Going for the One is the eighth studio album by British progressive rock band Yes. It was released in 1977 after an extended break for solo activity, and is especially notable for marking the return of keyboardist Rick Wakeman, who had departed in 1974 in the aftermath of the Tales from Topographic Oceans tour. His re-entry was facilitated by the departure of Patrick Moraz, after having only played on Relayer, although Moraz is thanked in the credits.
After their extended break, the band regrou...
Going for the One is the eighth studio album by British progressive rock band Yes. It was released in 1977 after an extended break for solo activity, and is especially notable for marking the return of keyboardist Rick Wakeman, who had departed in 1974 in the aftermath of the Tales from Topographic Oceans tour. His re-entry was facilitated by the departure of Patrick Moraz, after having only played on Relayer, although Moraz is thanked in the credits.
After their extended break, the band regrouped in Switzerland, refreshed and ready to record in late 1976. The album was recorded at Mountain Studios by recording engineers John Timperley and David Richards. After constructing epic tracks for the last few years, Yes felt inspired to scale things back a bit and recorded some of their most direct and concise material since Fragile. Wakeman also varied his sound by largely forsaking his mellotron and experimenting with church organ to pleasing effect on "Parallels" and the sole extended track, "Awaken".
After many successive album covers with Roger Dean, Yes (who also produced the album entirely by themselves) instead commissioned Hipgnosis (known for designing album covers for Pink Floyd) to create the artwork for Going for the One. The album cover features the Century Plaza Towers in Los Angeles, also known locally as the Twin Towers.
Yes's return at the height of the punk movement was an unexpectedly successful one, with Going for the One reaching the pinnacle of the UK charts and even having a Top 10 hit single with "Wonderous Stories" - something that would have been considered impossible during the days of Tales from Topographic Oceans. The album was another U.S. Top 10 charting album for the band reaching #8 on the Billboard album chart in 1977.
With its confident and natural qualities, Going for the One is still generally regarded by most critics as one of Yes's finest, and many times, most underrated albums. In addition, the song "Awaken" is considered by many fans to be Yes's finest work[citation needed], and Jon Anderson has said "We had a hit record! I loved listening to 'Awaken', at last we had created a Masterwork" and has indicated in some interviews that he considers it to be Yes's most complete composition.
Side one
"Going for the One" (Jon Anderson) – 5:32
"Turn of the Century" (Jon Anderson/Steve Howe/Alan White) – 7:56
"Parallels" (Chris Squire) – 5:53
Side two
"Wonderous Stories" (Jon Anderson) – 3:49
"Awaken" (Jon Anderson/Steve Howe) – 15:31
Bonus Tracks
Going for the One was remastered and reissued by Rhino in 2003 with several bonus tracks:
"Montreux's Theme" (Steve Howe/Chris Squire/Jon Anderson/Alan White) – 2:38
"Vevey (Revisited)" (Jon Anderson/Rick Wakeman) – 4:46
"Amazing Grace" (Trad. Arr. Chris Squire) – 2:36
"Going for the One" (Rehearsal) (Jon Anderson) – 5:10
"Parallels" (Rehearsal) (Chris Squire) – 6:21
"Turn of the Century" (Rehearsal) (Jon Anderson/Steve Howe/Alan White) – 6:58
"Eastern Number" (Early version of "Awaken") (Jon Anderson/Steve Howe) – 12:16
Reception
Going for the One (Atlantic K 50379) reached #1 in the UK. It also reached #8 in the US during a chart stay of 21 weeks.
Personnel
Jon Anderson: Vocals, percussion, harp
Chris Squire: Bass guitar, vocals
Steve Howe: Electric and acoustic guitars, Portuguese 12 String ( incorrectly listed as a vachalia at the time ), lap steel guitar, vocal
Rick Wakeman: Piano, organ, Polymoog and Minimoog synthesizers, pipe organ
Alan White: Drums, percussion
Reissues
1988 - Atlantic - CD
1994 - Atlantic - CD (Remastered)
2003 - Rhino - CD (Remastered with Bonus Tracks)
Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.