Page 1 of 1

Ricky Phillips Interview - 8-31-05

PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 10:01 am
by SuiteMadameBlue
Here ya go Carrot Styx and Ricky fans :) Just received this from one of the "detectives" :)

August 31, 2005
Styx have it covered on new CD
By LINDSEY WARD - Winnipeg Sun

We've all heard Mr. Roboto like, a zillion times. And with its beepy, sci-fi rhythm, recreating it might seem like child's play.

Turns out it's not. Ditto for pretty much every other Styx tune. And getting hired to play with the Chicago-based classic pop-rockers is no small feat, either.

"Styx is a very exclusive club," says the band's newest member, bassist Ricky Phillips. "The band doesn't think of it as the new Styx -- they think of it as a continuum."

Luckily, Phillips had a VIP pass to the club, which includes singer-guitarists James Young and Tommy Shaw, percussionist Todd Sucherman and Canadian singer-keyboardist Lawrence Gowan.

The bassist had shared stages with Styx when he played with pop-rockers The Babys and Bad English, both fronted by singer John Waite. He and Sucherman had also worked together, and he and Shaw had both played with Motor City madman Ted Nugent.

But that doesn't mean he knew Styx's intricately crafted songs.

"Styx's music is very unique ... they're not common arrangements," Phillips says, adding his biggest challenge since joining the band in 2003 has been memorizing their two-hour sets.

"You don't know what's going to happen next, and I think that's what's been the charm about Styx's music over the years."

In 1972, Styx began as theatrical prog-rockers, breaking into the mainstream with radio hits Lady, Come Sail Away and Blue Collar Man. Following several artsy concept albums in the '80s, they jumped back on to the charts with '90s power ballads like Show Me the Way.

Despite a full plate of their own hits, Styx's latest release is a covers album entitled Big Bang Theory -- which Phillips claims happened by accident.

"It wasn't because we said 'Hey let's do a cover album,' " he says. While performing at Dallas's Crossroads Guitar Festival last year, they tossed a cover of The Beatles' I Am the Walrus into their set and before they knew it, they had recorded a full disc of classics from rock heroes like The Who, Jimi Hendrix and Willie Dixon.

"We decided the only way to make a cover record special was to do the songs that influenced us when we were younger," Phillips says.

Which explains the whole "big bang" concept.

"It was the beginning of our universe and what became our universe. They were the songs that influenced us."

Styx heat up CanWest Global Park tomorrow night, following a set by San Francisco theatre-rockers The Tubes. Doors open at 6 p.m. Admission is $40.



http://jam.canoe.ca/Music/2005/08/31/1194795.html

Re: Ricky Phillips Interview - 8-31-05

PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 10:39 am
by froy
SuiteMadameBlue wrote:Here ya go Carrot Styx and Ricky fans :) Just received this from one of the "detectives" :)

August 31, 2005
Styx have it covered on new CD
By LINDSEY WARD - Winnipeg Sun

We've all heard Mr. Roboto like, a zillion times. And with its beepy, sci-fi rhythm, recreating it might seem like child's play.

Turns out it's not. Ditto for pretty much every other Styx tune. And getting hired to play with the Chicago-based classic pop-rockers is no small feat, either.

"Styx is a very exclusive club," says the band's newest member, bassist Ricky Phillips. "The band doesn't think of it as the new Styx -- they think of it as a continuum."

Luckily, Phillips had a VIP pass to the club, which includes singer-guitarists James Young and Tommy Shaw, percussionist Todd Sucherman and Canadian singer-keyboardist Lawrence Gowan.

The bassist had shared stages with Styx when he played with pop-rockers The Babys and Bad English, both fronted by singer John Waite. He and Sucherman had also worked together, and he and Shaw had both played with Motor City madman Ted Nugent.

But that doesn't mean he knew Styx's intricately crafted songs.

"Styx's music is very unique ... they're not common arrangements," Phillips says, adding his biggest challenge since joining the band in 2003 has been memorizing their two-hour sets.

"You don't know what's going to happen next, and I think that's what's been the charm about Styx's music over the years."

In 1972, Styx began as theatrical prog-rockers, breaking into the mainstream with radio hits Lady, Come Sail Away and Blue Collar Man. Following several artsy concept albums in the '80s, they jumped back on to the charts with '90s power ballads like Show Me the Way.

Despite a full plate of their own hits, Styx's latest release is a covers album entitled Big Bang Theory -- which Phillips claims happened by accident.

"It wasn't because we said 'Hey let's do a cover album,' " he says. While performing at Dallas's Crossroads Guitar Festival last year, they tossed a cover of The Beatles' I Am the Walrus into their set and before they knew it, they had recorded a full disc of classics from rock heroes like The Who, Jimi Hendrix and Willie Dixon.

"We decided the only way to make a cover record special was to do the songs that influenced us when we were younger," Phillips says.

Which explains the whole "big bang" concept.

"It was the beginning of our universe and what became our universe. They were the songs that influenced us."

Styx heat up CanWest Global Park tomorrow night, following a set by San Francisco theatre-rockers The Tubes. Doors open at 6 p.m. Admission is $40.



http://jam.canoe.ca/Music/2005/08/31/1194795.html



File this one in the who cares club

PostPosted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 11:01 am
by bugsymalone
Apparently, under penalty of death I suppose, the name DeYoung cannot ever be mentioned by the interviewer.

Some continuum. :roll:

Bugsy

PostPosted: Fri Sep 02, 2005 2:39 am
by RoyalOakRoadie
Bloody hell! There is a war in Iraq, there are millions homeless, and hundreds dead in the Gulf, and we are still bitching about DDY not being in Styx???

To quote William Shatner on SNL to Trekkies...

"Get a life!"

PostPosted: Fri Sep 02, 2005 3:17 am
by classicstyxfan
R.O.R. I see your point, but this is a place many of us come to get away from the gloominess of real life......sort of like a cyber "comfort food"

There are plenty of places to go on the web if you want more info, or to chat about all of that other stuff, and I'm OK with a labeled off-topic thread about darned near anything.....

But to say people should come here and not use the board in the way it was intended..........sorry, cant back you up on that.

-Classic

PostPosted: Fri Sep 02, 2005 3:24 am
by yogi
Its all JY's fault!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

PostPosted: Fri Sep 02, 2005 3:38 am
by RoyalOakRoadie
classicstyxfan wrote:R.O.R. I see your point, but this is a place many of us come to get away from the gloominess of real life......sort of like a cyber "comfort food"

There are plenty of places to go on the web if you want more info, or to chat about all of that other stuff, and I'm OK with a labeled off-topic thread about darned near anything.....

But to say people should come here and not use the board in the way it was intended..........sorry, cant back you up on that.

-Classic


I'm not saying thats what should be talked about here, I was trying to contrast the level of importance of trivial things like DDY, who's been out of the band for HOW long?

I agree that this is a forum for the discussion of the band, but beating a dead horse has just gotten old.

PostPosted: Fri Sep 02, 2005 3:40 am
by sadie65
I actually agree. I saw (and believe me, I am a huge "DeYoungian") for him to be mentioned in the article. Ricky would have no reason to mention him...or at least none that I can see.

Ah well...

PostPosted: Fri Sep 02, 2005 3:42 am
by bugsymalone
Bloody hell! There is a war in Iraq, there are millions homeless, and hundreds dead in the Gulf, and we are still bitching about DDY not being in Styx???

To quote William Shatner on SNL to Trekkies...

"Get a life!"


I understand that some people have a problem separating out the mundane from the profound, and don't see a reason to dabble in the former when the latter is so horrific.

I suggest that those who feel something like responding to specific subjects on this board is ridiculous should simply stay away and, by all means, do not read, and respond to, the posts here.

Bugsy

PostPosted: Fri Sep 02, 2005 3:47 am
by jrnyman28
bugsymalone wrote:Apparently, under penalty of death I suppose, the name DeYoung cannot ever be mentioned by the interviewer.

Some continuum. :roll:

Bugsy


Well, in contrast to Journey, it is refreshing that the article did not spend much of it's time talking about Dennis and the past. Journey has that problem, every article about them has to spend much time comparing Steve to Perry, or recanting the history.

How did Styx avoid or get over that?

PostPosted: Fri Sep 02, 2005 3:56 am
by sadie65
jrnyman28 wrote:
bugsymalone wrote:Apparently, under penalty of death I suppose, the name DeYoung cannot ever be mentioned by the interviewer.

Some continuum. :roll:

Bugsy


Well, in contrast to Journey, it is refreshing that the article did not spend much of it's time talking about Dennis and the past. Journey has that problem, every article about them has to spend much time comparing Steve to Perry, or recanting the history.

How did Styx avoid or get over that?


They didn't. As a rule, they are still asked, as is Dennis at nearly every opportunity, about each other. Depending on your point of view and your stance on the split, you either like the answers given, or you use it as fuel to further your own perception of things. Just my take at least.

Now can we get back to discussing important things...like where did JY put his knee high boots? Did he keep them? Come on...burning issue here :wink:

PostPosted: Fri Sep 02, 2005 4:02 am
by SuiteMadameBlue
RoyalOakRoadie says:

I'm not saying thats what should be talked about here, I was trying to contrast the level of importance of trivial things like DDY, who's been out of the band for HOW long?


6 years, 3 months and 15 days and about 3 hours. I'm just not sure on the hours - LOL

Sadie says:

Now can we get back to discussing important things...like where did JY put his knee high boots? Did he keep them? Come on...burning issue here


I'll have to add that to the questions - LOL They're really going to think I'm a doofus with most of the questions that I'm bringing - LOL

PostPosted: Fri Sep 02, 2005 4:15 am
by bugsymalone

Bugsy said:

Apparently, under penalty of death I suppose, the name DeYoung cannot ever be mentioned by the interviewer.

Some continuum


Bugsy replies to self:

OK, ok. Apologies. I think I worded my response a bit, uh, strongly??? Sorry.

And sometimes I feel schizophrenic (and so do I!) on this subject.

I think my response was actually to something unrelated to what has been posted here with regards to the Current Lineup. I won't even bother to go into it here.

Onward.

Sadie, you are right . Where ARE those boots anyway???

Suite: This is now the number one question.

Bugsy

PostPosted: Sat Sep 03, 2005 2:57 am
by Zan
sadie65 wrote:Now can we get back to discussing important things...like where did JY put his knee high boots?



:::STANDING OVATION:::

Bravo. I'd really like to know. Better yet - take them out one night, so I can get a picture.

PostPosted: Sat Sep 03, 2005 3:29 am
by Monker
To quote William Shatner on SNL to Trekkies...

"Get a life!"


Well, like I said in the Journey forum recently...

...."So, you are saying we should talk more about the solo albums then?"

Nobody's gonna listen, especialy Froy.

PostPosted: Sat Sep 03, 2005 3:36 am
by Monker
Now can we get back to discussing important things...like where did JY put his knee high boots? Did he keep them? Come on...burning issue here


No, because every single time a thread is started about Styx, it has to go down this path...even when your beloved Suite STARTS the thread.