styxfanNH wrote:I've heard/read by most of them that looking back, Kilroy probably should have been Dennis' first solo album/project. It would probably have changed the whole dynamic of the band as we know it today.
So they'd end up like Journey after SP's
Street Talk. I think the outcome was inevitable. Kilroy accelerated it.
styxfanNH wrote:Tommy and JY would have had a break from the music that they claim they dislike, and been more open to trying different things upon reuniting. Instead Tommy and JY wrote songs they felt they had to write instead of songs they wanted to write for Kilroy.
I'm not so sure about that ... TS needed a break to detox, that's for sure. While I like GWG, his work from 1982 (post-PT) to 1987/88 with Ambition and DY is spotty at best. I don't think Tommy was capable of writing another BCM or Renegade then. He had some good songs, but none stick with you like those did (or even the stuff off of PT sans She Cares).
DOuble Life is actually a good JY song. HMP is typical JY in many ways. I don't see him coming to the table with "fresh" ideas in 1985 or 6 that sound different than HMP or anything off of City Slicker.
DDY is the wildcard here - had Kilroy been his first solo album and it had one hit (even just Roboto) - not only would it have changed the face of the band as you say, but he'd arguably have more power to supposedly hold over them. I don't see that working - again, I think whether it happened when it did or 4 years later, a breakup was inevitable.