Everything about Conspiracy Band totally explained
Conspiracy was a progressive rock band founded by
Billy Sherwood (formerly of
Yes) and
Chris Squire (bassist in Yes). The band has released two albums:
Conspiracy (2000) and
The Unknown (2003), and a live DVD (2006), but is currently inactive.
History
Squire & Sherwood in Yes
In the late 1980s, Yes's original lead singer
Jon Anderson had left the group to form
Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe with three other former Yes members. Chris Squire brought
Billy Sherwood, a new, young musician he'd met, into the group as a possible new lead singer. With
Trevor Rabin also absent (concentrating on his solo work), a line up of the three remaining Yesmen—Squire,
Alan White and
Tony Kaye—plus Sherwood and guitarist
Bruce Gowdy (Sherwood's band mate in
World Trade) began rehearsals. Rabin subsequently returned to the band and demos were recorded with a line up of Squire, White, Kaye, Rabin and Sherwood.
Squire and Sherwood had formed a strong writing partnership, but events were to see Sherwood pushed out of Yes before he'd officially joined. A reunion with Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe left no official role for Sherwood, although one Squire/Sherwood composition, "The More We Live—Let Go", was released on the Yes album
Union (1991). Sherwood played most of the instruments on the piece, including bass.
The Chris Squire Experiment
Having written a body of work, Squire and Sherwood went on a brief
US tour in 1992 under the name The Chris Squire Experiment. The rest of the band were White on drums,
Jimmy Haun on guitar (Haun had played much of the guitar on
Union) and
Steve Porcaro on keyboards. The set for the 25 August 1992 show in San Jose, California was: "Open Your Eyes", "The Lonesome Trail", "You're the Reason", "One World Going Round", "Days of Wonder", "Follow Our Dreams". Another show included "Long Distance Runaround". Further collaborative work by Squire and Sherwood cropped up: "Say Goodbye" appeared on the second
World Trade album
Euphoria while a Yes demo they'd written, "Love Conquers All", was released on the
YesYears collection.
The years passed—work continued on and off on the material while Sherwood's relationship with Yes went through many phases—when finally, in the late 1990s, a release under the Chris Squire Experiment name was announced, an album to be called
Chemistry.
However, again, events in the Yes camp took over. Sherwood officially joined the band in 1997 and the band moved to new management and a new record label. Although Yes had recorded new material in late 1996 with a previous line-up, this belonged to a different record label (who released it on
Keys to Ascension 2 later in 1997). The new label wanted an album recorded quickly and, to this end, two tracks from
Chemistry ("Open Your Eyes" and "Man in the Moon") were re-worked by Yes for
Open Your Eyes (1997).
Conspiracy
The use of these two tracks from
Chemistry stalled the release while Squire pondered what to do. Eventually, in 2000,
Conspiracy by Chris Squire & Billy Sherwood was released. It appears that everything on
Chemistry made it to
Conspiracy (presuming a song title on
Chemistry of "You are the Light of My Life" became the song "Light in My Life" on
Conspiracy). Not wishing for the album to be seen as a re-release of existing material, the two
Open Your Eyes tracks and a third familiar song ("Say Goodbye") were included on
Conspiracy, but as 'hidden' bonus tracks. Versions of "The More We Live—Let Go" and "Love Conquers All" were also included on
Conspiracy, plus material known from The Chris Squire Experiment tour.
Squire and Sherwood share lead vocals on the album, with Squire playing most of the bass parts and Sherwood playing most of the guitar and keyboard parts, plus contributing some drumming. The name Conspiracy was intended to represent Squire and Sherwood's desire to collaborate with different musicians. The album included appearances from White, Haun and World Trade drummers
Jay Schellen and Mark T Williams.
Conspiracy also included one track based on a set of sessions involving Squire,
Steve Stevens and
Michael Bland: "Violet Purple Rose" consists of a recording from the sessions with overdubs from Sherwood.
The Unknown and a DVD
The album name became a band name and Conspiracy moved from being a collection of recordings to a fully fledged group based around Squire (bass, vocals), Sherwood (guitar, keys, vocals) and Schellen (drums). The album
The Unknown was released in 2003. Haun guests again, as do
Michael Sherwood (Billy's older brother) and Jordan Berliant (better known as Yes's then manager). The initial pressing of the album includes a bonus track entitled "I Could", an alternate form of the first half of a Yes track, "Finally", on
The Ladder (1999). Many of the album lyrics refer to the events of the
9/11 terrorist attacks. Cover art was by
Bob Cesca, who has also worked with Yes.
Shortly after leaving Yes in 2000, Sherwood had announced a project called The Unknown including brother Michael, Haun, Schellen and
Jonathan Elias. Nothing more came of this, but the title track of the Conspiracy album was co-written with M. Sherwood and Haun and derives from those earlier plans.
A live band was assembled in 2004 with Squire (bass, vocals), B. Sherwood (guitars, keys, vocals), Schellen (drums), M. Sherwood (keys, vocals) and Scott Walton (keys). They rehearsed, but touring plans were abandoned. However, a private live show was recorded and released on DVD in 2006. Their set included Conspiracy tracks, material from
Open Your Eyes and from Squire's 1975
Fish Out of Water solo album.
Band dissolves & a new project
The band were looking towards a third album, but progress slowed dramatically when Squire—who had been living on the US west coast, like Sherwood—moved back to London, UK. By 2006, Sherwood was leading the project with Schellen, but with Squire no longer involved. A new album was announced and expected to include two songs written by Sherwood and Gowdy, left over from an abortive World Trade album. Others appearing include former Yes members
Tony Kaye,
Geoff Downes, and former
Gentle Giant guitarist
Gary Green.
(External Link
) (Kaye and Green have worked with Sherwood on a number of recent projects.) However, in 2007, Sherwood announced that this project, called
Psy-Op, will be released under a different name and, while finished, will be put back so as not to compete with Sherwood, Kaye and White's new band, .
In a late 2007 interview, Sherwood said, "I don’t foresee another Conspiracy record, simply because Chris lives in London and I live here in the States. I’m doing Circa now and he's doing his own thing. We have drifted apart in terms of working together simply by location/geographically more than anything. I’m enjoying playing bass a lot right now, my focus is on Circa and obviously Conspiracy is dear to my heart, but it took a turn and went into a dormant mode here so really see anything in the future right here at the moment."
(External Link
)
Discography
Albums
Further Information
Get more info on 'Conspiracy Band'.
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