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Before the Moody Blues toured the album, Moraz was fired from the band. In September 1991, Moraz sued the group for $500,000 as well as wrongful dismissal, claiming the group decided to split their profits four ways instead of five, and wished to be paid royalties he
Whether that was just Chris trying to give an excuse why they fired him i dunno. I know Patrick was pissed off because he had spent a fortune on keyboards and equipment to play with Yes and back then a lot of the money was made with the records and they only made 1 with him when it shouldve been 3.
27 de may. de 2015 · I found an interesting interview on the Patrick Moraz website: http://dmme.net/interviews/moraz.html – Were you forced to leave or parting company was friendly? Unfortunately, I was forced to leave. And even though, at the time, the split “was not made to appear acrimonious”, I suffered extremely and extensively.
6 de sept. de 2016 · That “plot” occurred during the making of the album “Keys of the Kingdom” in 1990-1991 when Moraz was fired from The Moody Blues just before the band went on tour (he was listed on the album credits for “Keys of the Kingdom” as just providing keyboards for three songs under the heading “Additional personnel.”)
5 de nov. de 2023 · There was one cabinet reshuffle. Keyboard player Patrick Moraz was “let go”: Yes claimed he’d been “missing rehearsals” (Moraz spoke of “psychological pressures,” saying not everybody “played fair”). With typically labyrinthine Yes logic, his replacement on keyboards was the man he’d replaced – Rick Wakeman.
Yes recorded the album in Montreux, Switzerland, the homeland of Patrick Moraz. Moraz, however, was fired from Yes early in the sessions, the rest of the group claiming that success went to his head, while Moraz was unhappy that his ideas for the group were not being taken on board.
21 de oct. de 2023 · published 21 October 2023. Rick Wakeman was out, new boy Patrick Moraz was in, and Yes were about to make their most underrated album of the 70s. (Image credit: Getty Images) It’s 1973 and Yes singer Jon Anderson is at home listening to a couple of albums he’s just been given.