock accompaniment, ending in a powerful song harmony and organ phrase which begins on a chord progression of E, D, C, M, and then A. Each repetition of the poesy is one whole step lower than the previous every bit the vocal fades out. Anderson has stated that he wanted to have the song develop quietly but then open upwardly into a big grandiose, church building organ sound.[11]

Village Vox critic Robert Christgau called the song a "slap-up cut", being one in which he thought Yeah' "arty eclecticism comes together."[six]

The vocal has been included on several compilation albums, such as 1981's Archetype Yes and 2004's The Ultimate Yes, since its initial release on The Yes Album in 1971. It has been performed during many of Yes' concert tours, and appears on many of Yep' alive albums. Equally of 2021, the well-nigh recent live anthology to feature the song is The Royal Affair Bout: Live from Las Vegas, which was recorded in July 2019 and released in October 2020.

Personnel [edit]

Ring

  • Jon Anderson – lead vocals, percussion
  • Chris Squire – bass guitar, bankroll vocals, bass pedals[12]
  • Steve Howe – vachalia, electrical guitars, backing vocals
  • Tony Kaye – Hammond organ, piano
  • Beak Bruford – drums, percussion

Invitee musician

  • Colin Goldring – recorders on "Your Move"

References [edit]

  1. ^ "The Best Song on Every Yeah Album". Ultimate Classic Stone. December 19, 2018. Retrieved March 24, 2019.
  2. ^ Smith, Bradley (1997). The Billboard Guide to Progressive Music. Billboard Books. p. 249. ISBN9780823076659. The 7-minute 'I've Seen All Good People' is a Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young-like hippie folk rock canticle led by audio-visual guitar.
  3. ^ Welch, Chris (2003). Shut to the Edge: The Story of Yes (2 ed.). Omnibus Printing. p. 293. ISBN0-7119-9509-5.
  4. ^ a b DeGagne, Mike. "I've Seen All Practiced People: Your Move/All Good People - Yep | Song Info". AllMusic . Retrieved March 24, 2019.
  5. ^ a b Martin, B. (1998). Listening to the Future: The Time of Progressive Rock, 1968-1978. Open up Court Publishing. p. 200. ISBN9780812693683.
  6. ^ a b Christgau, R. "Yeah". robertchristgau.com. Retrieved 2014-08-xvi .
  7. ^ John Anderson, Former Yes Frontman, Pays Tribute to John Lennon in California
  8. ^ Womack, Kenneth (2014). The Beatles Encyclopedia: Everything Fab Four [two volumes]: Everything Fab Four. ABC-CLIO. p. 325. ISBN978-0-313-39172-nine.
  9. ^ Jr., Bill Martin (2015). Music of Yeah: Construction and Vision in Progressive Stone. Open Court Publishing Company. p. lxxx. ISBN978-0-8126-9945-half dozen.
  10. ^ Shea, Stuart; Rodriguez, Robert (2007). Fab Four FAQ: Everything Left to Know Most the Beatles ... and More than!. Hal Leonard. p. 320. ISBN978-1-4234-2138-two.
  11. ^ a b Aye (1996). Yesstories: Aye In Their Ain Words. MacMillan. ISBN9780312144531.
  12. ^ Hurwitz, Matt (January 5, 2018). "Classic Tracks: Yep". Mix Online . Retrieved March 24, 2019.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I%27ve_Seen_All_Good_People

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