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Grotelul wrote:What are the chances Styx has a top 10 single in the '00's?
Styx is one of a handful of acts that had Billboard Top Ten singles in three decades (70s, 80s, 90s) and under four different presidential administrations (Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush).
Blue Falcon wrote:
I think Styx should be more concerned whether they will have another Top 500 album...ever.
stabbim wrote:Blue Falcon wrote:
I think Styx should be more concerned whether they will have another Top 500 album...ever.
Well, first they'd actually have to record an album and put it out...anyone wanna lay odds on that?
elmotano wrote:stabbim wrote:Well, first they'd actually have to record an album and put it out...anyone wanna lay odds on that?
I'll thake that bet, I believe they are cooking up a new batch of music now.
stabbim wrote:elmotano wrote:stabbim wrote:Well, first they'd actually have to record an album and put it out...anyone wanna lay odds on that?
I'll thake that bet, I believe they are cooking up a new batch of music now.
Would like to believe so too, though recent comments from TS & JY seem to indicate otherwise.
Ah well.
stabbim wrote:Blue Falcon wrote:
I think Styx should be more concerned whether they will have another Top 500 album...ever.
Well, first they'd actually have to record an album and put it out...anyone wanna lay odds on that?
Grotelul wrote:What are the chances Styx has a top 10 single in the '00's?
Grotelul wrote:stabbim wrote:Blue Falcon wrote:
I think Styx should be more concerned whether they will have another Top 500 album...ever.
Well, first they'd actually have to record an album and put it out...anyone wanna lay odds on that?
They don't have to record an album. As JY has stated, they will probably record a few songs here and there to either go on something like CYO or just an Itunes release.
stabbim wrote:Grotelul wrote:stabbim wrote:Blue Falcon wrote:
I think Styx should be more concerned whether they will have another Top 500 album...ever.
Well, first they'd actually have to record an album and put it out...anyone wanna lay odds on that?
They don't have to record an album. As JY has stated, they will probably record a few songs here and there to either go on something like CYO or just an Itunes release.
Yes. And that's unfortunate.
But as long as TS continues to do Shaw/Blades tours in the off-season, I won't grumble too loudly.
Rockwriter wrote:I would actually lay a big bet that the entire industry will be digital-only in a few years. It's the cheapest information delivery system model ever . . . no packaging, no trucking, no warehousing, no clerks . . . far fewer layers of profit skimming between the consumer and the artist. It makes sense. The variable is how to control the stealing, the illegal downloading, and I would imagine that at some point someone's going to come up with something. Coupled with some of the lawsuits that are ongoing, if they can just make legal dowloading affordable and make illegal downloading seem unappealing, the business could right itself. It's a different ball game now and everyone has to live with, like it or not. All of my friends at the labels here in Nashville are starting to talk in terms of trying to accept that it might become actually impossible to make money at selling music in the future . . . they are talking in terms of the music itself being a loss leader that gets people involved with the band so you can sell them live shows, merchandise, special downloads, whatever. Given the extreme tough circumstances right now, I wouldn't hold my breath for a label to invest in the budget for a band like Styx, when the release is likely barely capable of earning out the production costs at this point. Those are the harsh realities of the business today. The guys don't have much choice but to ride the storm out and figure out a way to make a new release financially viable - if indeed there is a way to do that in the current marketplace.
stabbim wrote:Rockwriter wrote:I would actually lay a big bet that the entire industry will be digital-only in a few years. It's the cheapest information delivery system model ever . . . no packaging, no trucking, no warehousing, no clerks . . . far fewer layers of profit skimming between the consumer and the artist. It makes sense. The variable is how to control the stealing, the illegal downloading, and I would imagine that at some point someone's going to come up with something. Coupled with some of the lawsuits that are ongoing, if they can just make legal dowloading affordable and make illegal downloading seem unappealing, the business could right itself. It's a different ball game now and everyone has to live with, like it or not. All of my friends at the labels here in Nashville are starting to talk in terms of trying to accept that it might become actually impossible to make money at selling music in the future . . . they are talking in terms of the music itself being a loss leader that gets people involved with the band so you can sell them live shows, merchandise, special downloads, whatever. Given the extreme tough circumstances right now, I wouldn't hold my breath for a label to invest in the budget for a band like Styx, when the release is likely barely capable of earning out the production costs at this point. Those are the harsh realities of the business today. The guys don't have much choice but to ride the storm out and figure out a way to make a new release financially viable - if indeed there is a way to do that in the current marketplace.
Well, I wasn't referring so much to the distribution or packaging -- I just meant it's unfortunate that they don't seem to be interested in creating a collection of new material, full stop. Even when driven by singles in a marketing sense, Styx was always an album band at heart.
I suppose they could be going through a dry spell and using the shifting marketplace as an excuse, which would be sad, but understandable. I'd just hate to think that they really are trying to "ride the storm out," waiting for the market to lead them, rather than taking any kind of initiative with the process. They still have the potential to be better than that (see: Radiohead, BNL, Marillion.)
Rockwriter wrote:I would welcome a viable collection from ANY of the bands I grew up with. But at the same time, I can understand the reluctance . . . these are guys who are closer to retirement than not, and the game at that point has to shift to, how do we make this work for us and pave the way for when we are no longer working together? I know that's not much of an art-driven discussion, but nonetheless it's the way it is at a certain point. I can't begrudge anyone the right to make the decision that is best for them financially, even if it isn't driven by purely artistic concerns.
Grotelul wrote: The only reason why gold is expensive is because we all agree that it is. There's no real use for it, except we all agree and abide by the idea that gold costs a certain amount per ounce.
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