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Videos Album: Saving My Heart1991

"Saving My Heart"
Single by Yes
from the album Union
B-side
Released1 July 1991[1]
Recorded1989–1991
GenreReggae pop[2]
Length4:41
LabelArista
Arista ASCD-2263 (US)
664 553 (UK)
Songwriter(s)Trevor Rabin
Producer(s)Trevor Rabin
Yes singles chronology
"Lift Me Up"
(1991)
"Saving My Heart"
(1991)
"Make It Easy"
(1991)

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Saving My Heart
Tags

Singles chronology

Saving My Heart
Saving My Heart
1/7/1991

Saving My Heart

Yes

1991 Single
  • Released: 1 July 1991 · Fecha Grabación: 1991 -
    Label: AristaArista ASCD-2263 (US)664 553 (UK) · · Productor: Trevor Rabin

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    Review

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    1991 single by Yes

    "Saving My Heart" is a song by British rock band Yes, written and produced by Yes vocalist and guitarist Trevor Rabin. It was the second single released from their 1991 "reunion" album Union, following "Lift Me Up". "Saving My Heart" peaked at number nine on Billboard`s Mainstream Rock Tracks chart in 1991. "Saving My Heart" reached number nine on the Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. It did not perform as well as "Lift Me Up", the lead single from Union (which topped the chart for six weeks) but outperformed competing Yes single "Make It Easy", a 1981 song released by Yes`s old record label, Atlantic Records, to promote the Yesyears boxed set. "Lift Me Up" and "Saving My Heart" were both issued by Arista Records.[3]

    Background

    The Union album was the result of the merger between Yes (featuring Rabin, bassist Chris Squire, drummer Alan White, and keyboardist Tony Kaye), and Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe, featuring 1970`s-era Yes members Jon Anderson (vocals), Steve Howe (guitars), Rick Wakeman (keyboards), and Bill Bruford (drums).[4]

    "Saving My Heart" was one of the four songs on the album to be written by the Rabin–Squire faction; the others were "Lift Me Up" (the lead-off single), "Miracle of Life", and "The More We Live", a song co-written by future Yes member Billy Sherwood. Three of the four featured Anderson on vocals.[4]

    According to Rabin, the song was originally planned as a collaboration with Supertramp vocalist Roger Hodgson.[5]

    Rabin felt the song, a "pop reggae tune" with a "bluesy guitar solo", did not work as a Yes song, but Anderson disagreed and wanted Yes to perform it.[5]

    Charts

    Chart (1991)

    Peak
    position

    US Mainstream Rock (Billboard)[6]

    9

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    1991 single by Yes

    "Saving My Heart" is a song by British rock band Yes, written and produced by Yes vocalist and guitarist Trevor Rabin. It was the second single released from their 1991 "reunion" album Union, following "Lift Me Up". "Saving My Heart" peaked at number nine on Billboard`s Mainstream Rock Tracks chart in 1991. "Saving My Heart" reached number nine on the Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. It did not perform as well as "Lift Me Up", the lead single from Union (which topped the chart for six weeks) but outperformed competing Yes single "Make It Easy", a 1981 song released by Yes`s old record label, Atlantic Records, to promote the Yesyears boxed set. "Lift Me Up" and "Saving My Heart" were both issued by Arista Records.[3]

    Background

    The Union album was the result of the merger between Yes (featuring Rabin, bassist Chris Squire, drummer Alan White, and keyboardist Tony Kaye), and Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe, featuring 1970`s-era Yes members Jon Anderson (vocals), Steve Howe (guitars), Rick Wakeman (keyboards), and Bill Bruford (drums).[4]

    "Saving My Heart" was one of the four songs on the album to be written by the Rabin–Squire faction; the others were "Lift Me Up" (the lead-off single), "Miracle of Life", and "The More We Live", a song co-written by future Yes member Billy Sherwood. Three of the four featured Anderson on vocals.[4]

    According to Rabin, the song was originally planned as a collaboration with Supertramp vocalist Roger Hodgson.[5]

    Rabin felt the song, a "pop reggae tune" with a "bluesy guitar solo", did not work as a Yes song, but Anderson disagreed and wanted Yes to perform it.[5]

    Charts

    Chart (1991)

    Peak
    position

    US Mainstream Rock (Billboard)[6]

    9