IF IT’S OUT THERE, IT’S IN HERE
THE RETURN OF TREVOR RABIN
Trevor Rabin has revealed the debt of gratitude he owes to his wife, Shelley May, as he prepares to release his new studio album, Rio, on October 6 via InsideOut. This, his sixth solo album, is the first collection of vocal-led material from the South African-born , multiinstrumentalist, composer and producer since Can’t Look Away in 1989. It also makes a marked detour from his celebrated film score work. His previous solo album, 2012’s Jacaranda, was an instrumental affair.
“There was quite a lot of pressure to make a record like this, and those demands have bordered upon insult – largely from my wife,” Rabin tells Prog.“She told me,‘Fuck the films, get your own record done.’So I owe a lot of the credit to her.”
Since leaving Yes following 1994’s Talk and largely as a prequel to touring as part of Yes Featuring Jon Anderson, Trevor Rabin, Rick Wakeman (ARW) in 2016, the musician has carved out a successful career as a composer of soundtracks for a wide number of Hollywood movies including the blockbusters Armageddon (1998), Gone In 60 Seconds (2000) and the action sequel Bad Boys II (2003).
“Once I joined Yes I did one solo album [Can’t Look Away] in that time and 10 years from my life seemed to vanish,”says Rabin as he ponders the motivation behind the origins of Rio.“I did the instrumental album [Jacaranda], which wasn’t really a planned thing, and then I became involved in film scores so everything else in my musical world was put on the backburner. With this one I really had to clear the decks.”
He continues: “I’ve done 30-odd movies with [Academy Award-winning producer] Jerry Bruckheimer, and it took me saying,‘I’m not feeling it on this one’to find the time to make this album. There’s a lot of pressure in movies; you have to deliver. That forced me to have a little more self-discipline. And of course with Yes, you’re dealing with a business.”
Getting back into the business of making a solo album would prove a wonderful experience for Rabin, though he’s a little mystified as to why it took him so long to do so.
“I really enjoyed it and I don’t know what caused me to stop [making my own music]… just a lack of discipline, I guess,” theorises Rabin, who elected to play just about all of the instruments himself while following a somewhat eclectic path.
“I even considered calling the album The Demographic Nightmare,” he says with a laugh. “I just wanted to get into what, for me, were a few different areas, even doing some countrytype stuff. There’s some prog things and a political song about the nightma