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South Side of the Sky

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"South Side of the Sky"
Song by Yes
from the album Fragile
Released
  • 12 November 1971 (UK)
  • 4 January 1972 (US)
RecordedSeptember 1971
Genre
Length
  • 8:04
LabelAtlantic
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)

"South Side of the Sky" is a song by progressive rock band Yes from their album Fragile.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • South Side of the Sky (2008 Remaster)
  • South Side of the Sky (2003 Remaster)
  • South Side of the Sky

Transcription

Description

It opens with the sound of a howling wind, then the song starts after a thunder-strike, bursting into a heavy, riff-dominated rock song. At around 2:08, Rick Wakeman's piano comes in along with another few seconds of wind. At around 3:19, Chris Squire, Steve Howe and Jon Anderson start singing wordless vocal harmonies along with the piano. This continues until about 5:42, when the earlier heavy riff part returns, with the wind in the background. The song fades out in the end to the same howling wind that occurred throughout.

Ultimate Classic Rock critic Ryan Reed described the song as being Yes' 6th heaviest song saying that "Howe goes wild with some of his most ferocious guitar tones...and engineer Eddy Offord sharpens every angular riff into a dagger."[2]

Anderson stated that "This is a song about climbing mountains. It’s dangerous, but we all must climb mountains every day."[3]

The original and a new "acoustic" version of this song, with piano as the dominant instrument and without the sound effects, appears on the 2004 U.S. version of the three-disc compilation album The Ultimate Yes: 35th Anniversary Collection. This new version is on the third disc, which consists of material newly recorded for the album, while the original version of the track appears on the first.[citation needed]

Production, lyrical content

According to Jon Anderson, the inspiration for lyrics came from an article which claims that "sleep is death's little sister", and the lyrics expand on the idea that death could be beautiful. The mountain referenced in the lyrics is a goal humanity struggles to attain, after which there is death, a set of transitions leading to "eternal sleep or the next life span". Chris Squire explained that Anderson wrote the first verse with acoustic guitar; Squire takes credit for the riff in the chorus (in the words of Steve Howe, "do-de-do-do-do") and for a section in the middle of the song. The guitar riff for the song, said Steve Howe, came from a composition by his earlier band, Bodast, and the song was rarely played live because "the vocal section came up short".[4]

In the liner notes of the remastered edition of Fragile, it is said that this song is about a tragic polar expedition that ends in death, as evidenced by lyrics such as "A river, a mountain to be crossed/ the sunshine, in mountains sometimes lost/ around the south side, so cold that we cried" and "The moments, seem lost in all the noise/ a snow storm, a stimulating voice".[5] In the second half of the song, the references to the cold switch to lyrics that seem to reflect hypothermia, such as "Of warmth of the sky/ of warmth when you die" and "Were we ever warmer on that day". In the introduction to this song in Yes' 2003 concert at the Montreux Jazz Festival, Jon Anderson said, "This is a song about climbing mountains... It's dangerous, but we all must climb mountains every day."[6]

Rick Wakeman contributed to the writing of "South Side of the Sky" (and fellow album piece "Heart of the Sunrise") by adding piano interludes to both songs, but was not credited due to contractual conflicts.[citation needed]

Covers

"South Side of the Sky" was covered by the band Spock's Beard. The song is heard on the special edition third disc of their album Snow. A cover of this song, with vocal contributions by Jon Anderson, appears as the first track on Glass Hammer's 2007 album Culture of Ascent, a concept album about mountain climbing in the Himalayas.[citation needed]

Personnel

References

  1. ^ a b Dimery, Robert; Lydon, Michael (23 March 2010). 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die (Revised and Updated ed.). Universe. ISBN 978-0-7893-2074-2.
  2. ^ Reed, Ryan (18 May 2022). "The 10 Heaviest Yes Songs". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved 18 May 2022.
  3. ^ "10 Heavy Yes Songs That Are Surprisingly Great". Society of Rock. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  4. ^ Yes (1996). Yesstories: Yes In Their Own Words. St. Martin's. pp. 988–89. ISBN 9780312144531. Retrieved 12 August 2013.
  5. ^ Yes. Fragile. CD-ROM. 2003. Elektra Entertainment.
  6. ^ Yes (musical group). Yes: Live at Montreux 2003. [DVD]. Eagle Eye Media.
This page was last edited on 13 February 2024, at 18:09
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