1975-May-10 Yes Live At Queen's Park (Volumes 1 & 2) Queen's Park Rangers Football Ground, Loftus Road London, England Disc 1: (do not have) 1 Introduction 2 Sound Chaser 3 Close To The Edge 4 To Be Over 5 The Gates Of Delirium 6 I've Seen All Good People 7 Mood For A Day 8 Long Distance Runaround 9 Moraz Keyboard Solo 10 Clap Disc 2 - 82.00 1 And You And I 2 Ritual 3 Roundabout 4 Sweet Dreams 5 Yours Is No Disgrace Comments about this recording (not mine): This 2-DVD set comes apparently from "Panorama" Video. The first disc shows the Dolby Digital logo and the Panorama logo and then goes straight into the main programme. The second disc goes to the menu screen after the logos. Both do have menu screens, however, complete with song selection, a badly-spelled and worded biography of the band, and even previews of other Panorama DVDs (not Yes stuff). The quality of the video is really clear with no problems. This video is kind of in the gray area of tradeable stuff. I believe this comes from a Japanese laser disc release of the footage from the early 90s (the Japanese origin probably explains the bad grammar in the biography text). It certainly is pro-shot video of a whole Yes concert from the Relayer tour, and the menu screens look very professional as well. But the fact that (at the time of this writing) it cannot be purchased on Amazon.com suggest to me that this is out of print and thus falls into the category of bootleg, so I will count this as a tradeable item. Which is great, because this is an awesome concert video. This is a complete, pro-shot show with Yes at their performing and musical height (IMO, of course). The show features Patrick Moraz on keyboards instead of Rick Wakeman, and Alan White on drums instead of Bill Bruford, but everyone here turns in a virtuosic, jam-filled performance. The show is not absolutely perfect (another reason why this is probably not an authorized official release): the sound mix on the first disc is a bit odd. To my ears it seems as if the keyboards are too high in the mix, whereas some guitars don't seem high enough (especially poor Chris Squire's bass) and at times Jon's vocals are strangely distant. Jon himself mentions "buzzes" to the crowd at one point. By the second disc, these mixing problems seem to have been sorted out, and the venue has gotten dark enough that the light show gets impressive. There are however some slight periodic speed fluctuations, at least at the beginning of the second disc. Regardless this is a dream set and even with the mixing issues the songs sound pretty great. You get plenty of close-ups of the various band members and not too many of the fans, which is nice. The far shots of the stage have the camera positioned well to the left side, probably because of a big lighting tower in the middle of the grounds that would obstruct the camera's view if it was positioned stage center. This is a fantastic show for those of you who are big fans of Close To The Edge and Relayer, like me. There is also a great performance of "Ritual", the last track from Topographic Oceans. In the encores I was surprised to hear the very old number "Sweet Dreams," and the very welcome "Yours Is No Disgrace". "All Good People" and "Long Distance Runaround" are shorter, more acoustic versions. I highly recommend this video to all fans of Yes.