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Abitaman wrote:Man of Miracles, Southern Woman, Golden Lark, Witch Wolf, Young Man, Lady, Unfinshed Song, and A Day are about the only things I care for from the WN years
stabbim wrote:I have a major soft spot for Styx I. I know that a lot of the material isn't theirs, that the performances and production are raw, that the band was still years away from forging a solid musical identity, that some of the lyrics are deeply silly, and so forth. Don't care. I adore every idealistic, youthful, energetic second of it, especially the suite on Side A.
Styx II is both a band and fan favorite and I'll concede that it's well put together, but it doesn't speak to me the way its predecessor does. The only track I truly love from that album is "A Day" (in my Top 5 Styx songs for sure, definitely my favorite of the WN years.) I also like "You Need Love" and DDY's Bach fugue, but the rest doesn't do much for me. "Lady" is a classic, of course, but I'm numb to it now.
The darkness and weirdness of Serpent appeals to me, even if I don't think the whole is as good as the sum of the parts. I've read that DDY considers it his songwriting nadir, and he may have a point, but I think "Young Man," "As Bad As This" and the title track are fantastic, and "22 Years" is fun too. I find it odd that most of the songs that made it to the 1977 Best Of Styx comp weren't anywhere near the "best" songs from that era. IMO.
When I first heard Miracles I liked it better than Serpent, but that first impression has paled over time. At this point, the only things I really dig on that album are "Rock N Roll Feeling" (a great little anthem, would be a radio classic in the league of "Rock N Roll All Nite" and "We're An American Band" if there was any justice or civilization in this world) and the vocal outro to "Golden Lark" blending into the cello intro to "A Song For Suzanne." The rest slides right off me. Not great, not terrible, just....meh.
Overall, I'd say the WN years are terribly underrated, both by the band themselves and the world at large. Would be nice to hear more from this era in concert someday.
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