New interview with Dennis at ddytalk.com

This was posted to my Styxbook group today, so I thought I'd pass it along here. The audio of this interview is actually pretty interesting.
Sterling
Ex-Styx Singer Talks About “First Time”
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 20, 2009
Former Styx vocalist Dennis DeYoung hasn't played with the multi-platinum rock group he co-founded as a teenager in more than ten years, but he still makes his living mostly from playing his old Styx hits. DeYoung performs his classic hits like “Lady”, “Come Sail Away”, “Mr. Roboto”, “The Best of Times” and “Show Me The Way” in concert to appreciative audiences, but there's one song that the rocker looks back on as the one that got away. In 1979, at the peak of Styx' success, DeYoung's ballad “Babe” scored the group its only #1 hit, but instead of following up with another DeYoung ballad, “First Time”, Styx instead chose a different direction, and “First Time” was never released. DeYoung has performed the song very rarely since. In an exclusive interview with Ron Stevens of www.ddytalk.com, DeYoung recently lamented what might have been.
“When it comes to that particular song, that was a terrible mistake,” the singer maintains. “Here’s my theory: If 'First Time' had been released, it would have been absolutely, unquestionably, a top 3 single. Which meant at that time that Cornerstone would have sold another 4 to 500,000 albums, ‘cause we were the biggest band in America. And Cornerstone might have sold 4 million copies—or more. That’s how not releasing that turned the tables on that record.”
Since 1999 Dennis DeYoung has carved out a solo career performing the music he created with Styx in concert, as well as releasing new albums. His latest album 100 Years From Now was a hit in Canada; its title song reached #1 in Quebec, and DeYoung is cautiously optimistic about its chances in the US. “You know, I’m just happy that I have a record company that is going to release the record and give me some visibility, and allow me the opportunity to be heard by somebody,” he says. “But beyond that I think you can’t really have expectations anymore in the current culture of radio and TV. It’s not really geared for people who are over 60 years old, to say the least. It’s not even geared for people over 40.”
Rounder Records will release 100 Years From Now on April 14th. The US release contains two additional tracks, “Private Jones” and “There Was A Time”. Read the entire Dennis DeYoung interview or listen to the audio file at www.ddytalk.com
# # #
Sterling
Ex-Styx Singer Talks About “First Time”
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 20, 2009
Former Styx vocalist Dennis DeYoung hasn't played with the multi-platinum rock group he co-founded as a teenager in more than ten years, but he still makes his living mostly from playing his old Styx hits. DeYoung performs his classic hits like “Lady”, “Come Sail Away”, “Mr. Roboto”, “The Best of Times” and “Show Me The Way” in concert to appreciative audiences, but there's one song that the rocker looks back on as the one that got away. In 1979, at the peak of Styx' success, DeYoung's ballad “Babe” scored the group its only #1 hit, but instead of following up with another DeYoung ballad, “First Time”, Styx instead chose a different direction, and “First Time” was never released. DeYoung has performed the song very rarely since. In an exclusive interview with Ron Stevens of www.ddytalk.com, DeYoung recently lamented what might have been.
“When it comes to that particular song, that was a terrible mistake,” the singer maintains. “Here’s my theory: If 'First Time' had been released, it would have been absolutely, unquestionably, a top 3 single. Which meant at that time that Cornerstone would have sold another 4 to 500,000 albums, ‘cause we were the biggest band in America. And Cornerstone might have sold 4 million copies—or more. That’s how not releasing that turned the tables on that record.”
Since 1999 Dennis DeYoung has carved out a solo career performing the music he created with Styx in concert, as well as releasing new albums. His latest album 100 Years From Now was a hit in Canada; its title song reached #1 in Quebec, and DeYoung is cautiously optimistic about its chances in the US. “You know, I’m just happy that I have a record company that is going to release the record and give me some visibility, and allow me the opportunity to be heard by somebody,” he says. “But beyond that I think you can’t really have expectations anymore in the current culture of radio and TV. It’s not really geared for people who are over 60 years old, to say the least. It’s not even geared for people over 40.”
Rounder Records will release 100 Years From Now on April 14th. The US release contains two additional tracks, “Private Jones” and “There Was A Time”. Read the entire Dennis DeYoung interview or listen to the audio file at www.ddytalk.com
# # #