Skip to main content
MusicRadar MusicRadar The No.1 website for musicians
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • Artist news
  • Guitars
  • Guitar Pedals
  • Synths
  • Keyboards & Pianos
  • Controllers
  • Guitar Amps
  • Drums
  • Software & Apps
  • More
    • Recording
    • DJ Gear
    • Acoustic Guitars
    • Bass Guitars
    • Tech
    • Tutorials
    • Reviews
    • Buying Guides
    • About Us
More
  • Lemmy vs Dylan
  • Are 'Friends' Electric?
  • Flava D - DnB is hard
  • Prince's drummers
  • 95k+ free music samples
Don't miss these
Derek Trucks takes a slide solo on his Gibson SG as Tedeschi Trucks Band performs live at Madison Square Garden.
Artists Derek Trucks is one of the greatest slide players of all time – here’s how he decides when to use it
Man in orange shirt playing drums with a guitar player
Drum Gear Best drum thrones 2025: my pick of budget-spanning stools for comfort behind the kit
Kids hands on a beginner keyboard
Keyboards & Pianos Best keyboards for beginners 2025: Get started with our expert pick of beginner keyboards for all ages
Rush in the '70s
Artists “The high priests of conceptual rock!” Every Rush studio album ranked - from worst to best
LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 10: Birdy performs at the VIP Opening of the David Bowie Centre, V&A East Storehouse, on September 10, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Dave Benett/Getty Images for David Bowie Centre at V&A East Storehouse)
Singles And Albums Jeff Beck, Roxy Music and Miles Davis all make the list of David Bowie’s 15 favourite tracks
Clem Burke, Ancienne Belgique (AB), Brussels, Belgium, November 1998
Drummers Clem Burke's 10 essential drum albums
Ray Cooper
Artists Percussionist Ray Cooper tells the story of his ‘lost’ live collaboration with Elton John
Rick Davies
Artists “I think a certain amount of friction is inevitable”: How Rick Davies described the conflict that ruined Supertramp
Drummers Listen to 11 isolated drum tracks from rock's drumming legends
Rainbow
Artists “Ritchie and I wrote some wonderful things”: How Ritchie Blackmore and Ronnie James Dio invented ‘castle rock’
Ozzy Osbourne and Zakk Wylde tear it up onstage in 1989. Ozzy is shirtless. Wylde his shirtless, too – and he plays his bullseye graphic Les Paul.
Keyboards & Pianos “That actually came from me and Oz jamming on the piano in my apartment in North Hollywood”: From Ozzy Osbourne to Papa Roach, Fleetwood Mac to George Harrison, here's 5 career-defining songs you didn’t know were written on the piano
Plugins Future owns
Plugins Our resident platinum award-winning mixer and producer shares 10 of his go-to plugins
Drummers When British rock drumming ruled the world
A composite image of Steve Vai [left] playing his green PIA Ibanez signature guitar onstage with the Satch/Vai band, and right, the late, great Allan Holdsworth playing an S-style with a cigarette smoking wedged on the strings.
Artists Steve Vai on why Allan Holdsworth – the fusion virtuoso who wrote his own rules – was the GOAT
Phil Collins, Steve Hackett, Mike Rutherford, Tony Banks and Peter Gabriel of Genesis in 1975
Bands “Some people might say we went too far”: Genesis dissect their bonkers but brilliant prog swan song
  1. Artists
  2. Singles And Albums

Rick Wakeman's 10 favourite prog-rock albums of all time

News
By Hamish Mackintosh published 20 November 2012

The keyboard legend chooses his ultimate progressive opuses

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Journey to the centre of his thoughts

Journey to the centre of his thoughts

“I learned an invaluable lesson from a kid in Argentina when we were playing Buenos Aires in 2002.” says former Yes man and all-round keyboard legend Rick Wakeman. “I came out of the hotel and this 16-year-old-boy asked me to sign his copy of my Six Wives of Henry VIII album. As I was signing it I asked him ‘what does a 16 year-old like about this old music?’ and he looked at me, quite hurt, and said, ‘it might be old to you, Mr Wakeman, but I only heard it for the first time last week. When you hear something for the first time, it’s new.’ I’ve never forgotten that.”

One of prog’s undisputed doyens, Wakeman’s contribution to the genre is immeasurable. Ever seeking to expand his sonic repertoire, Wakeman became a respected confidante and adviser of all the prime movers in early synthesizer development, which gave rise to an amazing piece of networking.

“My proudest moment was introducing Bob Moog to Katoh San [founder of synth behemoth Korg] at the Frankfurt music fair… it was like putting two lovers together!” Rick explains. “Neither of them could see their own importance in the synthesizer world; they were both famous in their own right whereas they both considered themselves quite insignificant.

“It was ridiculous: here were these two guys who changed the face of keyboards - and music in many respects - and they were terrified to meet one another as they thought the other wouldn’t be interested. Bless them - both no longer with us”

Classic Rock’s exclusive Fanpack release of Rick Wakeman’s re-recorded solo masterpiece, Journey To The Centre Of The Earth, was only made possible by another synchronicitous tale of a long-lost musical score found coupled with some intensive restoration work.

“The last performance, I think, was in 1979, and just after that I signed to MAM management, which later folded,” Rick tells us. “In about 1983 I got a request to tour Journey in South America. All my stuff had been in storage with MAM and we couldn’t locate any of it and were told most of the storage stuff had been skipped, which was horrendous.

“Back then, of course, everything was done by hand - the music was copied by hand - so what there was was all gone. I got asked numerous times over the years to perform Journey but we couldn’t do it.”

Surely a full-stop end to the story but, as Rick reveals, there was a happy ending.

“In 2008 a huge cardboard packing case arrived at the house, which sat in my garage for about five months before I took it out. It was full of music but none of it was mine. It was incredibly badly water-damaged but something made me keep going through it and the hairs on the back of my neck stood up when I reached the bottom and saw a grey, gaffa-taped cover that we’d put on the conductor’s score of Journey. I knew straight away what it was - I was, quite literally, shell-shocked.”

After passing the find on to friend and musicologist Guy Protheroe, there then followed almost a year’s worth of work to restore and digitise the score.

How was the original version of Journey to the Centre of the Earth recorded, though? Did Rick have a lot of studio gear to work with back in 1974?

“I did the whole demo on a Revox reel-to-reel, a Fender Rhodes with a Clavinet on top of it and a Mellotron at its side,” he recalls. “It was just a case of bouncing tracks on the Revox and doing a rough guide of what would be happening musically then adding a very rough vocal track myself and adding spoken guides like ‘narration 1 starts here’ on the tape.”

How does Rick feel, then, about the influence of prog and its recent resurgence? “I think the fact that, if you listen to the music from the ‘60s that prog followed on from, the songs then were very formatted. To a large extent it was ‘intro-verse-verse-chorus-verse-solo-chorus-fade-out’. All prog did was to say, “we’re not going to do that… we’re going to break the rules and if we feel like doing something, then we’re going to do it.

“What’s happened over the years is that there’s now a little bit of prog in almost everything. So it’s had an influence.”

Indeed it has, but which of the great prog rock albums does Rick Wakeman consider to be the best? You’re about to find out.

NEXT: Rick Wakeman’s 10 favourite prog-rock albums of all time

Page 1 of 11
Page 1 of 11
King Crimson - In The Court Of The Crimson King

King Crimson - In The Court Of The Crimson King

“I have absolutely no doubt about choosing this one as it was just light years ahead of its time. It’s distorted to fuck when you listen to it because of the limitations of how it was recorded but it was such a game-changing album.

“I still see his Lordship every once in a while and I said to him recently, ‘Robert, if you announced that you were going to do Court of The Crimson King in its entirety live, you’d sell out the O2!’. I’d be first in the queue. Robert’s always been a future man, though, and doesn’t really want to look back.”

Page 2 of 11
Page 2 of 11
Vanilla Fudge - Vanilla Fudge

Vanilla Fudge - Vanilla Fudge

“Their very first album was, again, just way ahead of its time. I remember buying it and loving it then I remember buying their next albums and they were rubbish! Normally it’s the other way around and you get to the third album and that’s the pivotal creative statement but, with them, it’s the first album that’s tremendous and I don’t know what happened to them after it!

“It was also a little unfortunate timing; when it came out in the ‘60s it just seemed to disappear.”

Page 3 of 11
Page 3 of 11
Pink Floyd - The Wall

Pink Floyd - The Wall

“Again, it’s how much is ‘prog’ and how much is whatever you like to call it but, because of the concept (and I like conceptual stuff) The Wall was a stroke of genius.

One of the most interesting things was that because they had thrown in a commercial track like Another Brick In The Wall which was a big hit that drew a lot of people to the album that wouldn’t necessarily have gone there otherwise. Whether deliberate or not I thought it was a masterstroke… almost as good as unfastening the giant pig from Battersea Power Station!”

Page 4 of 11
Page 4 of 11
Muse - The Origin Of Symmetry

Muse - The Origin Of Symmetry

“First time I heard this was when John Sugar was putting together 6Music and they were doing trial programmes. John had previously had a company called Wise Buddha who I used to do a lot of voiceovers for to go out on Radio 2 and the World Service.

“He asked me to do one of their test programmes and he let me hear Muse and I thought, ‘Oh boy… I like this’. I thought at the time that, if they could avoid being influenced by their record company then they’d do some amazing stuff. It was interesting to follow them and see how they developed.”

Page 5 of 11
Page 5 of 11
Deep Purple - Shades of Deep Purple

Deep Purple - Shades of Deep Purple

“I consider this to be a prog album. When you listen to what they did with tracks like Help and when you hear what Jon Lord did with the Leslie… that’s prog. Taking something and making it into a different animal; taking a piece like Help and shaping it into something completely different to how it was.

“They did it with some of the other tracks on the album too, which they could do with Jon and Richie [Blackmore] being such phenomenal players and Ian [Paice] being a drummer in the mould of Bill Bruford - I consider them both to be technically brilliant drummers. I know they moved slightly more towards rock afterwards but Shades was a truly pivotal album.”

Page 6 of 11
Page 6 of 11
Genesis - Nursery Cryme

Genesis - Nursery Cryme

“This was their first album with Steve Hackett and it was important to what direction they were going to go in as a band. They could so easily have gone in a Yes direction but instead they went on from here more into the song format. Nursery Cryme remains a very interesting album musically.”

Page 7 of 11
Page 7 of 11
Junior's Eyes - Battersea Power Station

Junior's Eyes - Battersea Power Station

“I was thinking of going with something a little more modern with The Mars Volta but I decided to choose this one.

Junior’s Eyes only did one album and it was overlooked, although it has been re-released and it’s become one of those cult albums. It was produced by Tony Visconti in 1969 when prog-rock didn’t really exist as such but they didn’t fit in with anything that was happening at that time.

“They took basic things like a 12-bar groove and just made it different. I think they did a few gigs but I just don’t think people were ready for them. We hadn’t quite reached the stage where people just wanted to listen to bands instead of dancing to them so there wasn’t a home for them. I have no idea what happened to any of the guys from the band but this is a great album.”

Page 8 of 11
Page 8 of 11
Ozzy Osbourne - Ozzmosis

Ozzy Osbourne - Ozzmosis

“This is an album I played on but I can assure you it’s not why I picked it. It’s what I lovingly call a prog-metal album. We’d been mates for donkey’s years and when I was in New York while we were making this Ozzy said he had quite a few Mellotron bits for me to do.

“The first track we did was Perry Mason and Ozzy knew exactly how he wanted it to sound and I told him that it sounded very prog. At that time, for metal bands, the thought of having a keyboard anywhere near them was unheard of. I told Ozzy I couldn’t believe he was making a concept album and he laughed and said, ‘Well we can now!’

“Ozzy is very bright and switched on. He was there when everyone was putting their parts down and would ask people to play things a certain way or change things slightly to get the sound he wanted. He’d had 8-track heads built to fit on a 24-track tape-machine to record the drums with because he wanted that fat sound. I was very, very impressed with how hands-on Ozzy was - he’s a damn sight cleverer than anyone would ever give him credit for.”

Page 9 of 11
Page 9 of 11
Yes - The Yes Album

Yes - The Yes Album

“I wasn’t on this one but it’s a similar thing to what I said about Genesis previously as to what direction the band was going to take with tracks like Starship Trooper and Yours Is No Disgrace. Genesis turned one way at the junction and Yes turned the other way, which was quite a brave thing to do at the time as prog-rock/orchestral-rock - call it what you will - still hadn’t crossed over from being underground.

“In that respect I think this was a very important album for Yes. The previous albums had Beatles covers on the - Time And A Word was even almost folky in some areas - so The Yes Album was a very brave step to take things to the next level.”

Page 10 of 11
Page 10 of 11
Emerson, Lake and Palmer - Tarkus

Emerson, Lake and Palmer - Tarkus

“Keith Emerson is a great friend and, again, somebody who didn’t listen to what other people said and just did what he wanted to do: if you didn’t like it, tough shit! That’s why he’s made so many good albums, really.

“The two guys that took the Hammond organ to their own new levels were Keith and Jon Lord. The tragedy was that, last year, the three of us planned to play together for the Sunflower Jam at the Albert Hall. Keith had a medical problem with his hand and couldn’t do it so I ended up doing it with Jon and we all said we’d just have to do it the next year. Sadly, now, we’ve lost Jon. I miss Jon greatly.”

Page 11 of 11
Page 11 of 11
Hamish Mackintosh
Read more
Rush in the '70s
“The high priests of conceptual rock!” Every Rush studio album ranked - from worst to best
 
 
LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 10: Birdy performs at the VIP Opening of the David Bowie Centre, V&A East Storehouse, on September 10, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Dave Benett/Getty Images for David Bowie Centre at V&A East Storehouse)
Jeff Beck, Roxy Music and Miles Davis all make the list of David Bowie’s 15 favourite tracks
 
 
Clem Burke, Ancienne Belgique (AB), Brussels, Belgium, November 1998
Clem Burke's 10 essential drum albums
 
 
Ray Cooper
Percussionist Ray Cooper tells the story of his ‘lost’ live collaboration with Elton John
 
 
Rick Davies
“I think a certain amount of friction is inevitable”: How Rick Davies described the conflict that ruined Supertramp
 
 
Listen to 11 isolated drum tracks from rock's drumming legends
 
 
Latest in Singles And Albums
Liam Gallagher, Noel Gallagher of Oasis perform onstage at the Oasis Live '25 World Tour
Oasis tour film promises “deeply-moving” scenes of the Gallaghers repairing their relationship
 
 
Lee Ranaldo, Kim Gordon, and Thurston Moore of the Sonic Youth perform at Shoreline Amphitheatre on May 16, 1995 in Mountain View, California
"We went to Memphis, ate a lot of barbecue”: Sonic Youth are teasing... something in 2026
 
 
The cover of Bohemian Rhapsody reissue
“You actually had to be good at your instrument”: Roger Taylor and Brian May remember Bohemian Rhapsody
 
 
The Rolling Stone The Last Time cover
“It gave us a pathway of how to do it”: Sixty years of The Last Time – the Stones’ big breakthrough
 
 
Phil Collins, Steve Hackett, Mike Rutherford, Tony Banks and Peter Gabriel of Genesis in 1975
“Some people might say we went too far”: Genesis dissect their bonkers but brilliant prog swan song
 
 
Brian May in 1975
“It felt like there wasn’t anything we couldn’t do”: Queen’s A Night At The Opera to get fiftieth anniversary reissue
 
 
Latest in News
Van Halen and Kool & the Gang on tour in 2012
How Van Halen ended up choosing an unlikely opening band for their 2012 tour
 
 
 Ozzy Osbourne and Andrew Watt attend the 2024 Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame
“He said bass is the most important thing in a rock song”: Andrew Watt on what Ozzy Osbourne taught him about mixing
 
 
Stolen violin pictures
Celebrated violist appeals for information in the case of the stolen bow collection
 
 
Labi Siffre, The Prince's Trust Rock Gala 5 June 1987 Wembley Arena . (Photo by Solomon N’Jie/Getty Images)
"I found myself in my studio sat down at the keyboard”: Labi Siffre on the origins of his biggest hit
 
 
Massive
“Violinists have their Stradivarius', guitarists have their Strats – and producers have Massive”: How Native Instruments’ Massive became the go-to bass synth for a generation of music-makers
 
 
Tom Misch in the studio
“Music is fundamentally about connection": Tom Misch is now taking applications for Wildflower 2025
 
 

MusicRadar is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...