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It Can Happen (Yes song)

"It Can Happen"
It Can Happen cover.jpg
Single by Yes
from the album 90125
B-side "It Can Happen" (live)
Released 1983 November 7
1984 June (single)
Recorded 1983
Length 5:29 (album version)
4:18 (single edit)
Label Atco Records
Songwriter(s) Jon Anderson, Trevor Rabin, Chris Squire
Producer(s) Trevor Horn
Yes singles chronology
"Leave It"
(1984)
"It Can Happen"
(1983)
"Hold on"
(1984)
"Leave It"
(1984)
"It Can Happen"
(1984)
"Hold on"
(1984)
90125 track listing
"Hold On"
(2)
"It Can Happen"
(3)
"Changes"
(4)

"It Can Happen" is a song by the progressive rock band Yes, from their 1983 album 90125. It was released as the third single from that album, reaching number 51 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1984. It also reached number 5 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock chart.

Following the 1981 breakup of the band, bassist Chris Squire and drummer Alan White joined with South African guitarist Trevor Rabin to form a new band, called Cinema. An early version of song "It Can Happen", sung by Squire, was written and recorded during this time.

Squire, White and Rabin eventually joined forces with former Yes members Jon Anderson, Tony Kaye and Trevor Horn, changing the name of their new band Cinema to "Yes" in the process. Anderson rewrote the lyrics of "It Can Happen" and it was included in 90125, with Anderson singing the verses.

The Cinema version of the song was released on 1991's Yesyears box set, and later on the remastered version of 90125. The version sung by Anderson was released as a single in 1984, and was included in several later Yes compilations, including the In a Word: Yes (1969–) box set and The Ultimate Yes: 35th Anniversary Collection.

A video for the song is included in the Greatest Video Hits DVD, and a live performance appears in the 9012Live concert video.

The dialogue that can be heard under the guitar solo - about 3 minutes and 13 seconds in - on the 90125 version, is taken from The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde. The lines, "...Come, old boy, you had much better have the thing out at once...." and "...that is exactly what dentists always do. Now, go on! Tell me the whole thing" are spoken by the character Algernon Moncrieff, in the play.


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