This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Close to the Edge" song – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
"Close to the Edge" | |
---|---|
UK album side one label | |
Song by Yes | |
from the album Close to the Edge | |
Released | 8 September 1972 |
Genre | Progressive rock |
Length | 18:43 |
Label | Atlantic |
Songwriter(s) | |
Producer(s) |
|
Close to the Edge track listing | |
3 tracks
|
"Close to the Edge" is a song by the English progressive rock band Yes, featured on their fifth studio album Close to the Edge (1972). The song is over 18 minutes in length and takes up the entire first side of the album. It consists of four movements.
Movements
This section possibly contains original research. Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations. Statements consisting only of original research should be removed. (September 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Part | Start Time | Length |
---|---|---|
The Solid Time of Change | 0:00 | 6:04 |
Total Mass Retain | 6:04 | 2:23 |
I Get Up, I Get Down | 8:27 | 5:45 |
Seasons of Man | 14:12 | 4:31 |
I. The Solid Time of Change
The song fades in with the sounds of running water, wind chimes, and birds chirping; a layering of sounds derived primarily from "environmental tapes" collected by lead vocalist Jon Anderson. These nature sounds move through a crescendo and into a somewhat menacing guitar melody, which is composed of a cacophonous musical passage that features a two-note guitar line which rapidly passes down and then up four octaves, in
8 time. The bass ascends through a line based on the notes of the second mode of the D harmonic minor scale (also called Locrian natural 6), adding an exotic flavor to the already cacophonic texture. The guitar melody is punctuated by a series of sudden band-harmonized vocables. Again, a crescendo signals a change, this time into a more traditional and less cacophonous melody. Like a classical composition, this melodic passage is the establishment of a theme that will go through many variations throughout the piece.
The lyrics are introduced at 4:00, along with a chorus that repeats throughout the song. Like the previously established melody, this chorus will be developed in many different ways, which will include changes to the lyrical content, as well as changes in time and key signatures, tempo, and harmony:
Down at the edge, round by the corner ...
Close to the edge, down by a river
II. Total Mass Retain
"Total Mass Retain" redirects here. For the concept in physics, see Conservation of mass.The song continues with generally the same melody and style, though the bass part changes significantly. The chorus here changes to a faster pace, and then slows down again at the end of the section. The final words "I get up, I get down" introduce the next segment.
This section, along with a sped-up version of the introduction of birds chirping at the beginning and a small part of the beginning of "I Get Up I Get Down" at the end, was remixed as a 3:21 single prior to the release of the album. It was included as a bonus track on the remastered version of "Close to the Edge".
This is the shortest of the four sections of "Close to the Edge".
III. I Get Up I Get Down
The song significantly slows its tempo and lowers its volume. This segment consists of two sets of vocals: the main vocals, sung by Anderson which contain most of the lyrics, and the backing vocals, sung by Chris Squire and Steve Howe. At about 12 minutes into the song, Rick Wakeman, recorded on the pipe organ of London's St Giles-without-Cripplegate church, begins the main theme of this segment, which changes from a major to a minor key as the music progresses. Jon Anderson explained:
We have the 'I get up, I get down' part before it goes into a beautiful ocean of energy. You've gone through nearly 10 minutes of music that's very well put-together, but then you want to let go of it. You relax a little bit.
The song came about because Steve was playing these chords one day, and I started singing, 'Two million people barely satisfy.' It's about the incredible imbalance of the human experience on the planet.
The vocals came together nicely. I'm a big fan of the Beach Boys and the Association – such great voices. Steve and I were working on this, and at one point he said, 'I have this other song ...' And I said, 'Well, start singing it.' And he went , 'In her white lace, you could clearly see the lady sadly looking / saying that she'd take the blame for the crucifixion of her own domain ...'
When I heard that, I said, 'Wait. That's going to be perfect! You start singing that with Chris, and then I'll sing my part.' We have an answer-back thing.
IV. Seasons of Man
The original, fast-paced theme picks up followed by musical and lyrical structure which sounds similar to "The Solid Time of Change", except this time with exclusively major chords. Rick Wakeman's organ parts are particularly complex and an overall polytonal effect is created with the guitar part being in a different key than the keyboard. The chorus is sung one last time before the vocals build up to the climax of the song in which all three themes from the prior movements ("A seasoned witch ...", "close to the edge, down by the river", "Seasons will pass you by, I get up I get down") are presented. Afterwards, the final lyrics "I get up, I get down" are repeated as the song fades away into the "sounds of nature" in which it began.
Music
In his 2021 memoir, All My Yesterdays, guitarist and co-writer Steve Howe writes that the intro was an attempt to emulate the sound of jazz guitarist John McLaughlin's Mahavishnu Orchestra, a favorite of the band's. He and Wakeman created the background drone in the "I Get Up I Get Down". Wakeman's organ part was based on a bossa nova guitar part Howe had written for another song, and Wakeman added some Minimoog lines. Another part was from a song Howe had written when part of Bodast several years earlier.
Howe says that Anderson, to his regret, found he was unable when performing it live to consistently sing the closing verse and chorus at the note he had hit in the studio, so the band often performed that part in E flat instead of F. "This, to my ear, is rather unsatisfactory", he complained. He noted that even Jon Davison, who has sung lead vocals for Yes since 2012, prefers to sing it lower even though in Howe's opinion he has the range to reach that note.
Lyrics
Jon AndersonThe lyrical content became a kind of dream sequence in a way. The end verse is a dream that I had a long time ago about passing on from this world to another world, yet feeling so fantastic about it that death never frightened me ever since.
In a 1996 interview, Anderson mentions that the song—indeed, the whole album—is inspired by the Hindu/Buddhist mysticism of Hermann Hesse's 1922 book Siddhartha. " did one album called Close to the Edge. was based on the Siddhartha ... You always come back down to the river. know, all the rivers come to the same ocean. That was the basic idea. And so we made a really beautiful album."
Anderson was concerned about how the words sounded, sometimes more than what they meant, creating, thus, lyrics that often don't seem to mean anything, such as "The time between the notes relates the colour to the scenes".
Cover versions
Japanese acid rock conglomerate Ruinzhatova included the song on their 2003 album Close to the RH. Running at a length of 17:54, it is a faithful note for note version, though a second guitarist replaces the main Wakeman keyboard parts and there is "a somewhat silly-sounding vocal interpretation" throughout.
A radically altered interpretation by British band Nick Awde & Desert Hearts appears on their 2010 EP Close to the Edge B/W Rocket Man/Meryl Streep, which features no drums or guitar, and substitutes the Hammond solo opening the "Seasons of Man" section with baritone saxophone by Wizzard horn player Nick Pentelow.
Personnel
- Jon Anderson – lead vocals
- Steve Howe – electric guitars, electric sitar, backing vocals
- Chris Squire – bass guitar, backing vocals
- Rick Wakeman – Hammond organ, Minimoog, Mellotron, grand piano, RMI 368 Electra-Piano and Harpsichord, pipe organ
- Bill Bruford – drums, percussion
References
- Murphy, Sean (22 May 2011). "The 25 Best Progressive Rock Songs of All Time". PopMatters. Retrieved 31 July 2016.
- Kitts, Jeff; Tolinski, Brad (2002). Guitar World Presents the 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time!: From the Pages of Guitar World Magazine. Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 76. ISBN 9780634046193.
- "Revisiting Yes's Masterpiece Album, Close to the Edge". 18 November 2016. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
- ^ Howe, Steve (2021). All My Yesterdays. Omnibus Press. pp. 92–93. ISBN 9781785581793.
- John Rudolph Covach, Graeme MacDonald Boone, Understanding rock: essays in musical analysis, p. 19, 1998, ISBN 0-19-510005-0.
- "[Untitled]". Circus. February 1973. Retrieved 20 February 2024 – via Forgotten Yesterdays.
- Edward Macan, Rocking the classics, p. 96, Oxford University Press, US, 1997, ISBN 0-19-509888-9
- "Ground and Sky review - Ruinzhatova - Close to the RH". Archived from the original on 3 January 2011. Retrieved 18 January 2011.
- Planet Mellotron Album Reviews: A11
Sources
- Covach, John Rudolph; Boone, Graeme MacDonald (1997). Understanding Rock: Essays in Musical Analysis. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-510005-0.
External links
- Religious interpretation Archived 22 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- Notes From the Edge fanzine, issue #0159.