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Lift Me Up (Yes song)

"Lift Me Up"
Yes - Lift Me Up - promo CD single cover.png
Single by Yes
from the album Union
B-side "Take the Water to the Mountain"
"Lift Me Up" (A Cappella opening) - U.S. promotional single
Released April 1991
Recorded 1989-1991
Genre Pop rock
Length 5:03 (Single version
6:30 (Album version)
Label Arista - Arista ASCD-2218
Songwriter(s) Trevor Rabin, Chris Squire
Producer(s) Trevor Rabin
Yes singles chronology
"Rhythm of Love"
(1987)
"Lift Me Up"
(1991)
"Make It Easy"
(1991)
"Rhythm of Love"
(1987)
"Lift Me Up"
(1991)
"Make It Easy"
(1991)

"Lift Me Up" is a song by the progressive rock band Yes. It was the first single released from their 1991 "reunion" album Union. It reached the number-one spot on the Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart in May 1991, and stayed at the top for six weeks. It also charted on the Billboard Hot 100, their last single to do so.

Following Yes's 1987–88 tour to support the Big Generator album, singer Jon Anderson left the band and formed a new group with 1970s-era Yes members Steve Howe (guitars), Rick Wakeman (keyboards) and Bill Bruford (drums). As their new band Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe, the quartet released a self-titled album and went on tour.

Meanwhile, the remaining members of the "official" Yes, guitarist Trevor Rabin, bassist Chris Squire, drummer Alan White and keyboardist Tony Kaye, continued work on a follow-up to Big Generator. Among the songs recorded was the Rabin- and Squire-penned "Lift Me Up", the lyrics of which allude to homelessness:

Lyrically, the verse was a little dark, we tried to make it somewhat vague as to what it was about, but one of the pictures is that it's a homeless person... 'Look around, I've got nowhere to stay... you look me up, you look me down' the guy who goes into the restaurant to use the bathroom and they look at him, 'No you can't come in here.' And he just looks to the sky [and says], 'Lift me up and turn me over,' you know, help me out.

The two competing bands had fought for the rights to use the "Yes" name, with the Squire/Rabin/White/Kaye faction filing suit to prevent Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe from using the name "Yes" during their tour promotion. However, once both factions were signed to Arista Records, the record label decided to combine the musicians' efforts and produce an album, Union, featuring songs from each group. "Lift Me Up" was one of four Rabin or Squire songs included on the album; its follow-up single, "Saving My Heart", was another.


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