Yes Solo Albums Ranked Worst to Best

Yes Solo Albums Ranked Worst to Best

Surveyed as a full, the Yes catalog is the ultimate hodgepodge: symphonic prog, hefty jazz fusion, arena rock, synth-pop, new wave and classical guitar showcases.

In a natural way, the members’ solo function darts close to even much more — if you pay attention to everything chronologically, you could knowledge a wild free jazz recording (like some of Bill Bruford’s improvisations with Dutch keyboardist Michiel Borstlap) up coming to a new-age atmosphere that phone calls to mind a therapeutic massage parlor lobby (Jon Anderson). Given that stylistic variety, it’s tough to rank it all — a issue only compounded by sheer volume. Most of these fellas have been prolific, both of those for the duration of and soon after their time in Yes.

To make our list additional digestible, we proven some unfastened regulations: focusing on officially launched albums exactly where the musician is both on the marquee (say, Chris Squire’s Fish Out of Drinking water) or is an obvious bandleader (like Steve Howe in the Steve Hackett collaboration GTR) striving to avoid projects where the billing is mainly a branding concern and whittling down the pile by eliminating solo instrument operates, soundtracks (sorry, Rick Wakeman) and all information principally comprised of addresses or reworked content.

Then there’s the supreme guideline: We looked at new music from “common” ’70s associates — Anderson, Howe, Wakeman, Bruford, Squire, Alan White, Tony Kaye and Peter Banking institutions — who performed on a number of Certainly LPs.

With the disclaimers out of the way, let us rank every single Sure solo album from worst to very best.

Indeed Solo Albums Rated

From unsuccessful pop experiments to symphonic prog masterpieces.