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Web Exclusive Interview
Yes's Alan White
Yes's
Alan White
As
Yes continues their world tour - featuring the return of keyboardist Rick
Wakeman, signifying the reborn
"classic" lineup - the band simply gets
hotter and hotter. Drummer Alan White recently sat down with Modern Drummer,
inaugurating the magazine's brand-new Playback column, in which the world's greatest players reflect on their
historic recordings.
by Adam
Budofsky
You'll find Alan's fascinating reflections on Tales From Topographic Oceans, Going For The
One, and other timeless Yes longplayers - as well as his seminal work on John Lennon's Imagine and Live
Peace In Toronto, and George Harrison's All Things Must Pass - in the January 2003 issue of
MD.
Happily, though, we brought an extra cassette with us when we
interviewed Yes's thirty-year veteran
skinsman, and captured a bit more
banter than we had room for in the print version.
MD: Since you were told
about the Live Peace In Toronto concert late in the game, how did you prepare? Had you even played together with John at
that point? Alan:
No, not at all. I was only twenty years old, so it was out of nowhere.
All of a sudden I'm
being whisked to Toronto. We actually rehearsed on
the plane. I was just playing with a pair of drumsticks on the back of
the
airplane seat. It was like a whirlwind. I just thought, Well, this
is what rock 'n' roll is all about. Now I reflect on it and
think,
"Wow, there's a little bit of history that was going down there." I
was into playing my original stuff at the time.
It was rock 'n'
roll-based, but it had jazz influences. I was always interested in
jazz. I used to go watch Roland Kirk
and people like that. I'd go to
clubs and see Roland play, and then go and see Jimi Hendrix play. That
definitely turns
your head around as far as what you can do musically.
So I started trying to use melody on the drums as opposed to just
being
the timekeeper. Who's to say you can't sidestep and play with the
guitars and leave the bass player to fend
for himself? Of course, you
play with the bass player most of the time, but there's no reason you
can't go with the
guy who is playing flute and make the drum pattern a
thing in itself, and let the bass player hold the time. That's
my
philosophy, basically: I'm the timekeeper, but at the same time I'm
melodic, and I can play harmony parts with
anybody who is soloing. MD: When watching "Ritual" from the recent Yes Symphonic Live
DVD, it's
apparent you don't take the easy road, when having a huge
orchestra behind you would certainly rationalize that
attitude. Alan:
I never take the easy road. I like a challenge. As much as people think
that playing with Yes is
regimented, it's not. We change it every
night; I throw new things in all the time. That makes life interesting
for
us. MD: At what point did you join Yes? Alan: I went to the rehearsals for Close To The
Edge,
in 1972. I remember it was a sewing shop or something like that in a
really weird part of London, and they
rehearsed in the basement. I went
down with Eddie Offord, who was the producer. They were working on
"Siberian Khatru,"
but Bill had left because they'd had some kind of
confrontation. I had experience playing different time signatures, so
I
went and played it with them. So I played the song before they recorded
it. Obviously the band must have later gotten
together and agreed,
"This guy can definitely do that job," because when Bill finally left
the band, they came back to
me. MD: Were you friendly with each other before that? Alan: I hadn't met Bill at that point. I think I
was on the road with Joe Cocker in Europe, playing with Jim Keltner. MD:
Obviously it's a very idiosyncratic
band, and Bill was the original
drummer. Was there any point when you wondered if it was going to
work
out? Alan: When I initially got asked to join the band I
said, Look, I'll give you three months and you
give me three months.
Let's see if this works, because I'm not going to live my life in
misery - and vice-versa.
It's my thirtieth anniversary with the band, so
I guess it's worked out. You know what's great about playing
with a
band like this? It's always challenging, it's always demanding.
Everybody's trying to achieve new
things all the time. We have this
built-in drive for creating new things all the time. That's what keeps
the energy going.
It's what keeps me alive. In fact, having Rick back
in the band is creating a new energy, because people are
actually
hearing what we did in the '70s and up to the '80s. They are hearing
that chemistry and magic. And the
set is huge; it's a three-hour set. MD: After playing with orchestras on your last tour, has there been a shift back
now that it's the smaller group again? Alan: No, not really. For me it's a shift forward.
The
orchestra was great. It was a great experience to go through that,
because everybody always wanted to see Yes with an
orchestra. But now
with Rick back - he's brilliant. Playing the orchestral parts on some of
the new music,
"Magnification," and stuff like that, he's just got it
down. The band feels like a complete, solid unit right now. It's
very
powerful. MD: How has the tour been going? Alan: We
were a little shaky at first. The first gig
was great, though. We
started in Seattle, which is my hometown. We started getting a few
standing ovations, and now we get
a lot of standing ovations. It's like, "Well, we made it through" [laughs], because there are a lot of notes to
play. MD: The music must be inside you after a while. Alan:
Yeah, it is to an extent, but to coordinate
the whole thing - Chris keeps
looking at me, saying, "You're the guy who controls all of this." MD: The Rhino
box set In A Word, released earlier this year, must have been interesting to work on. Alan:
Rhino put a
program together and presented it to us, then we added some
stuff like the Paris tapes. They've been bootlegged, but
Rhino did it
properly and re-EQ'd it so it sounds good. It's a good package - all
their packaging is fantastic. I think
their plan is to do a three-CD
set of live stuff next year. MD: Is it unusual going back and listening to all this stuff
from the past? Alan:
I've got most of the tapes anyway. If anybody wants to find something
that we did in
rehearsals, they come to me because I've got bags and
bags of cassettes. It takes me like two days to go through all
these
cassettes, but I'll eventually find the piece they want. I keep
everything. MD: It seems that over the
years [singer] Jon
Anderson has taken a more active role onstage percussively. It adds a
lot to the show. Alan:
Except he breaks all the things I give
him. [laughs] He doesn't use regular sticks, he uses pieces of pipe and
stuff like
that. I gave him a gong, which cost a fortune. He absolutely
destroyed this thing. It has a huge dent in it. And he still thinks
it
sounds good! MD: Good thing he's not a bigger guy. Alan:
Yeah. I keep giving him cymbals
and he keeps breaking them. I play with
relatively small jazz drumsticks. I know guys who play with tree
trunks, but I just
can't handle that. You can get the same effect by
just turning up the volume. If you hit it hard with bigger
sticks
you're going to break things. MD: At this point, Jon is an integral part of the percussive thing
that's going on onstage. Alan:
Yeah, he gets into some nice stuff. I think he finds it like a home
away from
home onstage. He kind of goes back to his base during a lot
of instrumental passages. He likes to have a "station" instead of
just
standing in the front. MD: "Ritual" really rocked during the
orchestral shows. Chris Squire and Jon were
playing drums, and the
orchestra's percussionist would be playing shakers; even the keyboard
player was smacking
stuff. Alan: Oh yeah, it was great. That
whole section is amazing. When we did it in the studio it was just
like,
"Okay, it's time for Alan to go nuts!"
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