Moderator: Andrew
Rockwriter wrote:This is Dave Ling's review of 'The Grand Delusion' that ran in the issue of Classic Rock magazine that is just leaving the stands. Good old Dave . . . I think he liked it! As always, it's interesting to see how differently people perceive the same piece of work.
I hope everyone is well.
Sterling
THE GRAND DELUSION: THE UNAUTHORIZED TRUE STORY OF STYX
Sterling Whitaker
www.thegranddelusion.com
Disregard the perception of Styx as goodie two shoes purveyors of saccharine ballads like Babe. The Grand Delusion is a gripping tale of rampant egotism, backstabbing and jealousy that provides fascinating insight into the Chicagoans’ flawed machinations. Former vocalist/keyboard player/chief songwriter Dennis De Young – discreetly sacked and reinstated at their commercial peak – is portrayed as unforgivably tyrannical, though Whitaker doesn’t take sides in a saga that includes drugs, mental illness, blackmail and that scourge of the rock world; interfering wives. The band’s bitter and ignominious topple from multi-platinum sales to hawking solo albums from PO Boxes reveals why James ‘JY’ Young once remarked that the original band would only ever reunite “when they’re playing [ice] hockey on the River Styx”.
[9/10]
Dave Ling
rajah2165 wrote:Rockwriter wrote:This is Dave Ling's review of 'The Grand Delusion' that ran in the issue of Classic Rock magazine that is just leaving the stands. Good old Dave . . . I think he liked it! As always, it's interesting to see how differently people perceive the same piece of work.
I hope everyone is well.
Sterling
THE GRAND DELUSION: THE UNAUTHORIZED TRUE STORY OF STYX
Sterling Whitaker
www.thegranddelusion.com
Disregard the perception of Styx as goodie two shoes purveyors of saccharine ballads like Babe. The Grand Delusion is a gripping tale of rampant egotism, backstabbing and jealousy that provides fascinating insight into the Chicagoans’ flawed machinations. Former vocalist/keyboard player/chief songwriter Dennis De Young – discreetly sacked and reinstated at their commercial peak – is portrayed as unforgivably tyrannical, though Whitaker doesn’t take sides in a saga that includes drugs, mental illness, blackmail and that scourge of the rock world; interfering wives. The band’s bitter and ignominious topple from multi-platinum sales to hawking solo albums from PO Boxes reveals why James ‘JY’ Young once remarked that the original band would only ever reunite “when they’re playing [ice] hockey on the River Styx”.
[9/10]
Dave Ling
I agree with him. The book was unnecessarily harsh on DDY.
BlackWall wrote:I am interested in this book, but does it still have to be ordered online(from Amazon)?
Rockwriter wrote:
LOL, you should have seen what I left out, or what people said off the record. You must believe me when I say how much worse it could have been. I was as diplomatic as I could be in the circumstances.
Sterling
Blue Falcon wrote:Give us a hint...how much worse COULD it have been?
stabbim wrote:Blue Falcon wrote:Give us a hint...how much worse COULD it have been?
Heh. Does "off the record" have some strange new definition of which we were not previously aware?![]()
rajah2165 wrote:Rockwriter wrote:This is Dave Ling's review of 'The Grand Delusion' that ran in the issue of Classic Rock magazine that is just leaving the stands. Good old Dave . . . I think he liked it! As always, it's interesting to see how differently people perceive the same piece of work.
I hope everyone is well.
Sterling
THE GRAND DELUSION: THE UNAUTHORIZED TRUE STORY OF STYX
Sterling Whitaker
www.thegranddelusion.com
Disregard the perception of Styx as goodie two shoes purveyors of saccharine ballads like Babe. The Grand Delusion is a gripping tale of rampant egotism, backstabbing and jealousy that provides fascinating insight into the Chicagoans’ flawed machinations. Former vocalist/keyboard player/chief songwriter Dennis De Young – discreetly sacked and reinstated at their commercial peak – is portrayed as unforgivably tyrannical, though Whitaker doesn’t take sides in a saga that includes drugs, mental illness, blackmail and that scourge of the rock world; interfering wives. The band’s bitter and ignominious topple from multi-platinum sales to hawking solo albums from PO Boxes reveals why James ‘JY’ Young once remarked that the original band would only ever reunite “when they’re playing [ice] hockey on the River Styx”.
[9/10]
Dave Ling
I agree with him. The book was unnecessarily harsh on DDY.
Blue Falcon wrote:Rockwriter wrote:
LOL, you should have seen what I left out, or what people said off the record. You must believe me when I say how much worse it could have been. I was as diplomatic as I could be in the circumstances.
Sterling
I'm amazed at how people throw the word 'tyrant' around like it's no big deal. Heck, even Chuck referred to DDY as a tyrant...if that was true then why not quit the band and start The Chuck Panozzo Project? Saddam Hussein was a tyrant...although I'm sure if a statue of DDY is put up in Chicago somewhere, that JY will come by and topple it.![]()
Give us a hint...how much worse COULD it have been?
Heh. Does "off the record" have some strange new definition of which we were not previously aware?![]()
Looking at the history and the things that were said, it's not hard to surmise whose comments went further, and on which topics.
Blue Falcon wrote:Rockwriter wrote:
LOL, you should have seen what I left out, or what people said off the record. You must believe me when I say how much worse it could have been. I was as diplomatic as I could be in the circumstances.
Sterling
I'm amazed at how people throw the word 'tyrant' around like it's no big deal. Heck, even Chuck referred to DDY as a tyrant...if that was true then why not quit the band and start The Chuck Panozzo Project? Saddam Hussein was a tyrant...although I'm sure if a statue of DDY is put up in Chicago somewhere, that JY will come by and topple it.![]()
Give us a hint...how much worse COULD it have been?
stabbim wrote:Blue Falcon wrote:Give us a hint...how much worse COULD it have been?
Heh. Does "off the record" have some strange new definition of which we were not previously aware?![]()
Looking at the history and the things that were said, it's not hard to surmise whose comments went further, and on which topics.
Rockwriter wrote:Well, I didn't actually reveal anything that shouldn't be said. I just said that there was more.
Rockwriter wrote: And not all of what was said that I didn't include was about Dennis, for that matter. I could have written a darker portrayal of several others as well, if that's what I had intended to do.
stabbim wrote:Rockwriter wrote:Well, I didn't actually reveal anything that shouldn't be said. I just said that there was more.
Right. That "off the record" jibe was not directed at you, but at someone else for knowing that some stuff was not (by your description, anyway) for public consumption, but then asking to hear it anyway.Rockwriter wrote: And not all of what was said that I didn't include was about Dennis, for that matter. I could have written a darker portrayal of several others as well, if that's what I had intended to do.
Of course. It's just that DDY was the subject at hand ("tyrant" comment, and all that jazz.)
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