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  <title>Episode 3: A Whale of a Tale!</title>
  <description>Is there any purer expression of the prog-rock moment than the one-side-per-track &amp;quot;concept album&amp;quot;?&amp;amp;nbsp; How about a double concept album?&amp;amp;nbsp; This week, Charlie, Henry and Bill&amp;amp;nbsp; say Yes to the excess and set sail across the four sides and 80-plus minutes of Yes's 1973 &amp;quot;Tales from Topographic Oceans.&amp;quot; Conceived when vocalist Jon Anderson got his hands on Parahamhansa Yogananda's &amp;quot;Autobiography of a Yogi,&amp;quot; gestated in a Georgia hotel room by candelight and born in a London studio decorated as a farm (complete with bales of hay), the result is the record that became an instant symbol of prog rock &amp;quot;going too far.&amp;quot;&amp;amp;nbsp; But could it be that Anderson, Squire, Howe, Wakeman and White found treasure in the musical deeps?&amp;amp;nbsp; Climb aboard... UPDATE 3/06/23: AUDIO CLIPS ADDED. Click here for Charlie Nieland's &amp;quot;musical map&amp;quot; of &amp;quot;Tales from Topographic Oceans.&amp;quot; Yes's &amp;quot;Tales From Topographic Oceans&amp;quot; full album on YouTube </description>
  <author_name>An Embarrassment of Prog</author_name>
  <author_url>https://sites.libsyn.com/445095</author_url>
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