You Gotta Say Yes to Another Excess

You Gotta Say Yes to Another Excess is Yello's third album and was released in 1983. It was the last Yello album to feature founding member Carlos Peron.

Track listing

  • "I Love You" – 3:14
  • "Lost Again" – 4:18
  • "No More Words" – 3:58
  • "Crash Dance" – 2:08
  • "Great Mission" – 2:56
  • "You Gotta Say Yes to Another Excess" – 2:08
  • "Swing" – 3:26
  • "Heavy Whispers" – 3:56
  • "Smile on You" – 3:09
  • "Pumping Velvet" – 3:18
  • "Salut Mayoumba" – 4:40
  • "Two Worlds" (bonus track on some cassette releases)
  • 2005 reissue bonus tracks

  • "Base for Alec" – 2:54
  • "Rubber West" – 3:26
  • "You Gotta Say Yes to Another Excess" (UK promo 12" version) – 4:44
  • "Live at the Roxy NY Dec. 1983" – 3:41
  • "Pumping Velvet" (12" mix) – 4:58
  • "I Love You" (12" mix) – 5:14
  • Charts

    Singles - The Official UK Singles Chart / Gallup (United Kingdom)

    Other

    In 2006, South African ceramicist Elton Harding, translated the opening track 'I Love You' into a ceramic tactile sculpture. The entire song was mapped out onto a rectangular spiral, with each second of the track taking up 1cm. Samples were then represented by unique shapes allowing for the song to be 'read' either by sight or touch.

    Thomas Ellis

    Thomas Ellis or Tom Ellis may refer to:

    Law and politics

  • Thomas Ellis (15th-century MP), in 1421 MP for Kent
  • Thomas Ellis (1569-1627), MP for Great Grimsby
  • Thomas Ellis (Irish politician) (1774–1832), U.K. Member of Parliament representing Dublin City, 1820–1826
  • Thomas J. Ellis, Pennsylvania attorney and politician
  • Thomas Flower Ellis (1796–1861), law reporter
  • T. E. Ellis (1859–1899), Welsh politician
  • Thomas F. Ellis, American lawyer and political activist
  • Tom Ellis (politician) (1924–2010), British Member of Parliament, 1970–1983
  • Religious figures

  • Thomas Ellis (clergyman died 1673) (1625–1673), Welsh clergyman
  • Thomas Ellis (clergyman died 1792) (1711/12–1792), Welsh clergyman
  • Others

  • Thomas Sayers Ellis, American poet and photographer
  • Tom Ellis (actor) (born 1978), Welsh actor
  • Thomas Ellis (Irish emigrant), in 1866 the first European settler in Penticton, British Columbia
  • Tom Ellis (journalist) (born 1932), radio and television news anchor
  • Tommy Ellis (born 1947), NASCAR racing driver
  • Thomas Iorwerth Ellis (1899–1970), Welsh classicist
  • Tom Ellis (journalist)

    Tom Ellis (born September 22, 1932) is a Boston-based journalist, well-known throughout New England for his tenure as anchor for three of Boston's network-affiliated stations. His career in television news spans more than 40 years.

    His career includes stints as a correspondent for WNBC-TV and as an anchor for WABC-TV – both in New York City, and for KONO-TV Channel 12 (now KSAT-TV) in San Antonio. His radio career has included anchor/reporter duties for KVET-AM in Austin, Texas, KWED-AM in Sequin, TX, and KONO-AM/FM in San Antonio.

    Ellis may be the only individual in television history to anchor top-rated newscasts in 3 major markets: San Antonio, TX, Boston, MA, and New York. His newscasts in Boston all have drawn top ratings.

    Early life

    Ellis grew up in the Big Thicket area of Texas. He is a 1958 graduate of the University of Texas.

    Early career

    When he was 17 Ellis worked as a sideshow barker, earning $150 per week. Ellis' first job in television came in 1951, when aproducer from New York approached him to host a baseball pregame show for children sponsored by the Curtiss Candy Company. Ellis hosted the Curtis Knot Hole Gang club, a thirty-minute program before the Dallas Eagles and the Fort Worth Cats of the Texas League. He would interview local youth baseball players.

    Tom Ellis (architect)

    Tom Ellis was a senior partner in the architectural firm Lyons, Israel and Ellis. The work of Ellis and his partners is noteworthy for both the collection of buildings they designed and for their influence on the group of architects who worked for the partnership. When English Heritage listed one of their buildings in 2006 they described the Lyons, Israel and Ellis partnership as 'one of the most influential post-war practices specialising in education, public housing and healthcare'.

    The list of architects who worked for Lyons, Israel and Ellis includes James Stirling, Richard MacCormac, Rick Mather, James Gowan, John Miller, Neave Brown, Eldred Evans, Alan Colquhoun, David Gray and many others. David Gray became a partner in the firm in 1970 and the firm's name was changed to Lyons Israel Ellis Gray.

    Early life and education

    Thomas Bickerstaff Harper Ellis was born in Lancaster in 1911. After attending Lancaster Technical School he was employed in 1929 as an assistant in the Lancaster office of the gardener and architect Thomas Hayton Mawson. During this period he also studied part-time at Lancaster School of Arts and Crafts where his academic work won him a Royal Exhibition (type of scholarship). With the help of this and a Lancashire County scholarship Ellis became a student at the Architectural Association in London (1934–35). A year later he moved to the Royal College of Art and obtained his final architectural qualification in 1938.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Lost Again

    by: Yello

    I told you
    lady
    take me for one day.
    Please don't ask any question
    you know I can't stay.
    I wish the wind was cold
    I wanna hold you
    baby
    hold.
    Only in your arms I'm lost
    don't look at me.
    I wish the wind was cold
    . . .
    I know this is crazy. Let's have a last drink.
    Don't ask where I come from
    and don't ask what I think.
    I leave you
    lady
    full of desire to stay.
    I wish the wind was cold
    . . .
    I told you: Take me for one day.
    Don't ask any question
    you know I can't stay.
    I wish the wind was cold
    . . .
    I wish the wind was cold




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