Many of his contemporaries are close to retirement, but Steve Howe is busier than ever, handling guitar duties for both Yes and Asia, and maintaining a prolific solo career. How he does it is one thing, but his skills as a guitarist and songwriter remain undiminished. He’s stuck with Yes since rejoining in the mid 90s through two post-Jon Anderson vocalists. He still cranks out records of different shades and temperaments at a regular clip.
But what may be most impressive â and the basis of this interview â is what Howe has accomplished with Asia since the original band reformed in 2006. Unlike so many reunions that go awry after a tour or album, this one has lasted longer than the two years they were together when they first started. For 2012, their 30th anniversary, Asia have released XXX, the third studio album theyâve made since reuniting, and quite possibly their strongest since the 1982 self-titled debut.
When I spoke with Howe, he was just finishing up his summer tour with Yes and preparing to switch over to Asia for a fall tour of Canada and the U.S. Then itâs back to the U.K. for a few shows before the Christmas break. Itâs likely the guitarist will spend time with family, but may well forgo a well-deserved sabbatical to create new music for 2013 (he didnât tell me this exactly; Iâm merely speculating). As it is, itâs an inspiration to still have guitar greats like Steve Howe excelling at their craft.
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Howâs the Yes tour been going so far?
Itâs going great. Weâve only got three more shows. Itâs been very successful. Procol Harem have got great songs, and theyâre lovely people…
Fantastic. Really, the reason Iâm calling today is I wanted to talk to you about Asia. Youâre going to go out with them after this tour, is that correct?
Yes, thatâs absolutely right. We kind of flip flop and Geoff (Downes) and I, right before that, we go to Japan with Asia. So weâll be pretty much in shape by the time we get here because we would have done some Japanese dates as well with Asia at the end of September. And then we kick off here. So itâs good.
You have a new album, XXX, your third since reuniting in 2006, and really in my opinion, the best of those three. How do you feel about it?
I feel pretty much the same. I mean, Phoenix, I enjoyed some of that. We kind of felt our way into that. There were some strengths. John Wetton showed his strength as a songwriter and there was room for my music. So we continued that with Omega, which also introduced us to the producer Mike Paxman. When we did this one (XXX), it solidified a lot of our thoughts and music and plans and work with Mike, really. Mike came on strong and gave us a lot of direction and helped us make the record even more than he did before, on Omega, which was getting to know us. But this time, he already knew us so he could kind of slap us around the face and make us work harder or just be more concise. We really had a nice time.
It has a really unique feel, very mature and sophisticated sound. Great melodies and dynamics, and undeniably Asia. Was there a conscious effort to try different things on this record?
Everyone wants you to do another like your biggest one. Thatâs obvious, labels always say, âCan you make one like your first one?â They always say that. They said that after the first one. Geffen said that. âCan you make another like this please?â Itâs hopeless. That isnât really a direction to go in. But obviously, you know what they mean under your skin. You kind of know what they mean. Can you kind of be that high and be that creative? I guess we did trim the fat off of it. But they did ask us not to do too many ballads, or any ballads. We kind of streamlined it so it was a bit more focused on making up the kind of summary kind of album. Every time I make a record, itâs what Iâve got, whether thatâs Yes or solo or Asia. Itâs what weâve got collectively. You canât manufacture â or you canât pull it out of the cauldron â some delightful, âOh this is a first album, carry on.â You canât do that. Youâve got what youâve got. XXX is an indication of what weâve got, which is pretty damn good.
Whatâs different about making records with Asia now as opposed to when you first got together in the early 80s?
It goes without saying a hell of a lot has changed about recording. If you look at it in black and white terms, itâs changed almost beyond recognition. There are so many ways of making records. You canât go into the studio with nothing and sit there pondering your navel for days and concoct things and kind of make it in that sense. Historically, you went in a room, you rehearsed for ages â thatâs how Yes made Fragile, The Yes Album, all the albums. And Asia started off doing that with their albums. We were in the room and we kind of just rehearsed and rehearsed and looked for material and tried out different things. It actually worked on arrangements. Then, you find that some of the same principles apply, but the methods are different.
In other words, thereâs no more going into the studio with nothing. Yes did that on Magnification, we kind of went in and said, âOh, we havenât got anything, what have you got?â And sort of started from scratch, which is just bizarre after working with Bruce Fairburn who re-educated us on exactly how the label made records, which is going into the rehearsal room for six weeks, two of them with him (the producer) and coming in with a record.
How to start today is at your own studio, at your own time, not at the groupâs expense. We (Asia) sat there pondering stuff, listening to different tunes, going, âOh thatâs kind of good. What about this one over here?â We kind shared the music. Geoff would come with what heâs got with John and find out what Iâve got. And thatâs the barebones of it. But by doing this, the process of setting up, if you like, what used to be called the demoâŠit used to be a horrible demo you couldnât use. But now what happens is you formulate a structure in what was in the land of MIDI, but now itâs more in the land of computers, do you set up a pattern. You can arrange it, chop this bit out, oh we donât like that now letâs go here.
So in your imagination, and with the aid of your imagination and the aid of fundamental structures, you create the structures. And I canât really deny that thatâs how we make great records. And they really can turn out great like that because you can forever redesign them. And what you had to do in the old days, if you wanted to redesign them, was either copy a bit, which degraded the quality, or hack bits out and stick them elsewhere, which also was so hit and miss that edits would glare out at you.
Iâve gone way too far, Iâm sure you didnât want an answer quite as long as that, but in a way, yeah, itâs changed (laughs). But, in a way, itâs a healthy change. Iâll be making solo albums more like people, like Iâm talking about Asia. Thereâs another way you can do it where you go around the houses. Itâs called, âgo around the houses.â In other words you say, âNo, no no, we canât agree to this modern method, no. Weâve got to get everyone playing together.â So get everybody playing together and you realize the mayhem of this. Theyâre like, âWell he doesnât know what heâs doing. And whatâs that mean with this par?â So you ponder all this stuff for ages and ages and theyâre like, âOK, right, letâs go back to the way theyâre doing it now.â Famous producers often do this. They go all the way around the circle and come back to the same place Asia were when we made XXX, which is âLetâs cut to the chase, letâs just do this.â Instead of saying, âOh well, this isnât really how you do it, you got to do it like this.â
Itâs like saying in 1980, âLetâs make records like Frank Sinatra made them.â It would be completely out of sync with reality. Of course now, whatâs fascinating about recording is that itâs like looking at quantum physics. You can look at a note and make it a full screen. âBink,â thatâs a note. âBinkâ and itâs a full screen image. So there is an awful lot of messing about you can do. And the sooner you start messing about, then the less of it you do, because like I said, if you start in the old way and start with the rehearsal and start with everybody playing, by the time you get together, itâs just letâs just do this. Letâs just do it the way weâre supposed to do it. I kind of resist trying to be too old school about it and saying, âOh weâve got make this like we did our great old records.â Thatâs like saying, âIâd like to take my wife out again like we did that first night.â How possible would that be? Because youâre grown-up people now. You canât fool yourself and thatâs what Iâm saying about records.
So you hit on a topic Iâm very, very interested in, and quantum physics and how you record. Why not do it the way youâre supposed to do it? So there is a learning curve here and some people are very late to get on it, and other people, like Asia, got on it very quickly â A, because it suited us; B, because itâs practical. You know, itâs just tidy, incredibly tidy.
And that brings up another point. Youâre talking about taking your wife out on first dates. Now, of course youâve been back with the original Asia longer than you were together the first time around. Did you ever imagine it would last this long for the second round?
Well, the reason we got together in 2006 was because, like you said, we hardly did anything when we were together in the 80s. I mean, two years is really, really nothing. So we got back on the premise, on the understanding that the one thing we totally agreed on is we love the first album. That is a great album for us. We love all the songs, we love all the instrumentation and we love the sound and we love Mike Stone for doing it, bless him. We really kind of had adoration for it. I guess that wasnât a commitment of time. It wasnât like saying, âWeâll do two years and break up again.â Whatâs the point? Honestly, there wouldnât have been a lot of point in doing two years and just breaking up again, like we did in 1982. So it kind of would have been a bit of a wasted time. I think we did hope there would be some longevity.
To be honest, I donât think we expected to be here six years later. We had a real burst when we came out. We went off to Japan and came to America. We kind of oiled and greased that, where it goes up and down a bit, but we didnât do too much here in one place or too much there in another place, just to kind of make it beautiful. And so, in short, I donât think we anticipated it. But we didnât put any kind of ceiling on it. Weâre just delighted that weâve been together three times longer than we were originally.
XXX is being touted as sort of a celebration of that first record. And just real quick, looking back at that first record, were you surprised it became such a big hit?
We were very confident. We were pretty sure we werenât just, as you say, pissing in the wind or that principle, it means just doing something just for the sake of it. We had a concept that this might work. We were quite a bit ambitious and we were very hopeful. It did surpass our hopes, obviously, because it just did colossally well.
Of course, you and Geoff Downes are both now in Asia and Yes…
…Thatâs pretty funny, isnât it? Just hearing you say it makes me laugh.
How do you manage it all?
Geoff looked at me the other day and said, âHow have you been managing to do this?â Because in a way, Geoffâs only just starting to do the first major transition. Although we did Asia in the beginning of the year and we recorded XXX and then we started work with Yes. So to go from an Asia recording to a Yes tour is easier than what weâre about to do, which is to go from a Yes tour to an Asia tour. It suddenly dawned on Geoff just how weird this might be. It probably wonât be, but from the distance, which isnât very much, a couple of weeks, (and) Geoffâs starting to go, âJesus.â I realize itâs partly because of equipment. In part, we both use the same fundamental equipment, but the programming of the sounds and the internal set up is quite different. Obviously, I use different guitars, and Geoff presumably uses some different features anyway. So heâs got to go through that. Geoff is only now really appreciating the complexity, if you like, of doing this. Because itâs not only the music, but the physical demands of going from one group to another quite rapidly â which Iâve tried to minimize this year by having quite a long period with Yes and quite a long period with Asia.
It wasnât like what I call hedge-hopping each month, going from one repertoire to another. Again, itâs not only the repertoire; itâs more the actual personal contact with people. Itâs the settling in to the modus operandi of one group and then the modus operandi of the next group. And theyâre all very different, thatâs what keeps it so colorful. Only I used to know how different Asia and Yes really are in sound.
Of course, Geoff is set to understand that, having been with Yes for all this time. Heâs kind of, âWow, itâs so different. The two creatures are very, very different.â And we like them being different. It would be tedious if they were the same. Unless both groups were at the optimum performance level at the time and did everything exactly alike to integrate, but thatâs never going to happen. That doesnât allow for our personalities.
Howâs (new Yes singer) Jon Davison working out?
Heâs a dream. He just couldnât have been better. Many people have said, âWhy didnât you find him before?â But anyway, we didnât. Heâs been, I mean I hate to use words like ideal, you know, but he is really ideal. He has enthusiasm, thatâs the most important thing â love and enthusiasm to want to take this opportunity and make it great for himself. What that does is provide Yes with an almost cataclysmic kind of solution.
It tempts fate to say this about him. I feel, in a way, that flattery and compliments can only go so far. Youâve got to have a shield around you. If too many people keep saying to him, âOh God, I canât believe how well youâre doing this,â thatâs the kind of thing to live up to when he realizes how well heâs doing. So I respect him a lot. Heâs clear. Heâs like Iâd like to think of myself as. Heâs a clear thinker. He doesnât muddy up his lifestyle with things. Heâs sort of spiritually going somewhere. Heâs got a wonderful voice and thatâs what I like about him. I havenât seen many singers close their eyes as much as he does and just get on with it. And he likes to find that space in the song. Heâs really just an amazing find.
Do you have plans to do a record with him?
Iâm not really talking about that yet. No, itâs a bit soon and the first thing you need when you want to make a record is material. I mean, weâve hardly addressed that issue at all. So I donât want to get in the same constant reference to when weâre going to record as we did before with the previous lineup. That twist kind of amplified it a bit by saying, âOh weâre going to make a record,â when in fact we werenât ready to make a record. We didnât have any material. And we started floundering around trying to get material, and the material was a key issue. It is on XXX. Itâs always going to be where you start. If you start by talking it up before youâve even written anything, youâve got a long way to go if youâre gonna do that.
Is there any possibility you see in the future at any time working with Jon Anderson again?
Thereâs a three letter word that starts with âWâ and has âYâ at the end and âHâ in the middle â thatâs really why. Because itâs about strength. Weâve just been talking about Jon Davison. And I mean, hereâs a guy whoâs 41, plays great guitar, he remembers all the words, he sings everything in the right key. You know, I donât want to put anybody under the pressure of being able to compete with that. I donât think there are any people who can.
Itâs the same with keyboard players. We were lucky now, weâve got Geoff. I mean Oliver (Wakeman) was great, Oliver was prepared to play anything of Yes, and so is Geoff. And I think thatâs kind of key to Yes now. Instead of it kind of being an exclusive club where weâll only play Tormato with the right lineup, weâve kind of blown that out of the window and said, âLook, if youâre in Yes, then please be expected to play anything from 1968 to 2012. And I think thatâs the pre-condition and in the original keys and with the original arrangement and with the right sound and texture.â
So all those things are big demands and weâre not laying them on anybody because weâve got people that do that because they want to. You know, they do that because they like it. Theyâre doing it because they love it that way themselves. And Jon Davison being brought up on Yes â he likes the way it is as well. Thatâs why, if weâre talking about something like âAwaken,â and I say to him, âYou know in this part it actually goes (sings), da da da da da da da,â and he goes, âOh yeah, youâre right.â And heâll sing it that way because weâre about that kind of performance. Weâre not about a jam band that takes an idea and throws out half the chords, like Bob Dylan does when he changes some of his great songs into songs that arenât so great. We donât ever want to do that with this. We want to be very faithful to the original version. We canât go there 100 percent, but as much as we can, weâll always try to represent the original version.
So youâre in two bands and youâre still making solo records too.
Yeah, I did release Time this year. Time is a different sort of solo album. In a way, in that interim period, I almost couldnât ever work with an orchestra again. Itâs far too expensive. Whoâs going to arrange it? I donât write music down. But when I met Paul Joyce about five years ago, I said, âLook, I need to work with an arranger. I can arrange stuff, I can write stuff and arrange it myself, but the kind of thing I want to do on this record is not about that; itâs got to be orchestral and Iâm not going to propose that I do that.â The music I gave him, he digitized it into a sort of digital orchestra and we got all of the arrangements written out, and we went in and recorded a real orchestra on all the music and all the guitars we had.
Making an album like that really was, you know, it was a pipe dream. It was something I always hoped I could do. It combines, you know, three classical pieces. We interpreted classical pieces obviously because, once again, Iâm on a different tact when it comes to authenticity. Interpretation allows you to not to play it the way other people did, bringing in music from myselfâŠand my son Virgil wrote one too, and Paul Joyce wrote a couple. It was kind of a collaborative album, and yet itâs just got my name on it. The way I did that that is other people did a lot for me as I was doing other things. So the collaboration was they knew what their field was and they knew that they had a guitar to work with and we already had an orchestration but we wanted to change it. So that was great.
So I canât thank Paul Joyce enough for doing all that. He worked very hard for many years on that. And that isnât how I usually make my records and Iâve made now 12 solo albums and live and the Homebrew series as well. So I guess what I was looking for after Elements when I left a bit of a gap before I did Spectrum, was I donât want to get in a holding pattern here, just churning out records, like some people have done at times. I donât like that churning sensation. I like the idea of a crystalline and got an urgency to do it, even if it takes a few years, I donât mind.
Iâve got other projects in the pipeline; Iâve got Motif Volume 2 in the pipeline, which is solo guitar playing, which is the single most important thing that I do that I like, you know, the way I like it, is that. And everything starts and ends with that. And itâs inspired by Chet Atkins, of course, one of the other great guitarists who could do that, and not everybody does it, not everybody wants to do it. But it does allow me to do a very special thing. Now I plan to continue doing that.
What I havenât been doing, which makes me a bit sad, is solo shows, you know â either trio or one-man shows, which I do enjoy a lot. I mean, there has to be a sacrifice. You want to do Yes and Asia â Iâm not a juggling ball, I canât do any more than that. So there has to be change in the future where I can, you know, resurface in those ways.
Youâre just so busy. I hope you have some hobbies (laughs).
Funny enough, I think hobbies are almost my personal side that I donât talk about a lot because I donât have many. I wouldnât call them hobbies, but you know, interests in things. I didnât used to read books at all and in my middle bit of my life I was a complete non-literary sort of person. It was all sound and visual and all that kind of thing. But strangely I got back into books and they obviously lead me into things that Iâm interested in. Iâm not into novels so much, so I like books that help educate me and lead me into directions I didnât know anything about. And I always instinctively had fun with cars and Iâve liked all forms of art, whether itâs glass or pottery or paintings. And I think that fills my life quite nicely. But mostly, of course, my family, you know, having my wife and Iâve got four kids who have never been to rehab, so think about how proud we are about that (laughs).
(Laughs) Congratulations on that. Youâve been with Yes and Asia for so long, and, of course, a lot of people talk about the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Obviously youâre not in, but youâre certainly eligible. Do you care about that?
Somebody asked me the other day in another interview how I dealt with fame and people telling me Iâm the greatest guitarist in the world. And itâs a similar area. Itâs not something I can exhaust a lot of time on because itâs something thatâs going on with its own kind of momentum, and I create the momentum with my music. And what that does for other people is wonderful, itâs a wonderful spinoff. But as far as the accolades, the gold albums and the awards; I mean, obviously, the first one you get is always the most meaningful because you never had one before. And then, yeah, it can be dangerously blasĂ© to suddenly have like 25 gold albums and absolutely nowhere to put them up.
So coming onto the idea of when they induct you into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, it sounds very majestic and very âoh isnât it worthy.â I donât know how verbal or out in the world I want to go with my real feelings about so maybe I better curtail it and say that to me, the audience are the main people where I know whether weâre getting this right or not. And the accolades, they can come and go, you know, some of them waste in the cupboards after the glory day of getting them. Some of them have created certain levels of problems, you know, why didnât somebody else get it. Then thereâs the whole problem of who thinks itâs worthy? Does everybody in America, for instance, think that everybody whoâs listed in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame are as worthy as the people who arenât listed? (laughs) So itâs a bit like what do you leave out and what do you put in. I guess I donât pay a lot of mind would be my incredibly short answer. I donât pay a lot of mind because I canât really affect it. Itâll either happen or it wonât and Iâm not going to lose sleep over whichever way that goes.