Your favorite prog rock memories just got a 2025 upgrade. Yes announced The Fragile Tour 2025, The Album Series, delivering something increasingly rare in today’s festival-dominated landscape—a complete album experience that honors musical architecture over streaming singles. This isn’t background music for scrolling; it’s focused listening that rewards your full attention.
The tour stretches from Wallingford, Connecticut to Reno, Nevada between October 1 and November 16. Each show features “Fragile” performed front-to-back, plus deep cuts from their catalog that built progressive rock’s foundation. While most artists deliver greatest hits packages designed for shortened attention spans, Yes commits to the album as artistic statement—continuing the experimental spirit that made tracks like “Close to the Edge” essential listening alongside other mind-bending ’60s innovations that still sound futuristic today.
Roger Dean’s otherworldly album artwork receives AI enhancement through dynamic video walls. His fragile planet imagery—originally symbolizing environmental themes and the band’s creative psyche—now transforms into living concert visuals. Fans can purchase original Dean pieces at venue galleries, bridging rock memorabilia and fine art.
The current lineup—Steve Howe, Geoff Downes, Jon Davison, Billy Sherwood, and Jay Schellen—represents five decades of progressive evolution. Their interpretation of “Roundabout” and “Heart of the Sunrise” carries both historical weight and contemporary energy that festival slot performances simply cannot match.
“Fragile” marked Yes’s transformation from British art rock experimenters to American arena headliners. Released in 1971, it featured each member’s solo contribution—a radical concept showcasing individual virtuosity within collective vision. Steve Howe recalls: “Each of us wrote and designed a solo piece, which was Bill [Bruford]’s great idea.”
Your concert experience extends beyond typical rock shows. The album’s complex arrangements demand focused listening, rewarding attention with musical discoveries that streaming playlists fragment into bite-sized pieces. This tour celebrates when albums were complete artistic statements rather than singles collections.
At $69 starting price, you’re investing in progressive rock education and emotional time travel. More importantly, you’re supporting an art form that refuses to compromise its vision for algorithmic approval. This tour signals that prog’s complexity isn’t obsolete—it’s essential for listeners craving depth over disposability, especially as major awards shows like the 2025 AMAs welcome back legendary performers who similarly prioritize artistic integrity over fleeting trends.


























