Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Yesterdays (band)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Genres
  
Progressive rock

Labels
  
Seacrest Oy

Genre
  
Progressive rock

Record label
  
Seacrest Oy

Years active
  
2000-present

Website
  
www.yesterdaysband.eu

Origin
  
Romania (2000)

Yesterdays (band) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Members
  
Bogáti-Bokor Ákos Enyedi Zsolt Fehér Róbert Benjámin Bölönyi-Márton Beáta Kecskeméti Gábor Márton-Sipos Dóra

Yesterdays is a Hungarian symphonic progressive rock band based in Cluj Napoca, Romania.

Contents

Its musical style has been compared by various reviewers to Yes [1], Quidam [2], Pat Metheny[3], Anna Maria Jopek [4], Eclipse (from Brazil) [5] and Genesis

Biography

In 2004 the band won its first First Prize at the Félsziget Fesztivál's Talentum competition in Targu Mures (Romania).

In 2006 it released its album, Holdfénykert (Moonlit Garden) on a small Hungarian record label: Rockszerviz. This first edition was sold out in 6 months. The band played in the Netherlands at the ProgFarm Festival (4 November 2006, Bakkeveen, The Netherlands).

In February 2007, Yesterdays and Rockszerviz Records organized the first MiniProg Festival (Budapest, Ship A38) in Budapest with two other bands: Flamborough Head from the Netherlands and ex-Yes guitarist Peter Banks' Harmony In Diversity (U.K.).

After some member changes the band worked on some new songs, a 20 minutes long epic for the upcoming Colossus Magazine/Musea release The Spaghetti Epic III and on a 5 minutes progrock hit with Jonas Reingold, the bassist of The Flower Kings, for Dante's Inferno (a new Colossus/Musea project CD box).

In 2008, Holdfénykert was re-released by the famous French label, Musea Records. The CD came out as an "Enhanced and Remastered" edition, with some multimedia bonuses.

In July 2008 "It's So Divine" from the Holdfénykert album reached position 23 on "City FM 106,2" (Romanian Radio) National Top 30 Hit Chart.

Yesterdays' second album called Colours Caffé has been released by Hungarian label Rockszerviz in January 2011. The album features 11 new songs and a hidden track. It seems that Yesterdays had the chance to play with their Hungarian influences, like Tamás Mohai (ex. East, Faxni, RABB, etc.), Hungary's most wanted session drummer Gergely Borlai. The album's mastering was done by King's X guitarist Ty Tabor at the Alien Beans Studio. Not long after the album's debut it was released by DiskUnion in Japan as a double CD (enhanced with a bonus CD, including old demos, alternate versions and even brand new songs).

Projects

  • The Spaghetti Epic III. was a project CD with 3 bands involved [6], each band had to write a 20 minutes long progressive rock epic inspired by Sergio Corbucci's famous tragic western movie called "The Great Silence"
  • This CD was released in January 2009 by Musea Records

  • Inferno was a 4CD project with 34 involved bands from all around the world [7] and thematically it is based on Dante's Inferno, the first part of the Divine Comedy. Yesterdays did its contribution with two guest musicians: David Speight (current drummer of ex-Yes guitarist Peter Banks (U.K.) and bass guitar player of The Flower Kings: Jonas Reingold.
  • This CD was released in December 2008 by Musea Records

  • Purgatorio was a 4CD project too with 34 bands composing 34 songs based on the canto's of Dante. Purgatorio is the second part of the Divine Comedy. Yesterdays did a song based on Canto XXX.
  • This CD was released in October 2009 by Musea Records

  • Paradiso was the final chapter of Dante's Divine Comedy trilogy, a very exciting 4 CD box. Yesterdays covered Dante's Canto nr.XXXIII, the title of the song is "33".
  • Yesterdays paid their tribute to the Swedish progressive rock band The Flower Kings covering their song called My Cosmic Lover. The 4CD box was released by French label Musea Records
  • Members

    Songs

    Canto XXXIII2010
    Isteni Színjáték2008
    Suite Pauline2009

    References

    Yesterdays (band) Wikipedia