WELCOME&You're Welcome.....Full Album.....
Description YT
WELCOME&You're Welcome.....Full Album.....Studijski album, objavljen 1979
. godine Songs / Tracks Listing
1. Glazba je život (5,23)
2. Godišnja doba (4:50)
3. Pridružite se Partiji (3,25)
4. Vilenjak (7,25)
5. Bič (17:05)
Ukupno vrijeme 38:08
Postava / Glazbenici
- Bernie Krauer / električni i veliki klaviri, orgulje Minimoog, Mellotron, vokal
- Francis Jost / bas, električne i akustične gitare, tuba, vokal
- Tommy Strebel / bubnjevi, cjevasta zvona, akustične gitare od 6 i 12 žica
, vokal: Stvarna instrumentacija u ovom trenutku nije se mogla u potpunosti potvrditi……….Studio album, released in 1979
. Songs / Tracks Listing
1. Music is life (5:23)
Seasons 2 (4:50)
3. Join the Party (3:25)
4. Elf (7:25)
5. Whip (17:05)
Total time 38:08
Lineup / Musicians
- Bernie Krauer / electric and grand pianos, organ Minimoog, Mellotron, vocals
- Francis Jost / bass, electric and acoustic guitars, tuba, vocals
- Tommy Strebel / drums, tubular bells, acoustic guitars of 6 and 12 strings
, vocals: The actual instrumentation at this time could not be fully confirmed..........Bands from the 1970s could never have predicted how impossible it would one day be to find anything about them for several decades down the road on the search engine because of their generic sounding nickname and even worse album title, but a digression before I even start! Largely forgotten in the annals of time due to the fact that they were dissed as nothing but Da clone, swiss band WELCOME created two albums in the second half of the 1970s before falling apart in 1981. Wecome's debut came out in 1976, and this second and last album YOU'RE WELCOME came three more years in 1979. The self-titled debut basically borrowed all those excellent to styles from their early period, from "The Yes Album" roughly to "Tales From Topographic Oceans." The band was just a trio consisting of Tommy Stebel (percussion, acoustic guitar, tubular bells, vocals), Bernie Krauer (electric and grand pianos, the Mini Moog organ, Mellotron, vocals) and Francis Jost (bass, electric and acoustic guitars, tuba, vocals), but managed to sound like a full band at least in the studio. Although the debut was a rather interesting rendition of classic Yes grooves, riffs and melodies from the early '70s, on the band's second album YOU'RE WELCOME it softened a little by sounding more like a watered-down version of "Tormato." As well as the debut, YOU'RE WELCOME featured five songs with a massive sprawling closer that lasted more than 13 minutes and in this case the song "The Whip" creaked over 17. There was a big difference between 1976 and 1979 in the prog world. Prog was already in serious decline, but some bands managed to convince record companies that they were still releasing very complex and creative albums. However, by 1979, the music industry had fallen quite completely, and even big ticket bands simplified their style to either fit into the molds of hard rock, AOR or pop. WELCOME was no exception and although this second edition is still at the altar of worship Yes, it's a big step down from a decent debut. This one sounds like it has the real sounds of an electric guitar, but there's no source who's playing what on this one. LADISLAV&Z..........