Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Yes Snubbed by Rock and Roll Hall of Fame


The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is to music what:

a) Keystone Light is to beer.

 b) Chef Boyardee is to fine cuisine.

c) Bernie Madoff is to business ethics

d) all of the above

So, Yes has been snubbed once again by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.  Most aficionados of progressive music could care less about the institution.  However, being inducted would have been a career boost for tYes and a possible catalyst for the return of Jon Anderson.

Yes’ exclusion from the Hall of Fame, however, makes a mockery of the supposedly objective criteria the judges utilize before casting their votes.  Presumably, longevity, sales, instrumental, excellence, musical merit, and influence are supposed to count.  Yes has been around as viable touring and recording group for forty-six years.  They’ve had numerous Billboard hits such as: Roundabout, All Good People/Your Move, Wondrous Stories, The Rhythm of Love, and a #1 hit with Owner of a Lonely Heart.  The album Close to the Edge is routinely described as a musical masterpiece and the pinnacle achievement of the progressive rock movement.  Yes’s roster of musicians – most notably Rick Wakeman, Steve Howe, Bill Bruford, and Chris Squire – have rightly drawn acclaim as among the finest rock musicians of our time.  Finally, can anyone seriously argue that Yes hasn’t had a significant influence on a generation of musicians and musical artists?

Centuries from now, I doubt many people will be listening much to the “music” of inductees like Kiss or the pleasant but bland pop churned out by Hall & Oates.  Close to the Edge, The Gates of Delirium, Awaken, and Tales from Topographic Oceans, on the other hand, are musical works that seems both ahead of their time and timeless.  That’s just the kind of thing that the judges at the Rock and Roll of Fame just don’t seem to get.  But that’s not surprising.  After all, mediocrity never recognizes anything higher than itself.

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