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Oct. 25, 1999 |
"We've always been interested in the modern, the avant-garde," Yes front man Jon Anderson reminds us. "We were the first band to use lasers onstage." Those far-out stage shows, combined with the band's sci-fi themes and Heavy Metal-esque album art appealed to the Dungeons & Dragons crowd of the '70s. Now, Anderson and company are trying to inspire a whole new generation of geeks with lyrics like: Anderson says he's long been attracted to video games. "I've thought about them for 10 years, ever since I met Jaron [Lanier, the virtual reality guru] in 1989," he notes. "They can be one of those immersive sound/color/perfume experiences -- real healing things that touch our chakras." Looks like it'll touch Yes' wallet, too -- the group's affiliation with the game is more than just a single tune on a soundtrack. It's full-on, multimedia, you- Like Age of Empires, Starcraft and Command & Conquer before it, Homeworld is a real-time strategy game: The goal is to harness resources, develop technologies and then smear your enemy. The game has been well received: Gamespot.com says, "Homeworld is the sort of game that can inspire unbridled hyperbole in game reviewers" -- because of its stunning 3-D graphics and carefully crafted story line. The game's internal narrative world opens with the discovery of ancient starship technology that the descendants of the original star farers use to return to their original "Homeworld." Yes may be hoping that the new video-game generation similarly discovers the band's ancient recordings. Anderson says that originally, "I wanted to do the whole new album as a video game -- even started doing work on the sketches and design. But nobody was interested." But maybe Anderson's finally about to get his chance. He's now collaborating with Sierra Studios, Homeworld's publisher, on a "visual game experience" of his own.
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