Bass profundo: The wit and wisdom of Chuck Panozzo

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Bass profundo: The wit and wisdom of Chuck Panozzo

Postby styxfanNH » Mon May 07, 2007 6:48 am

Excerpts from Chauncey Mabe's interview:

On the Catholic Church: I'm very harsh on the church in my book, but I grew up in a very Catholic Italian family and I went to seminary for a year, and I know it from the inside. I still resent the fact the Catholic Church cannot differentiate between homosexuality and pedophilia. Besides, after 2,000 years of men wearing dresses, no wonder the priests are confused.

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Re: Bass profundo: The wit and wisdom of Chuck Panozzo

Postby Zan » Mon May 07, 2007 7:10 am

styxfanNH wrote:Excerpts from Chauncey Mabe's interview:

On the Catholic Church: I'm very harsh on the church in my book, but I grew up in a very Catholic Italian family and I went to seminary for a year, and I know it from the inside. I still resent the fact the Catholic Church cannot differentiate between homosexuality and pedophilia. Besides, after 2,000 years of men wearing dresses, no wonder the priests are confused.




God, I do love that man.
-Zan :)

believe me, i know my Styx

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Postby brywool » Mon May 07, 2007 7:14 am

Great response from Chuck.
NO. He's NOT Steve F'ing Perry. But he's Arnel F'ing Pineda and I'm okay with that.
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Postby blt man » Mon May 07, 2007 10:42 am

From the interview:

"One would write ballads, the other heavy rock, and the third almost a kind of rockabilly. Then it's John and I who had to figure out how to make them go."

What's rockabilly (I presume he is referring to Tommy)?
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Postby StyxCollector » Mon May 07, 2007 10:52 am

blt man wrote:From the interview:

"One would write ballads, the other heavy rock, and the third almost a kind of rockabilly. Then it's John and I who had to figure out how to make them go."

What's rockabilly (I presume he is referring to Tommy)?


Rockabilly isn't exactly what I'd call Tommy's stuff .. rockabilly is more like Stray Cats.
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Postby Rockwriter » Mon May 07, 2007 10:53 am

blt man wrote:From the interview:

"One would write ballads, the other heavy rock, and the third almost a kind of rockabilly. Then it's John and I who had to figure out how to make them go."

What's rockabilly (I presume he is referring to Tommy)?


Rockabilly is that kind of country/rock amalgam made famous by early Elvis, Carl Perkins and so on. And it's actually an interesting way to view some of Tommy's material, as I have often observed that many of his melodies are country/bluegrass melodies that are being expressed in a rock arrangement. You know, when you hear Tommy play on acoustic guitar the songs in the way he wrote them, you realize how arrangement-driven a lot of Styx' albums were.

A very interesting interview!


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Postby StyxCollector » Mon May 07, 2007 10:55 am

Well, I just got Chuck's book.

It's not very long, and hope to have my review up ASAP.
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