Jon Anderson and the Band Geeks: In Concert May 7, 2026

Jon Anderson knows he’s no spring chicken. On the last night of his tour’s current leg at Detroit’s Royal Oak Music Theatre, he went straight for the dad jokes to introduce classics from Yes’ vintage years:

We’re gonna do a song that’s so old I’ve forgotten when it’s from! (before “Perpetual Change” and “I’ve Seen All Good People”)

(Looking at guitarist Andy Graziano for his cue) The beginning of this next song is how I remember what song it’s the beginning of! (before “And You and I” and “Leaves of Green”)

Add the inevitable physical limitations that have crept in since Anderson’s 2019 tour, and you might wonder what was in store as, backed by bassist Richie Castellano’s Band Geeks, he took the stage to the strains of Stravinsky’s Firebird Suite. But there was nothing for the 1,000-strong sold out audience to worry about, as the sextet launched straight into a taut, crackling version of “Close to the Edge”. Shimmying to the music, shaking a streamer-laden tambourine, constantly catching the eyes of his support team, above all singing with the vocal range and stamina of his salad days, Anderson delivered the goods throughout the two-hour set of majestic epic-length tunes, rarely glancing at his Autocue to remember the words he’s sung for fifty-plus years.

The Band Geeks are obviously a major part of the experience here. Unlike Anderson’s multi-generational 1000 Hands band, bassist Castellano, Graziano and the rest of the team (keyboardist Chris Clark, utility player Phil Castellano and drummer Anthony Ascolese) generally stick to the original manuscripts, festooning selections from The Yes Album through Going for the One with the requisite flourishes and ample echoes of Howe, Squire, Kaye/Wakeman/Moraz and Bruford/White in their solo moments. “Counties and Countries” and “Once Upon a Dream” (from 2023’s quite wonderous album True) follow the same blueprint in expanding Anderson’s new songs (Anderson introducing the former tune onstage: “Richie sent back the music and I asked: ‘How’d you do it? Why’d you do it?”); if there’s less compositional heat that might have come from players and writer interacting in the studio, nonetheless tasty interplay, nifty stylistic callbacks and deep, solid grooves still jump out at you. And the new song “Giving Is Living” has an uptempo rock kick, boosting the energy and accenting the rhythmic rhetoric of Anderson’s magical, mystical hippie word salad. (If Jon was a natural-born American citizen and ran for president, I’d vote for him in a heartbeat. Is there a Time Lord in the house?)

After seeing the man four times over four decades, I have no doubt: whatever cynicism Anderson may have about his life in music, he leaves it offstage. His smile beamed constantly; he shuffled to the rhythms as best he could; he waved at adoring fans on the main floor as often as possible. Duetting on harp with Clark’s digital church organ on “Awaken”, he stole his own show with one of the night’s musical highlights. And when the audience spontaneously sang along for “I’ve Seen All Good People”, Anderson was there to wave a giant tie-dyed flag back at ’em while quoting John Lennon’s “Give Peace a Chance” in counterpoint. Only Ringo himself could have topped the gesture.

From that moment, the evening built to its predestined climax, with “Once Upon A Dream” and the acoustic “Leaves of Green” providing more aural space and focus, and “Starship Trooper” unrolling solos aplenty from sundry Geeks. (After all these years, it’s finally struck me: the chords of the “Wurm” section are awfully similar to the playout of “Free Bird”! Coincidence or …?). And “Roundabout” proved the predestined finale, as the 81-year old Anderson delightedly danced with his wife during Clark’s Wakemanesque keyboard break, then skipped back to the mike to finish up.

Six weeks from now, this tour resumes with a month-long West Coast/Midwest leg, followed by a five-week UK/Sweden/France jaunt in September and October. (Tour dates are here.) Yes fans, Jon Anderson fans, who knows how many more chances you’ll get? Based on what I saw in metro Detroit, this is a concert to see (with all good people) and hear while you can!

— Rick Krueger

Setlist:

  • Close to the Edge
  • Perpetual Change
  • Counties and Countries
  • And You and I
  • Giving Is Living
  • Soon (from The Gates of Delirium)
  • Awaken
  • I’ve Seen All Good People
  • Once Upon a Dream
  • Leaves of Green (from The Ancient)
  • Starship Trooper
  • Roundabout

Rick’s Quick Takes: Across the Great Divide

This month’s connecting thread: grizzled veterans connect with high-powered talent from younger generations; the chemistry fizzes, fuses and pops — and some excellent new music is the result! (Of course, there’s an outlier or two in this month’s stack as well.) Let’s get down to it, shall we? Purchase links are embedded in the artist/title listing, with album streams or samples following the review.

Jon Anderson and The Band Geeks, True: Anderson (going on 80, and as seemingly immortal as Keith Richards) has consistently worked with little-known yet impeccable virtuosos since his abrupt exit from Yes; watching him front a high-impact big band from the 10th row in 2019 was a thrilling experience. Now, teaming with a quintet of killer players half his age, he delivers the album fans have desired for decades. Sure, there are times when The Band Geeks (bassist Richie Castellano, guitarist Andy Graziano, keyboardists Christopher Clark and Robert Kipp and drummer Andy Ascolese) seem a little too eager to ape their counterparts in the classic Yes lineup, but overall they lean into epics like “Counties and Countries” or “Once Upon a Dream” and shorter romps like “True Messenger”, “Shine On” and “Still a Friend” with full commitment, fresh creativity and chops galore. Then there’s Anderson, still soaring into sub-orbit with that unmistakable voice, still preaching peace, love and understanding with his trademark New Age word salads. (Is there no way this man could run for U.S. President? At this point, he’d get my vote.) At first, I thought Time Lord’s full review was a bit over the top — but repeated hearings are bringing me around. Most hardcore Yes-heads will flip over this, and casual listeners will find plenty to lure them in.

Tim Bowness, Powder Dry: the exception to this month’s rule, Bowness’ first-ever “solo solo project” hits the speakers like a cold slap in the face. Instead of the languorous widescreen ruminations of previous albums, we get brusque, sparse song sketches (rarely more than 3 minutes); a disorienting mix of natural tones, machine rhythms, bracing industrial grit and gnarled lo-fi samples yields shocks, disturbances and wake-up calls aplenty across these 16 tracks. Well practiced in the dark arts of ineffable yearning and melancholy, here Bowness hones and refines his lyrics to bare-knuckled, highly charged haikus, whether staring down decadent cultures (opener “Rock Hudson”), devolving psyches (“This Way Now”, the title track), disintegrating connections (“Heartbreak Notes”) or the unholy conjunction of all three (“Summer Turned”, “Built to Last”). With his stoic vocals bearing the brunt of this emotional tangle, Bowness’ voice plumbs fresh depths, flickering in desperate hope one moment, driven to sublimated fury and fear the next. If you’re already a Bowness fan, stow your expectations — but whether he’s familiar or brand new to you, don’t hesitate to strap in for a compelling, cathartic ride.

David Gilmour, Luck and Strange: another prog legend who can sound like nobody but himself cranks up one more time. But the canvass Gilmour paints on here accents different tones and tints, with youthful co-producer Charlie Andrew shaking up instrumental backgrounds and song formats to good effect. There’s a sense of lightness, air and space this time around, a less obviously Floydian palette that both complements and contrasts with Gilmour’s craggy singing and singular take on blues guitar. Polly Samson’s lyrics level up as well, tackling well-worn topics (nostalgia on “Luck and Strange”, spirituality on “A Single Spark”, love as refuge on “Dark and Velvet Nights” and “Sings”) from newly contemplative angles, sounding absolutely right coming out of Gilmour’s mouth. (Oh, and daughter Romany Gilmour totally enthralls in her vocal turn on The Montgolfier Brothers’ “Between Two Points”.) By the time Gilmour hearkens back to which one’s Pink, firing off a final round of Stratocaster fireworks on orchestral closer “Scattered”, he’s taken us on the most varied – and I’d argue, most sheerly enjoyable – ride of his solo career; this one’s already a 2024 Favorite.

King Crimson, Sheltering Skies: OK, so this one isn’t “new” new. But when Crimson sherpas Robert Fripp and Bill Bruford teamed with American upstarts Adrian Belew and Tony Levin back in the 1980s, the result was a revitalized second reign for the King, swapping out trademark Mellotrons and prodigious pomp for raucous noise, limber polyrhythms and surging, seething energy. With Belew and Levin now touring this music again as BEAT, this issue of a 1982 show previously released on video couldn’t come at a better time; opening for Roxy Music on the French Riviera, Crimson pulls the unsuspecting audience right into the clinches for the hottest of hot dates. From the subdued intensity of “Matte Kudasai” and “The Sheltering Sky” through the dynamic clatter of “Indiscipline” and the hypnotic guitar weave of “Neal and Jack and Me” to Bruford and Belew’s ecstatic percussion duet that kicks off “Waiting Man”, this is that rare live album of nothing but highlights. Banter, bicker, balderdash, brouhaha, ballyhoo — whatever their desired flavor of elephant talk (including some 70s throwbacks), Crim devotees will find it here.

Nick Lowe, Indoor Safari: almost 50 years on from his solo debut at the crest of the New Wave, Lowe’s pure pop for now people remains pin-sharp and on point. Who else can still pump out breezy rockers like “Went to A Party” and “Jet Pac Boomerang” (the latter complete with high-culture similes and a Fab easter egg), ring wry changes on the battle of the sexes in “Blue on Blue” (“You’re like a mill, you run me through”) and “Don’t Be Nice to Me”, then capture the emotional devastation of the quietly crooned “A Different Kind of Blue”? Masked surf-rockers Los Straitjackets (currently celebrating their 30th anniversary) prove crucial here, laying down swinging retro grooves for Lowe’s originals and hoisting just the right backdrops as he nails the blue-collar aspiration of Garnet Mimms “A Quiet Place” and the innocent romance of Ricky Nelson’s “Raincoat in the River”. Lowe’s smart-aleck satire has always entertained, but his later embrace of pre-rock stylings deepened his songwriting and singing; now, even at his jauntiest, his aim for the heart is true. This is a real charmer that’s gone straight onto my 2024 Favorites list.

Pure Reason Revolution, Coming Up to Consciousness: a variation in reverse of this month’s theme, as long-time Pink Floyd/Gilmour bassist Guy Pratt brings extra low-end oomph to the latest from Jon Courtney, Greg Jong and their fellow electroproggers. As Time Lord ably spells out in his full review, once again PRR relies on the proven recipe of previous high points like 2006 debut The Dark Third and 2022’s Above Cirrus: float in on low-key ambience, keep the verses chilled out, ramp up on the bridge, kick hard into the chorus! (While seasoning to taste with lush harmonies, towering guitar riffs and slamming club beats, whipping up maximum tension and release before serving.) Here the results are consistently yummy, not least because the soundscapes’ ebb and flow echo Courtney’s perennial lyrical themes. As Courtney, Jong and Annicke Shireen’s voices entwine, splinter, and reunite, there’s a serene insistence on transfiguration, on something more than material, beyond the harsh realities of eros (“Dig til You Die”, “Betrayal”), fear (“The Gallows”), and death itself (“Useless Animal”, “As We Disappear”). Pure Reason Revolution isn’t giving us answers, but Coming Up to Consciousness points us toward the mystery they’ve pursued all along.

— Rick Krueger