Listening Party - Paradise Theatre

"Not For Today, But For All Time"
The Paradise Theatre, Styx's most over the top concept album to date with a worldwide tour with a finely crafted stage show with a choreographed introduction that brings the theatre to light in a real time concert setting. Coming off being repositioned to appeal to a broader audience and being named by Gallup as the most popular band in the country on the heels of the success of "Babe", Paradise Theatre took the USA by storm and even made an impact worldwide. Showcasing a jazzier sound with even more horns, Paradise Theatre does bring back some straightforward rock that was arguably missing on Cornerstone. With only 1 real ballad, it gets back to a more balanced sound. with contributions from all three members. While DDY envisions the concept and contributes more than half of the material, all three principle songwriters bring strong showings to the album as at least one of each's songs receives significant airplay.
A few other pieces of trivia about Paradise Theatre
- idea based upon a painting by the same artist that did the cover for DDY's 100 Years from Now Solo Album and was used to represent America's decline in the 70s. Interestingly, DDY came out and publically supported Ronald Reagan for President in 1980 election, just prior to the January 1981 release date of Paradise Theatre.
- Styx's only number #1 album and it hit it for #1 for 3 weeks, - April 4, April 11, May 9
- An example of how hot the band was at the time and how ready radio was for new Styx product, the first single, Best of Times, ENTERED the charts at #35 in its first week in release - which was crazy for a first single (by comparison, Come Sail Away entered the charts at #79 and had a slow climb to the top 10).
- I mentioned this earlier - only week (April 25th) where two Styx songs were in the top 20 (BOT #9, TMTOMH at #19). The next week, TMTOMH would continue its run upward, while Best of Times was fading out to #23, thus making this the only week where Styx ever accomplished this feat
- Recreated Styx cred at Rock Radio with two Rock Singles - RTP (#8), Snowblind (#22)
- 5th single NEGAP had a middling chart performance at #54 on the pop charts.
- The laser etching LP was really innovative for the time
So, relive the early 80s and Styx's contribution to the year 1981 in rock - the peak year for arena rock with huge albums from Styx, REO, Journey, and Foreigner.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=adOITE1 ... 8B789C4727
The Paradise Theatre, Styx's most over the top concept album to date with a worldwide tour with a finely crafted stage show with a choreographed introduction that brings the theatre to light in a real time concert setting. Coming off being repositioned to appeal to a broader audience and being named by Gallup as the most popular band in the country on the heels of the success of "Babe", Paradise Theatre took the USA by storm and even made an impact worldwide. Showcasing a jazzier sound with even more horns, Paradise Theatre does bring back some straightforward rock that was arguably missing on Cornerstone. With only 1 real ballad, it gets back to a more balanced sound. with contributions from all three members. While DDY envisions the concept and contributes more than half of the material, all three principle songwriters bring strong showings to the album as at least one of each's songs receives significant airplay.
A few other pieces of trivia about Paradise Theatre
- idea based upon a painting by the same artist that did the cover for DDY's 100 Years from Now Solo Album and was used to represent America's decline in the 70s. Interestingly, DDY came out and publically supported Ronald Reagan for President in 1980 election, just prior to the January 1981 release date of Paradise Theatre.
- Styx's only number #1 album and it hit it for #1 for 3 weeks, - April 4, April 11, May 9
- An example of how hot the band was at the time and how ready radio was for new Styx product, the first single, Best of Times, ENTERED the charts at #35 in its first week in release - which was crazy for a first single (by comparison, Come Sail Away entered the charts at #79 and had a slow climb to the top 10).
- I mentioned this earlier - only week (April 25th) where two Styx songs were in the top 20 (BOT #9, TMTOMH at #19). The next week, TMTOMH would continue its run upward, while Best of Times was fading out to #23, thus making this the only week where Styx ever accomplished this feat
- Recreated Styx cred at Rock Radio with two Rock Singles - RTP (#8), Snowblind (#22)
- 5th single NEGAP had a middling chart performance at #54 on the pop charts.
- The laser etching LP was really innovative for the time
So, relive the early 80s and Styx's contribution to the year 1981 in rock - the peak year for arena rock with huge albums from Styx, REO, Journey, and Foreigner.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=adOITE1 ... 8B789C4727