Esquire sported a sound that represented the buoyant side of progressive rock, and with
Chris Squire's wife singing lead, the band resembled Renaissance in their airy but stable musical approach. With their 1987 debut album,
Charles Olins keeps the tracks flowing with his fluent keyboard activities, and guitarist
Pat Thrall, most notably of
Asia fame, pinches in with some arousing string work that evens out the synthesizer. There are traces of the
Yes family all over this album, with
Alan White playing drums and
Chris Squire singing backup vocals. Even former
Yes singer and Buggles mastermind
Trevor Horn is involved with the mixing of the tracks. With all these
Yes counterparts, it's no surprise that the songs simulate the same type of instrumental and, to an extent, lyrical composition as
Yes. With titles like "Up Down Turnaround," and lines such as, "Could you conceive/How it read/A book in a still room/Life is a silent movie," the comparisons are evident. But even with such correlations, tracks like "Hourglass" and "Blossomtime" emit a certain prog flair that sheds its own character and individuality, giving the album some differentiation. This album stands up much better than 1996's
Coming Home, which contains barely any artistic motivation.