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''Fly from Here'' is the twentieth studio album from the English progressive rock band Yes. Yes' first studio album since ''Magnification'' (2001), it is also the only one to feature Canadian singer Benoît David, and only the second album (after 1980's ''Drama'') without former singer Jon Anderson and with keyboardist Geoff Downes. The line-up is David, Downes, bassist Chris Squire, guitarist Steve Howe and drummer Alan White. The album was produced by Trevor Horn, who was the singer on ''Drama'', and who had previously produced ''90125'' (1983) and initially ''Big Generator'' (1987). The album takes its name from its main work, "Fly from Here",〔 a 24-minute composition split up into six songs. The basis of the hexalogy was a demo originally recorded by Downes and Horn of The Buggles before they joined Yes in 1980. After Yes disbanded in 1981, Horn and Downes recorded a second demo, and both recordings became the foundation of the tracks "We Can Fly" and "Sad Night at the Airfield". ''Fly from Here'' was first released on 22 June 2011 in Japan and France, followed by releases on 1 July in the rest of Europe and Australia and on 12 July in the United States. It peaked at number 30 on the UK Albums Chart, and number 36 on the US ''Billboard'' 200. ==Background== ''Fly from Here'' is Yes' first studio album since the release of ''Magnification'' (2001), the longest gap to date between two Yes studio albums. It is also their only studio album with Canadian singer Benoît David on lead vocals who had replaced long-time member Jon Anderson in 2008.〔 Before joining Yes, David performed as the lead vocalist in Close to the Edge, a Canadian Yes tribute band, for more than 10 years. He remained the lead singer of the Canadian band Mystery, which he joined in 1999 until he left in 2013. To produce the album, Yes recruited Trevor Horn (who'd produced their 1983 comeback album ''90125'' and had also been the band's singer during the short-lived 1980 phase which included the ''Drama'' album). Horn's involvement with the new album also involved a major contribution to the songwriting, which drew heavily on two songs which he'd written back in 1980 with his Buggles partner Geoff Downes (who, like Horn, had also been a member of the 1980 Yes lineup). Back in 1980, Horn and Downes had made their initial approach to the band by pitching them a demo titled "We Can Fly from Here" and the band had gone as far as to rehearse the song (with former member Bill Bruford deputising for an injured Alan White on drums).〔Welch 2003, p. 190, 196〕 A version of "We Can Fly from Here" was later recorded as a studio demo and was performed in concert on the 1980 Yes tour, but never made it to album. (A live performance appears on the 2005 compilation live album ''The Word is Live'').〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The Word is Live – Yes )〕 After Yes disbanded in 1981, Horn and Downes resumed work as The Buggles and recorded another demo of "We Can Fly from Here", this time as a two-part composition. It was a candidate for inclusion on the second Buggles album, ''Adventures in Modern Recording'' (1981) and was eventually featured as a bonus track on the album's 2010 reissue.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Adventures in Modern Recording – The Buggles )〕 These two demos and a third (which has not been released) would become the basis of the 2010 Yes tracks "We Can Fly", "Sad Night at the Airfield", and "Madman at the Screens".〔''Classic Rock Presents... Prog'', July 2011〕 A further Buggles demo, "Riding a Tide" (first released on the 2010 reissue of ''Adventures in Modern Recording'', would be rewritten for Yes in 2010 as "Life on a Film Set". Further contributions to the "Fly From Here" suite were made by Chris Squire and Steve Howe (the latter contributing a new two-minute instrumental section called "Bumpy Ride"). Howe also contributed one new song ("Hour of Need") and another instrumental ("Solitaire"), while the whole band co-wrote a new song "Into the Storm" with Horn. "The Man You Always Wanted Me to Be" was co-written by Squire with two separate songwriter collaborators from outside the band: Gerard Johnson (who had recently worked with Squire in a reunion lineup of The Syn) and Simon Sessler. The first recording sessions for ''Fly from Here'' took place between 3 October and 12 November 2010 at SARM West Coast Studios in Los Angeles, California, before resuming in the first week of January 2011. Horn produced the album using the digital audio workstation software Pro Tools. Although the work commenced with Oliver Wakeman in place as the band's keyboard player (and contributing to the writing),〔〔 he was replaced during the sessions by Geoff Downes〔 The replacement came about at Horn's suggestion and with the band's agreement, reasoning that as a co-originator of the "Fly From Here" suite and "Life on a Film Set", he would have a better feel for the material than Wakeman would. Downes ended up handling "most of the keyboards" on the record. The album was mixed in April 2011 at SARM West Studios in London, with additional vocals being added.〔 Despite being supplanted by Downes in the studio, Wakeman remained in the band for the band's early 2011 tour. In July 2011, when Yes began the promotional tour for ''Fly From Here'', Downes also replaced Wakeman as live keyboard player. According to Squire, "Fly from Here" is the band's 11th epic-length piece, their first in 15 years, clocking in at nearly 24 minutes. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Fly from Here」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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