Vinyl Record

Yes - 90125

Yes - 90125 album cover

Yes - 90125 on LP vinyl. A 1983 record available from Kilmorna Collection in Listowel, Ireland.

LP ยท 1983

Available from Kilmorna Collection in Listowel.

Buyer notes: 1983 LP, currently available from the Kilmorna Collection vinyl shelf. Pay for pickup in Listowel or ship within Ireland for EUR 5.50.

90125 is the Trevor Rabin and Trevor Horn-era Yes comeback that turned a band begun as Cinema into a multiplatinum 1980s reinvention.. The record's identity is clearest in its sound: precision 1980s art-rock with digital sheen, tight rhythm edits, bright guitars and huge pop hooks. That musical frame keeps the album from feeling interchangeable, because the arrangements point back to the moment that produced it: 1983, the personnel and production choices around it, and the way Yes was being heard by new or returning listeners. What gives it album-story weight is the combination of context and use. It can introduce a newcomer to a specific side of Yes, but it also gives existing fans a reason to revisit the surrounding era. The appeal is not a claim about scarcity; it is the way the record turns biography, repertoire and sound into a playable chapter. On a shelf, it helps answer a practical collector question: which version of Yes's world do I want to hear tonight?

90125 matters because the Trevor Rabin and Trevor Horn-era Yes comeback that turned a band begun as Cinema into a multiplatinum 1980s reinvention. It gives Yes a defined discography moment: not a loose listing, but an album with a usable story for listeners comparing eras, lineups, scenes and production choices.

For collectors, 90125 works best as prog collectors who want the Owner of a Lonely Heart era beside the classic run. It is also useful as a listening-path record: one that can sit beside better-known titles and explain a different angle of Yes's discography without relying on rarity claims or packaging mythology.

precision 1980s art-rock with digital sheen, tight rhythm edits, bright guitars and huge pop hooks

Recommended for: prog collectors who want the Owner of a Lonely Heart era beside the classic run; Fans exploring Yes's discography with context; Record buyers who prefer albums with a clear story and repeat-play value.

Why is 90125 a notable Yes record? It captures the 1983 chapter described here: the Trevor Rabin and Trevor Horn-era Yes comeback that turned a band begun as Cinema into a multiplatinum 1980s reinvention. What does 90125 sound like? The album is best approached as precision 1980s art-rock with digital sheen, tight rhythm edits, bright guitars and huge pop hooks. That sound profile is the main reason it belongs with listeners comparing mood, production and era. Who should consider 90125 on vinyl? It is strongest for prog collectors who want the Owner of a Lonely Heart era beside the classic run, especially when the collection needs this specific period of Yes's work rather than only the most obvious title.