Announced today (although I will say that I had received word of this a couple months back) is a long-awaited re-release for Talk, the 1994 album which marked the last time we would hear the full YesWest lineup on record.
It's wonderful to see this "lost" classic get the full archival treatment, from a very interestingly titled distributor, Spirit of Unicorn Music. The release is scheduled for May 24th on vinyl and CD, featuring a bonus disc of edits, demos, and instrumental versions as well as a full live show from the Finger Lakes Performing Arts Center in Canandaguia, New York on June 19th, 1994.
The press release contains one particular piece of information which is historically interesting:
Talk was also one of the first albums to be recorded and edited entirely digitally, without using traditional audio tape. It was a groundbreaking move at the time, but the technology, as advanced as it was, was not without its problems. In January 1994, Northridge in the San Fernando Valley in California was hit by an earthquake measuring 6.7 on the Richter Scale, and production had to be halted as the early Apple Mac computers they were working on were being affected by the tremors. To put the technology into context now, in its unedited form, Talk took up 34GB of memory, which today could be transferred via a flash drive in seconds.
I imagine there were any number of albums being recorded at the time which were affected by the Northridge Quake but another which has been publicly documented is The Black Crowes' third album Amorica, also released in 1994.
And this is a perfect time to get into the Talk frame of mind with my essay on the album from 2016.
https://rabinesque.blogspot.com/2016/03/talk-and-modern-sound-of-yeswest.html