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jestor92 wrote:Very good show, he sounds great and seems very happy. The whole band was very good, Dennis's lead guitarist (whose name escapes me) was very good, Glen was great and energetic as usual. Dennis was telling about the time he spent on his honey moon in the Pocono's and how he's one of the few people who come to the area that know how to pronounce Wilkes-Barre properly. A very funny guy.
He played most of the hits, Grand Illusion, Lady, Lorelei, The Best Of Times, Show Me The Way (Highlight of the show because it was him singing along with the bassist, his wife and another background female vocalist), Suite Madam Blue, Come Sail Away, Mr. Roboto, Don't Let It End, Light Up, Castle Walls, Rockin' The Paradise, Babe. They also played Edge of the Century, an unreleased song from a 1992 recording that didn't get released on record because they couldn't find a label, and All In A Day's work all three of which Glen sang along with Run Rudolph Run. Dennis also sang Great Balls Of Fire. Also played Desert Moon from his solo efferts
If anyone has the audio or know where I may be able to get audio of this show please let me know, and whats up with Dennis's drummer playing behind a plexiglass barrier? Also does anyone know if the 8 or 9 songs they wrote for the Edge Of The Century album was has ever surfaced?
jestor92 wrote:Very good show, he sounds great and seems very happy. The whole band was very good, Dennis's lead guitarist (whose name escapes me) was very good,
MtlLady wrote:jestor92 wrote:Very good show, he sounds great and seems very happy. The whole band was very good, Dennis's lead guitarist (whose name escapes me) was very good,
Tommy Dziallo.
He absolutely ROCKS.

[/quote]

bugsymalone wrote:Nice picture, Suite! Tommy D and I had a discussion about the sound of the Fender Telecaster (which he is playing there) vs. the Stratocaster. We, disagreed, LOL!![]()
He can play the hell out of any guitar in my book.
Bugsy
I know what I just typed may not make a bit of sense to many of you who don't know the ins and outs of what makes guitars sound the way they do. If clarification is needed I'd be happy to provide it.
The other Eric

bugsymalone wrote:I know what I just typed may not make a bit of sense to many of you who don't know the ins and outs of what makes guitars sound the way they do. If clarification is needed I'd be happy to provide it.
The other Eric
Thanks, Other Eric!I always love talking guitars with anyone who will listen and enjoys them like I do.
I am an acoustic person myself, but like any guitar talk, especially with those who do it for a living.
Bugsy
shaka wrote:Now for my take on Tommy D. I hope I don't piss some of you off.
Tommy D. is a very good player. However, his tone is horrible. His sound is way over-processed which is what guitar players were doing in the eighties.
The other Eric
MtlLady wrote:shaka wrote:Now for my take on Tommy D. I hope I don't piss some of you off.
No worries, if everyone had the same opinion, the world would be a very boring place!Tommy D. is a very good player. However, his tone is horrible. His sound is way over-processed which is what guitar players were doing in the eighties.
The other Eric
I'll preface my question by telling you that I don't play guitar or any musical instrument (does singing in a church choir count??), so I'm just a simple fan.
But - considering most of DDY's music is from the 80's, isn't that what Tommy's guitar is *supposed* to sound like? I know that I want to hear what the songs sounded like then.
Personally, I think he's an even better musician to be able to adapt to whatever style he needs. But I'm no expert - I just know what makes my ears happy!
jestor92 wrote:Very good show, he sounds great and seems very happy. The whole band was very good, Dennis's lead guitarist (whose name escapes me) was very good, Glen was great and energetic as usual. Dennis was telling about the time he spent on his honey moon in the Pocono's and how he's one of the few people who come to the area that know how to pronounce Wilkes-Barre properly. A very funny guy.
He played most of the hits, Grand Illusion, Lady, Lorelei, The Best Of Times, Show Me The Way (Highlight of the show because it was him singing along with the bassist, his wife and another background female vocalist), Suite Madam Blue, Come Sail Away, Mr. Roboto, Don't Let It End, Light Up, Castle Walls, Rockin' The Paradise, Babe. They also played Edge of the Century, an unreleased song from a 1992 recording that didn't get released on record because they couldn't find a label, and All In A Day's work all three of which Glen sang along with Run Rudolph Run. Dennis also sang Great Balls Of Fire. Also played Desert Moon from his solo efferts
If anyone has the audio or know where I may be able to get audio of this show please let me know, and whats up with Dennis's drummer playing behind a plexiglass barrier? Also does anyone know if the 8 or 9 songs they wrote for the Edge Of The Century album was has ever surfaced?
styxdudebrandon wrote:I met Tommy D in Dennis's Toronto gig in June!
MtlLady wrote:[But - considering most of DDY's music is from the 80's, isn't that what Tommy's guitar is *supposed* to sound like? I know that I want to hear what the songs sounded like then.
Personally, I think he's an even better musician to be able to adapt to whatever style he needs. But I'm no expert - I just know what makes my ears happy!
You make a good point. Should he try to match the album or should he go with what's the rage these days. Most other guitarists in similar positions have changed up how they play and sound. There has been a big backlash in the guitar community against overprocessed eighties sounds.
Eric
MtlLady wrote:MtlLady wrote:[But - considering most of DDY's music is from the 80's, isn't that what Tommy's guitar is *supposed* to sound like? I know that I want to hear what the songs sounded like then.
Personally, I think he's an even better musician to be able to adapt to whatever style he needs. But I'm no expert - I just know what makes my ears happy!You make a good point. Should he try to match the album or should he go with what's the rage these days. Most other guitarists in similar positions have changed up how they play and sound. There has been a big backlash in the guitar community against overprocessed eighties sounds.
Eric
Which means he has to be comfortable enough with his guitar abilities to be able to stand against the backlash and stick with the original sound. I would think there would be a bigger backlash (and some angry DDY fans) if he changed the sound.
He must have other projects where he can go with what is a more the rage.
Thanks for your post, I've learned something today!!
SuiteMadameBlue wrote:Hi JestorThanks for the review, I'm glad you were able to see him perform
Awwww, I wish I could've heard Run Rudolph Run and I love when Dennis sings Great Balls of Fire!!! How fun!!
I'm not sure on the audio for that show. Sometimes they show up here and other Styx/DDY related sites.
Here is more information on the Edge of Century 2:
http://forums.melodicrock.com/phpBB/vie ... ge+century

Now that I've got that bit of information, is it true that DDY was left go from Styx after the reunion because he was to poppish? That's always the story I've heard, is that true, or what it just because JY and Tommy didn't like him?

Now that I've got that bit of information, is it true that DDY was left go from Styx after the reunion because he was to poppish? That's always the story I've heard, is that true, or what it just because JY and Tommy didn't like him?
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