Returning from the stormy waters of their uncompromising double album, Tales From Topographic Oceans, Yes, Britain’s leading prog-rock pioneers, released their seventh studio album, Relayer, in late 1974. As perplexing as it was complex, the album signalled the group’s determination to maintain their creative momentum following the departure of keyboardist Rick Wakeman.
With the arrival of new member Patrick Moraz, Relayer’s three tracks – each one a crusading masterclass in musical sophistication – boldly showcased Yes’ zealous fusion of spiritual lyricism, compositional intricacy and virtuosic ostentation, successfully mapping out a new sonic battlefield for the taking.
Here is the story behind the making of Relayer, and how Yes asserted themselves as the reigning kings of progressive rock.
Listen to ‘Relayer’ here.
The backstory: “The confidence of the band really comes from the union of the five people”
When keyboardist Rick Wakeman first told his Yes bandmates that he wanted to leave the group, they had no idea just how hard it would be to replace him. There were no shortage of possible candidates – Eddie Jobson, Jean Roussel, Mike Smith and Derek “Blue” Weaver among them – but, one by one, each of them said no. Allegedly, guitarist Steve Howe even asked Keith Emerson of Emerson, Lake And Palmer to jump ship and join Yes, but he, too, declined.
For a short while, the Greek keyboardist Vangelis, formerly of Aphrodite’s Child, seemed to be in the frame. He even attended a few weeks of rehearsals with the group, but it quickly became apparent that his maverick tendencies didn’t mesh well with Yes’ style. “Musically it would have been fantastic with Vangelis – he had a fantastically strong direction,” Howe later told Prog magazine, before admitting that Vangelis’ love of improvisation went beyond even what Yes were comfortable with.
- Yes Line-ups: A Complete Guide To Every Band Member And Every Era
- Best Yes Songs: 20 Prog-Rock Classics You Can’t Refuse
- Roundabout: How A Classic Yes Song Took Over TikTok
Eventually, Yes finally found their man in Patrick Moraz, the Swiss keyboardist for prog-rock group Refugee. “I was always fascinated by their music and I thought they were brilliant,” Moraz later told music journalist Chris Welch. “They had already been preparing material for the Relayer album. When I heard them play Sound Chaser I was blown away. It was unbelievable.”
With Moraz agreeing to join, the new Yes line-up was now complete, and the group began to pick up where they left off. “I think the confidence of the band really comes from the union of the five people,” Howe later said, “and once we had Patrick there, we were up and running.”
The songs: “The theme of war, that was the driving force”
Settling in to bassist Chris Squire’s home studio in Surrey during the summer months of 1974, Yes began working on Relayer with their long-standing producer Eddie Offord. As they wrapped their heads around Offord’s mobile recording equipment, the band wasted no time putting newcomer Moraz through his paces. “I was totally overwhelmed, because they played so fast and so precisely and so well,” the keyboardist later admitted.
The Gates Of Delirium, the 22-minute suite that takes up the entire first half of the album, was reportedly inspired by Leo Tolstoy’s War And Peace, prompting frontman Jon Anderson to write a soft, lilting piano ballad (titled Soon) that imagined the soul-searching aftermath of a bloody battle. Essentially working backwards from this moment of peace to envisage the violence that led up to it, Anderson and his bandmates took an epic journey into a maelstrom of sonic discord. As Howe’s guitar spars with Alan White’s drums, Moraz evocatively cavorts through the wreckage with his Minimoog.