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"We have a medley of some of those songs. I was against it but I got outvoted," JY says. "(The band)'s a democracy now and I have to go along with it. We do Lady, but Lady is a rock song. This is a rock band. This is not a band that does show tunes."
"Our goal was to get away from what brought the band down the first time. He would contend that he brought the band to its biggest success
"Really, I bear him no ill will," JY says,


styxfansite wrote:
What songs did Jy do that made the band sucessful after wooden nickle? Did he write "Babe", Did he write "lady", Did he write "show me the way", you get my point on this I hope.

JY wrote:"We're avoiding the big Dennis DeYoung pop hits," JY explains, in that frank manner of which I spoke earlier. "Our goal was to get away from what brought the band down the first time. He would contend that he brought the band to its biggest success. But he and I are polar opposites."
The Reluctant Legend wrote:This is a rock band. This is not a band that does show tunes."
The Great White Dope wrote:"but at a certain point you have to function as a team, and (DeYoung) ceased being a team player in 1982."

shaka wrote:styxfansite wrote:
What songs did Jy do that made the band sucessful after wooden nickle? Did he write "Babe", Did he write "lady", Did he write "show me the way", you get my point on this I hope.
For many of us JY tunes, whether written, co-written, or just sung bye him, were an essential ingredient of Styx. For me, Styx was never about hits. Styx was about an albums worth of music that could hold my attention for months or even years. I think about songs like Southern Woman, Midnight Ride, Ms. America, Great White Hope, Eddie, Snowblind, Half Penny Two Penny, Double Life, and Captain America are just as important to Styx as Queen of Spades, Castle Walls, Too Much Time on My Hands, Man In The Wilderness, Blue Collar Man, Grand Illusion etc.... In fact, I'm far more likely to listen to any of the above songs before I listen to Babe, First Time, She Cares, and Boat on the River. (I also like those songs but they aren't as important to me)
Let's not forget the intangibles such as guitar playing and singing. JY, while not Eddy Van Halen, can flat out play the guitar. His solos are often the perfect balance of bombast and melody. I often think of the first time I heard Midnight Ride when I was still kid and beginning guitar player. In the begining of the song JY says, "Check this out" and pops off a wonderfully catchy guitar lead before going into the verse. Many of you do not lik Eddie but I love that song (and not just because it rips the Kennedy's). I dare any of you to crank Eddie in your car paying special attention to the awesome Dennis synth solo followed by JY's equally awesome guitar solo and then tell me you weren't rocking out.
JY's voice is a big part of Styx's signature sound. Think about the chorus of virtually every styx song and right smack dab in the middle of the background vocals is JY. Styx got by without Tommy for a time because Glen could do a pretty good approximation of Tommy's background vocals. However, I think it would be much harder to replace JY's voice in those awesome three-part harmonies because it tends to be his voice that is the muscle that ties things together. Then there's Double Life. I should hate that song but I don't. In fact, I love Double Life. There is no way that Dennis or Tommy could have sung DB and pulled it off. JY's performance makes an otherwise quirky song rock.
Yes, JY is extremely important to Styx.
Eric
When Babe became a hit I knew Styx would never be the same.It was downhill from there.
[/quote]
Come to think of it.I wonder what Styx could have been , had Babe never been released??
froy wrote:When Babe became a hit I knew Styx would never be the same.It was downhill from there.
Downhill from there for who?
Was Faithfully The Downfall for Journey?
Was I Want To Know What Love Is the Down fall for Foreigner?
Babe was number 1 it brought STYX a huge amount attentio
Just because 2 jealous members could not write a number 1 song we have to hear about how Babe was a mistake
I look at Babe and think of the Beatles
Could you imagine if John Lennon stopped Paul from releasing Yesterday ?
They could have been what they are today
A shitty band with immature members.
froy wrote:When Babe became a hit I knew Styx would never be the same.It was downhill from there.
Downhill from there for who?
Was Faithfully The Downfall for Journey?
Was I Want To Know What Love Is the Down fall for Foreigner?
Babe was number 1 it brought STYX a huge amount of attention
Just because 2 jealous members could not write a number 1 song we have to hear about how Babe was a mistake
I look at Babe and think of the Beatles
Could you imagine if John Lennon stopped Paul from releasing Yesterday ?
Come to think of it.I wonder what Styx could have been , had Babe never been released??
gr8dane wrote:If there was no Babe ,maybe Dennis would still be in Styx.
froy wrote:If there was no Babe ,maybe Dennis would still be in Styx.
shaka wrote:froy wrote:If there was no Babe ,maybe Dennis would still be in Styx.
And if there was no Babe there would be no STYX period
If there was no Dennis DeYoung there would be no STYX either.
No Babe no Styx?
sadie65 wrote:JY...what more can I say....read on....
Styx still proud to call itself a rock band
By Leslie Gray Streeter
Palm Beach Post Music Writer
Friday, September 22, 2006
I love interviewing musicians — almost all of them — but my absolute favorite ones are the old rock guys, simply because they're never boring. They're usually funny, laid-back, at peace with their demons and have been famous long enough that they're not self-censoring themselves every five seconds in fear of ticking somebody off and getting uninvited from their next TRL appearance.
In other words, very little is off the record. And "very little off the record" is music to a reporter's ears.
My recent chat with James Young, guitarist for Chicago's own Styx, was just like that. JY (everybody calls him "JY") and his band are coming to Sound Advice Amphitheatre on Sunday, and they give a great big show full of their signature screaming guitars, larger-than-life arrangements and sing-along anthems like Fooling Yourself (Angry Young Man) and Renegade.
It'll also touch on songs from Big Bang Theory, their 2005 collection of classic rock covers, including their rock radio No. 1 version of The Beatles' I Am the Walrus. But be forewarned — it won't be full of Babe, or Mr. Roboto or Don't Let It End, or any of the other gloriously theatrical '80s classics penned by former lead singer and recent Celebrity Duets guest star Dennis DeYoung.
"We're avoiding the big Dennis DeYoung pop hits," JY explains, in that frank manner of which I spoke earlier. "Our goal was to get away from what brought the band down the first time. He would contend that he brought the band to its biggest success. But he and I are polar opposites."
Intriguing! Please elaborate.
"We have a medley of some of those songs. I was against it but I got outvoted," JY says. "(The band)'s a democracy now and I have to go along with it. We do Lady, but Lady is a rock song. This is a rock band. This is not a band that does show tunes."
If you're a Styx fan, or even someone who's seen their Behind the Music special — in my opinion, the best episode ev-er — you know what he's talking about. DeYoung's penchant for full-on stage productions like the play-like Kilroy Was Here tour, or gushy earnest ballads of love, are the bane of the existence of some die-hards who JY says were "alienated" by the showiness of, say, Mr. Roboto.
"Really, I bear him no ill will," JY says, "but at a certain point you have to function as a team, and (DeYoung) ceased being a team player in 1982."
But that's all in the past. Styx has both moved on, with keyboard player and singer Lawrence Gowan replacing DeYoung, and lived on. Besides the success of the Walrus cover, the band is releasing a DVD of a show they did last spring with Chicago's Contemporary Youth Orchestra. And they saw the downloads of Renegade shoot up 500 percent after American Idol's Chris Daughtry sang it on the show and in concert. The thing is, the song hasn't aged a bit, and sounds like it could've been recorded last week.
"That addresses the notion of how this band can still be relevant 34 years after it started making records," JY says. "That song retains a sense of a sort of timelessness. There's not doubt that a lot of young people, even young women, were turned on to us because of that show. Even Simon Legree (that's snarky judge Simon Cowell to you) said that was a great choice of songs. Chris has done us a great turn."
So is he hoping that AI stays on the Styx bandwagon, or maybe even does a Styx-themed night?
"They called and said that might happen at some point," JY says. "By all means."
STYX — With Foreigner and the Blue Oyster Cult, 6:30 p.m. Sunday at the Sound Advice Amphitheatre, suburban West Palm Beach. Tickets: $20-$51.50. Phone: (561) 793-0445 or (561) 966-3309.
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/search/con ... _0922.html
sadie65 wrote:And they saw the downloads of Renegade shoot up 500 percent after American Idol's Chris Daughtry sang it on the show and in concert. The thing is, the song hasn't aged a bit, and sounds like it could've been recorded last week.
styxfanNH wrote:sadie65 wrote:JY...what more can I say....read on....
probably the best pre-show interview/article we have seen. JY stays away from "the best line-up ever" comment. They say that Dennis is gone and that you won't hear Dennis top 40 songs. JY says he and Dennis are polar opposites and they are staying to songs that like REnegade. For the first time that I can remember, he says that he was out voted on the medley being included. A couple of minor shots at Dennis that we read more into than any casual fan at the show.
Overall it is a milder, less offensive JY. And the writer did her homework about the band, how good is that.

SuiteMadameBlue wrote:IMO:
The current line-up of Styx will not be on American Idol this season.
sadie65 wrote:"Really, I bear him no ill will," JY says, "but at a certain point you have to function as a team, and (DeYoung) ceased being a team player in 1982."
sadie65 wrote:So is he hoping that AI stays on the Styx bandwagon, or maybe even does a Styx-themed night?
"They called and said that might happen at some point," JY says. "By all means."
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