Moderator: Andrew
ek88 wrote:I haven't had any luck thus far finding anything official. I guess the way I heard the story was that the chorus was taken from an old MS Funk song (Ain't Getting Any or something like that) and that Dennis pretty much wrote the rest of the song around that. I have no idea if there's any truth there or not, but I seem to remember Tommy and Dennis both telling the story something along those lines!
While he was looking out at the huge piles of snow everywhere, he said he thought about Hawaii, how beautiful it had been, and he wanted to "sail away" and started working on this song.
bugsymalone wrote:SOMEwhere in all these interviews I have -- print, radio (on CD), and PBS (on DVD), Dennis talks about coming back from Hawaii. I think he said from a vacation there. He talked about Chicago having one of the worst snow storms ever and everyone was sort of confined to their homes.
While he was looking out at the huge piles of snow everywhere, he said he thought about Hawaii, how beautiful it had been, and he wanted to "sail away" and started working on this song.
Probably, if someone put a gun to my head, I could find this interview, and may yet look for it, but when? where? what is it on? OY! I have no idea. But I clearly remember hearing or reading this from him.
What I don't know if if he had the elements from Tommy's song already and added on to that or if everything was combined later.
From what I understand, the JY suggestion about the aliens was added when the song was basically completed. BTW, I think that was a great addition.
Bugsy
SuiteMadameBlue wrote:I'm SO happy, I have my computer back and I didn't lose anything on my hard driveAnd I have a DVD burner added
So I can actually make copies of my interview with Dennis for those who would like to transcribe the interview
![]()
Anyway, here is what I found so far about "Come Sail Away", hope this helps:
The entire track list of The Grand Illusion is strong. “Castle Walls” is an epic journey. “Come Sail Away” became a Top 10 single and “Superstars” captured the imagination and heart of the band. There was no stopping Styx. The band produced the album as well, with the help of engineer Barry Mraz. Mraz had proven he knew how Styx should sound in the studio. The only real complaint of Mraz comes from Shaw, “We might have gotten impatient with Barry for the amount of time he spent tuning and adjusting the microphones on the drums but he was a genius and his drum sounds were brilliant and worth the wait.” Mraz only encapsulated the genus of musicians. Styx proved they were as much of a team in the control room as they were on the stage. Shaw remembers mixing with Mraz and the rest of the band, “We knew how we wanted the arrangements to go. We were good judges of our performances and we all had hands on the console during the mixes. There was no automation. The middle section of "Come Sail Away" took seven of us, each with specific moves, to do all the pans and level changes. I'll never forget how exciting it was when we finally got the mix. It was quite an achievement.”
Indeed the hard work paid off. Styx watched as “Come Sail Away” entered the singles charts. As the song began to stall the band and the band’s management went to work. Rock radio stations were contacted and Styx went into action granting interviews and doing radio station promotions. The push climaxed and the song climbed higher until it reached # 8 on the charts. ““Come Sail Away” first came from the intro and chorus chord progression of a song I wrote in a former band,” notes Shaw, “The song was called "Ain't Gettin' Down For You." It was an okay song, and you can hear it--‘Ain't gettin' down/ain't gettin' down/ I ain't getting down for you’ sung to the tune of the chorus in "Come Sail Away.” Dennis took it another level; rewriting it and making it tell an uplifting story that was more universal and positive. JY put the spin on the last verse suggesting that what the singer perceived as angels were actually aliens from outer space. Put all of it together and that's what being in a band is all about--lifting up the best in each other and making it better.”
StyxCollector wrote:From the rumors I've heard, in demo form, JY sang the "angels" verse. I guess by the time the album was recorded, the decision was made to let DDY sing it all.
Too bad no one outside the band will ever know the truth to this one.
OrlandoChris wrote:Not shooting a hole in your research Suite, but...from what you posted they played Hawaii on July 4, 1977. Since Grand Illusion was released on 7-7-77, it's a little hard for the song to have been created then.
Just a thought.
Chris
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests