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when anyone asked him about Yes not being

inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: “It’ll

happen when it happens.” Last year, it happened.

In his euphoric induction speech, Anderson, the

frontman during the band’s classic era, marveled at joining his

musical heroes in the Hall, among them Little Richard, Bill

Haley & His Comets, and Stevie Wonder. He also honored the

memories of guitarist Peter Banks and bassist Chris Squire,

two of the band’s co-founders, both of whom passed within the

past ve years.

“I was in shock; I didn’t know what to say,” Anderson told

Ravinia

Magazine in a phone interview. “It was very surreal. We

did a couple of songs, and a er that, I drank a bottle of wine.”

ose “couple of songs” (“Roundabout,” “Owner of a Lonely

Heart”) represented something of an extraordinary moment

in Yes’s tumultuous -year history. It marked the rst time in

more than a decade that Anderson performed onstage with

guitarist and co-founding member Steve Howe and drummer

Alan White, who tour in their own incarnation of Yes.

Yes, there are two Yeses, but let’s not reopen old wounds—

“I never le Yes; it le me,” stated Anderson, who was uncere-

moniously replaced in

a er being sidelined by a serious

health issue. e ensemble that will perform at Ravinia on

September is aptly billed on the schedule as “Quintessential

Yes”; they have also toured as ARW. It features Anderson,

whose distinctive alto-tenor is the band’s trademark voice;

keyboardist Rick Wakeman, who in

joined the lineup that

RAVINIA MAGAZINE | SEPTEMBER 3, 2018 – MAY 11, 2019

24