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Thread: Horn & Downes allude to 3rd 'Buggles' album & tour!

  1. #1

    Horn & Downes allude to 3rd 'Buggles' album & tour!

    Horn & Downes revealed they recorded some demos earlier this year & their management says there will be Buggles re-issues & a tour in 2017. Horn also has other projects completed & ready for release incl. a musical 'A Day in the Life of a Recording Studio' co-penned with Lol Crème.

    He also has this to say about YES, ''I liked lots of other prog, like Caravan and Genesis, although never as much as YES because the rhythm section was never as interesting. I'd never heard anything like them before & I've not heard anything like them since''.

    Source is the latest issue of Prog Magazine!

  2. #2
    Of additional interest to prog fans is the mooted involvement of Steve Howe, which could even extent to live activity.
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  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by calyx View Post
    Of additional interest to prog fans is the mooted involvement of Steve Howe, which could even extent to live activity.
    Yes, here's the quote, 'It is believed that members of YES are to be involved, ''Especially certain guitar players'', Horn told Prog, possibly hinting at his long-term associate Steve Howe.

  4. #4
    Member 2steves's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Rufus View Post
    Horn & Downes revealed they recorded some demos earlier this year & their management says there will be Buggles re-issues & a tour in 2017. Horn also has other projects completed & ready for release incl. a musical 'A Day in the Life of a Recording Studio' co-penned with Lol Crème.

    He also has this to say about YES, ''I liked lots of other prog, like Caravan and Genesis, although never as much as YES because the rhythm section was never as interesting. I'd never heard anything like them before & I've not heard anything like them since''.

    Source is the latest issue of Prog Magazine!
    Rhythm section and cool groove is what got me into Yes too.

  5. #5
    NEARfest Officer Emeritus Nearfest2's Avatar
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    This could be pretty cool!

    How is Horn's Producers album?
    Chad

  6. #6
    The first Buggles album is a favorite of mine, which I knew even before I had heard of Yes (as a teenager in the late 80s/early 90s). Downes' keyboard work is wonderful, and his lesser involvement on the second album is partially why it's just not nearly as good. The electronic drums don't help, either. I'll be interested to see what they can conjure up on this new album. Given that I think "Fly From Here" is very solid, I'm optimistic.
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  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by Nearfest2 View Post
    This could be pretty cool!

    How is Horn's Producers album?
    I love it, my interest has really been piqued of the impending musical he's written with Lol Crème!

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Nearfest2 View Post
    How is Horn's Producers album?
    A very good pop album, full of the Horn sound you'd expect. It's a little bit like a grown-up Buggles album. Three Horn-penned tracks about his wife's accident (Your Life"/"Every Single Night in Jamaica"/"Garden of Flowers") are heart-rendingly beautiful. There's also a nice opener from Horn in "Freeway" that chugs along, Soan/Creme's "Barking Up the Right Tree" is a lovely 10cc-esque love song, and bonus track "Seven" is the proggiest and most Buggles like piece. I think some of the Braide-penned numbers (e.g. "Man on the Moon", "Stay Elaine") are more so-so though.

    Henry
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  9. #9
    Studmuffin Scott Bails's Avatar
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    I pretty much agree with Henry's review. But I often listen to the Producers' album with the two Downes/Braide Association albums together, as they all have a very similar sound, and I think Braide's work on DBA is much better than his contributions to the Producers.
    Music isn't about chops, or even about talent - it's about sound and the way that sound communicates to people. Mike Keneally

  10. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by calyx View Post
    Of additional interest to prog fans is the mooted involvement of Steve Howe, which could even extent to live activity.
    I couldn't quite parse what the Prog article was saying. I think it's saying Howe will be in the live band but that it doesn't say anything about him being involved in studio work, although the latter must be fairly likely if the former. It hints at maybe other Yes members being involved too.

    The article also has that studio work so far is re-interpretations of Adventures in Modern Recording-period numbers (e.g. "Vermillion Sands" from the album and "Dion", a demo on the 2010 re-release of the album), but Downes earlier in the year implied new songs as well...? I listened to Adventures yesterday and decided that all the Horn/Downes songs are good, but all the material without Downes is weak!

    Other quotes at http://www.bondegezou.co.uk/wnalum.htm#buggles

    Henry
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  11. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by ProgArtist View Post
    Downes' keyboard work is wonderful, and his lesser involvement on the second album is partially why it's just not nearly as good.
    Indeed.

    Quote Originally Posted by Scott Bails View Post
    I pretty much agree with Henry's review. But I often listen to the Producers' album with the two Downes/Braide Association albums together, as they all have a very similar sound, and I think Braide's work on DBA is much better than his contributions to the Producers.
    Yes, also agreed. DBA were sort of a spin-off from Producers after all!

    Henry
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  12. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by bondegezou View Post
    The article also has that studio work so far is re-interpretations of Adventures in Modern Recording-period numbers (e.g. "Vermillion Sands" from the album
    Which, it has to be noted, was initially written for the follow-up to "Drama", which it seems was an option until some time after the 1980 tour.
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  13. #13
    Studmuffin Scott Bails's Avatar
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    I actually prefer AiMR to the debut.
    Music isn't about chops, or even about talent - it's about sound and the way that sound communicates to people. Mike Keneally

  14. #14
    Quote Originally Posted by Nearfest2 View Post
    This could be pretty cool!

    How is Horn's Producers album?
    I absolutely love Garden of Flowers. Brilliantly composed, brilliant vocals and beautiful lyrics. Not too impressed by the rest of that album, though.

  15. #15
    Member Paulrus's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by bondegezou View Post
    I couldn't quite parse what the Prog article was saying. I think it's saying Howe will be in the live band but that it doesn't say anything about him being involved in studio work, although the latter must be fairly likely if the former. It hints at maybe other Yes members being involved too.

    The article also has that studio work so far is re-interpretations of Adventures in Modern Recording-period numbers (e.g. "Vermillion Sands" from the album and "Dion", a demo on the 2010 re-release of the album), but Downes earlier in the year implied new songs as well...? I listened to Adventures yesterday and decided that all the Horn/Downes songs are good, but all the material without Downes is weak!

    Other quotes at http://www.bondegezou.co.uk/wnalum.htm#buggles

    Henry
    Yeah, I couldn't really understand what the hell the article was saying either.

    As for Adventures in Modern Recording I agree that it's very spotty. Definitely one for Yes freak/completists only (/raises hand). The reissue with all the bonus tracks (including "Fly From Here") is a step up from the original, but for my money the debut kicks its butt.
    I'm holding out for the Wilson-mixed 5.1 super-duper walletbuster special anniversary extra adjectives edition.

  16. #16
    Quote Originally Posted by Scott Bails View Post
    I actually prefer AiMR to the debut.
    I was just going to write the same thing.

    I bought AiMR because I liked the youtube version of Fly From Here I and II a year before the then new Yes album and also got the debut album. I put away the debut without listening to it and spent time with AiMR. I prefer the original 10 minute vesrion of FFH I and II to the 23 minute suite apart from liking one added part -- too bad that wasn't a 16 minute song instead of a 23 minute one. There is also a starkness I like on the original that I like better than the album version Chris Squire called turning a pop song into something with more substance. The pop song works better.

    Anyway, at first all I liked was FFH I and II and I am a Camera. I slowly got into one song then another and lo and behold... I liked the entire disk. After a while I went to the debut album and aside from VKtRS I couldn't get into it. I'll try again, but I've now bought AiMR twice due to an unfortunate scratch. (See that Henry? I bought the CD twice! )

    Edit: I'm talking about the 18 track version released in 2010. I like every weird track on that in addition to the outstanding FFH I and II.
    Last edited by yamishogun; 08-26-2016 at 09:11 PM.

  17. #17
    Member rickawakeman's Avatar
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    I had not previously been aware of Trevor Horn's wife's tragic accident and subsequent death. As our people say, "may her memory be a blessing."

  18. #18
    Quote Originally Posted by yamishogun View Post
    Edit: I'm talking about the 18 track version released in 2010. I like every weird track on that in addition to the outstanding FFH I and II.
    The bonus tracks tend to be stuff written with Downes, which is why they're good and the 2010 version better than the original album. The filler, I'd argue, are the tracks Horn did with Darlow.

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  19. #19
    Quote Originally Posted by bondegezou View Post
    The bonus tracks tend to be stuff written with Downes, which is why they're good and the 2010 version better than the original album. The filler, I'd argue, are the tracks Horn did with Darlow.

    Henry
    Wiki doesn't list who did the bonus tracks. Which of those was with Darlow?

  20. #20
    Quote Originally Posted by yamishogun View Post
    Wiki doesn't list who did the bonus tracks. Which of those was with Darlow?
    Don't check Wikipedia! Go straight to the Yescography: http://www.relayer35.com/Yescography/adventur.htm

    Henry
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  21. #21
    Quote Originally Posted by bondegezou View Post
    Don't check Wikipedia! Go straight to the Yescography: http://www.relayer35.com/Yescography/adventur.htm

    Henry
    Well, wiki is the first stop... Thanks for the link.

  22. #22
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    I always thought it was interesting that "Into the Lens" was credited to Downes/Horn/Howe/Squire/White while "I Am a Camera" was credited only to Horn/Downes. They are, of course, essentially the same song, and while Horn/Downes presumably brought it to the Drama sessions, it was released on Drama before it was released on the second Buggles album. It seems Howe/Squire/White could have claimed a writing credit for the version that the Buggles released.

  23. #23
    ^ This takes us back to the recent discussion on another thread about when Yes decided to just credit everything to the group and when they didn't.

    Henry
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  24. #24
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    I understand why Yes decided to credit "Into the Lens" to the group. It just seems odd that, on a subsequent release, Howe/Squire/White were "un-credited."

  25. #25
    Quote Originally Posted by malgeo View Post
    I understand why Yes decided to credit "Into the Lens" to the group. It just seems odd that, on a subsequent release, Howe/Squire/White were "un-credited."
    It was their song. I imagine the Adventures version is close to (and possibly just is) their original, pre-Yes recording. On Drama, the credits were subsumed into the greater whole. Back on their own territory, they no longer had to stick to that, I guess.

    Henry
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