Yess

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Tape label from Bandung Indonesia. Active from late 70s to late 80's.
The name and design of the J-cards was inspired by the group Yes.

until 1988,
Yess’ cassettes (and so as others) were never considered as pirated products
Yess paid tax to Indonesian government
There was a legal tax label attached to each cassette covers, the label was issued by ASIRI (the Indonesian Association of Recording Industry)
State did not adjudge this act of copying foreign vinyl records as piracy
In this sense, both Yess and its consumers did not commit any act of piracy
At the time, everything was pirated – nothing was official.

history :
From 1975 to 1988, in the city of Bandung, Indonesia, the output of a record label called Yess Records was responsible for inspiring a generation of Indonesian listeners to pursue a musical life with progressive rock at the center. However, calling Yess a “label” doesn’t necessarily compute with its day-to-day operations: Their output was composed almost entirely of bootlegs, created by recording existing releases onto a C-60 or C-90 Maxell cassette.

For the three owners – A Fung, Ian Arliandy and Ihok, about whom little is known – audio quality was a high priority, even if following international copyright law was not. But with a total of 731 releases over Yess’s lifespan, the cassette brokers played an essential role in introducing its local customers to truly weird music – Marillion, Pendragon, Tangerine Dream, King Crimson and, of course, their namesake Yes among them – with the bluish-green covers of their cassettes still sitting on the shelves of unassuming record shops or nostalgic collectors throughout Indonesia.

Initially founded between 1972 and 1973 by A Fung under the name Diamond Records, it wasn’t long before Ian Arliandy was invited in as a curator. While A Fung primarily managed the re-recording process and Ihok took care of the store’s day-to-day business, Arliandy tended to a specific curatorial vision: “I really want to make [Yess] all about progressive music. My mission was to spread this kind of music. The more unintelligible progressive music gets, the better,” he once said.

Generally, the musical interests of Indonesians throughout the 1970s didn’t really expand beyond classic rock – the Led Zeppelins and Deep Purples of Western pop culture – or dangdut, the popular rhythmic music influenced by Arabic and Malay structures. Due to tight regulations under the authoritarian government, television was nothing more than a channel of propaganda and print publications needed a specific permit and, as a result, music didn’t travel fast. For Yess, the word “alternative” was commonly tossed around: their brand of prog and avant-garde music was the alternative to pop, just as cassettes were the alternative to rare and expensive records.

Yess were more than just purveyors of prog, though, and its restless work re-recording choice imports from the US, UK, Netherlands, Singapore and beyond became less constrained by genre as their output increased.

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  • TheF1shOutofWater's avatar
    unlike other Indonesian bootleg cassette labels at the time, Yess Records is one of the more popular ones and are very special, the tape on these Yess releases are very good quality and were duplicated in real-time by Lin Fung (owner of the Yess label). I highly recommend checking out their compilation series (Slow Heavy, Blues In Memories, Heavy Memory Hits, Slow Rock and Special Slow.)

    There are also many variants of the Yess J-Cards according to my researching and here's all of the ones I could find;
    - First being the rarer teal cover with the drummer clip art on the track listing section (back cover)
    - Second being the teal cover but with a shiny coating on the Yess logo
    - Third being a teal one but the drummer clip art on the back has been replaced with the flying bird image found on Yes - "Fragile" back cover
    - Fourth being a very hard to find orange cover version with a different Yess logo with where there's only one 'S' in the name (Yes)
    - Fifth being a blue version of the orange one found on the Yes/Yess release of Led Zeppelin - "Physical Graffiti"
    - Sixth being the classic gradient blue cover
    - Seventh being a very hard to find misprint edition where the gradient background is red instead (according to sources, this was a mistake with the printing company that Yess contracted to do the printing which is why they exists)
    - Eight being the more uncommon green gradient background
    - (and finally,) Ninth being the more modern Yess logo version which was produced around during the tail-end of the bootleg cassette era of Indonesia (1985-1987?)
    • suwandi's avatar
      suwandi
      I personally knew the 3 names mentioned, quite close actually. Lin Fung was the owner of the company. His main business was (and still is) a bicycle shop across the street where Yess shop as we knew it took place in Jalan Veteran 77 (?), Bandung (it was Lin Fung's brother empty shop next to his furniture shop; mastering room was at the basement of the shop). Lin Fung was a truly an audiophile, he had the knowledge and the expertise to deal with mastering and reproducing cassette tapes. The last time I met him back in 2013, he suffered a hearing problem as he used headphones way too much during Yess heyday. Ian was the master-reel-maker with Lin Fung's stood right behind. The last time I met him he worked in hospitality area in a hotel in Pasir Kaliki. He was the man behind almost all Yess' releases (in of the which groups and songs' list/structure). Ian is Ihok older brother and they both lived next to another in an alley way along Jalan Sunda. I was once the largest Yess cassette collector with 660+ titles which unfortunately I got rid off in 1989 when I switched to CD. All Yess original LPs were mailed over from the Netherlands, purchased and selected by Roy, an Indo-Dutch man who lived in Den Haag. I met him once when he visited Bandung in late 1983 when he gave me a treasure ... a Marillion "Script for a Jester's Tear" T-Shirt.
      When Yess closed the biz down in early 1988, Ihok gave me all their catalogue albums and unused covers. So sad that I threw them all away. You never appreciate them until they're gone ... there goes the saying!
      I hope this brief additional info is helpful, cheers!

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