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ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Part of the revisionist history that JY and crew liked to spell out...It wasn't a ROCKER so in their minds, it was a deep buried track......you know the adage, keep telling yourself lies and you eventually believe it? Very true with Messers. Shaw and Young...(and Monker, Bry, and Everett/Chickenbeef/Nightbull)
Everett wrote:Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day"
Please give me one good reason why you think i have multiple accounts.
SuiteMadameBlue wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
"Sing for the Day'" is the second single that Styx released from the Pieces of Eight album. It reached number 41 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 pop singles chart.
I heard it played in my area too when it was released. I love this song
froy wrote:Everett wrote:Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day"
Please give me one good reason why you think i have multiple accounts.
Because you PMd me and 2 min later beef PMd me,
You talk the same way Quote I will say this one time only, Both you and beef ( yourself )said the exact same thing,
Everett wrote:froy wrote:Everett wrote:Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day"
Please give me one good reason why you think i have multiple accounts.
Because you PMd me and 2 min later beef PMd me,
You talk the same way Quote I will say this one time only, Both you and beef ( yourself )said the exact same thing,
What are you smokin froy? I haven't pm'd you in a long while
Are you sure you weren't dreaming when that happened?
froy wrote:Everett wrote:froy wrote:Everett wrote:Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day"
Please give me one good reason why you think i have multiple accounts.
Because you PMd me and 2 min later beef PMd me,
You talk the same way Quote I will say this one time only, Both you and beef ( yourself )said the exact same thing,
What are you smokin froy? I haven't pm'd you in a long while
Are you sure you weren't dreaming when that happened?
And when ya did you and beef (yourself) did it 2 min apart
Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Part of the revisionist history that JY and crew liked to spell out...It wasn't a ROCKER so in their minds, it was a deep buried track......you know the adage, keep telling yourself lies and you eventually believe it? Very true with Messers. Shaw and Young...(and Monker, Bry, and Everett/Chickenbeef/Nightbull)
Hollywood wrote:Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Part of the revisionist history that JY and crew liked to spell out...It wasn't a ROCKER so in their minds, it was a deep buried track......you know the adage, keep telling yourself lies and you eventually believe it? Very true with Messers. Shaw and Young...(and Monker, Bry, and Everett/Chickenbeef/Nightbull)
How is this revisionist history when that part of the article was not a quote and was not said by JY? The writer wrote this based on his research. Most likely based on the fact that it was not a Top 40 single. The writer is incorrect here not JY.
Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Part of the revisionist history that JY and crew liked to spell out...It wasn't a ROCKER so in their minds, it was a deep buried track......you know the adage, keep telling yourself lies and you eventually believe it? Very true with Messers. Shaw and Young...(and Monker, Bry, and Everett/Chickenbeef/Nightbull)
Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Part of the revisionist history that JY and crew liked to spell out...It wasn't a ROCKER so in their minds, it was a deep buried track......you know the adage, keep telling yourself lies and you eventually believe it? Very true with Messers. Shaw and Young...(and Monker, Bry, and Everett/Chickenbeef/Nightbull)
Toph wrote:Hollywood wrote:Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Part of the revisionist history that JY and crew liked to spell out...It wasn't a ROCKER so in their minds, it was a deep buried track......you know the adage, keep telling yourself lies and you eventually believe it? Very true with Messers. Shaw and Young...(and Monker, Bry, and Everett/Chickenbeef/Nightbull)
How is this revisionist history when that part of the article was not a quote and was not said by JY? The writer wrote this based on his research. Most likely based on the fact that it was not a Top 40 single. The writer is incorrect here not JY.
Whatever...Doug Fox is a paid pawn for the band...always has been. Whatever was said in that article was blessed by the band.
Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Part of the revisionist history that JY and crew liked to spell out...It wasn't a ROCKER so in their minds, it was a deep buried track......you know the adage, keep telling yourself lies and you eventually believe it? Very true with Messers. Shaw and Young...(and Monker, Bry, and Everett/Chickenbeef/Nightbull)
Toph wrote:Hollywood wrote:Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Part of the revisionist history that JY and crew liked to spell out...It wasn't a ROCKER so in their minds, it was a deep buried track......you know the adage, keep telling yourself lies and you eventually believe it? Very true with Messers. Shaw and Young...(and Monker, Bry, and Everett/Chickenbeef/Nightbull)
How is this revisionist history when that part of the article was not a quote and was not said by JY? The writer wrote this based on his research. Most likely based on the fact that it was not a Top 40 single. The writer is incorrect here not JY.
Whatever...Doug Fox is a paid pawn for the band...always has been. Whatever was said in that article was blessed by the band.
brywool wrote:Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Part of the revisionist history that JY and crew liked to spell out...It wasn't a ROCKER so in their minds, it was a deep buried track......you know the adage, keep telling yourself lies and you eventually believe it? Very true with Messers. Shaw and Young...(and Monker, Bry, and Everett/Chickenbeef/Nightbull)
Just caught this... Dude, seriously, don't lump me in here. I don't care if it "rocks". I do care if it sounds like a left over Barry Manilow track ala "First Time" and a lot of the stuff Dennis did using that crappy Fender Rhoades sound. "Sing for the Day" is similar to "Fooling Yourself". Doesn't rock, but doesn't suck either. "First Time" and "Roboto" DID suck (please just admit it).
"Pieces of Eight" on the other hand was a brilliant track as was "Goodbye to Roseland". Both slower tunes of Dennis' that didn't suck.
Also, Dennis got in a writing RUT and pretty much wrote the same song over again after "Babe", trying to recreate the number 1 "forumla". He did it with "Don't Let it End" and his tracks on Edge. He shouldn't have done that. After Cornerstone, I believe Dennis wrote only 1 more ROCK song for Styx and that was "Rockin' The Paradise". After that, everything was a slower track (at least for Styx). Doesn't mean they all sucked, just means that Dennis became a slave to the formula and in doing so, turned out some lame songs (not all of them).
Toph wrote:Hollywood wrote:Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Part of the revisionist history that JY and crew liked to spell out...It wasn't a ROCKER so in their minds, it was a deep buried track......you know the adage, keep telling yourself lies and you eventually believe it? Very true with Messers. Shaw and Young...(and Monker, Bry, and Everett/Chickenbeef/Nightbull)
How is this revisionist history when that part of the article was not a quote and was not said by JY? The writer wrote this based on his research. Most likely based on the fact that it was not a Top 40 single. The writer is incorrect here not JY.
Whatever...Doug Fox is a paid pawn for the band...always has been. Whatever was said in that article was blessed by the band.
Rockwriter wrote:Toph wrote:Hollywood wrote:Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Part of the revisionist history that JY and crew liked to spell out...It wasn't a ROCKER so in their minds, it was a deep buried track......you know the adage, keep telling yourself lies and you eventually believe it? Very true with Messers. Shaw and Young...(and Monker, Bry, and Everett/Chickenbeef/Nightbull)
How is this revisionist history when that part of the article was not a quote and was not said by JY? The writer wrote this based on his research. Most likely based on the fact that it was not a Top 40 single. The writer is incorrect here not JY.
Whatever...Doug Fox is a paid pawn for the band...always has been. Whatever was said in that article was blessed by the band.
That's actually unfair to Doug, he's pretty unbiased in his coverage. When he did those pieces for Billboard, the band wanted him not to speak to Dennis, and he told them he couldn't possibly do a piece on the history of Styx and not give Dennis a chance to have his say, so he spoke to him against their wishes. And when my book came out, he did a very nice review of it, even after I warned him the band was probably not too thrilled about it. Doug is pretty independent as far as that kind of thing goes.
Sterling
Boomchild wrote:Rockwriter wrote:Toph wrote:Hollywood wrote:Toph wrote:kansas666 wrote:ChicagoSTYX wrote: -- except for the deep album track "Sing For the Day" --
I always thought Sing For the Day was a single release. It sure got a lot of airplay in my home town when it came out.
Part of the revisionist history that JY and crew liked to spell out...It wasn't a ROCKER so in their minds, it was a deep buried track......you know the adage, keep telling yourself lies and you eventually believe it? Very true with Messers. Shaw and Young...(and Monker, Bry, and Everett/Chickenbeef/Nightbull)
How is this revisionist history when that part of the article was not a quote and was not said by JY? The writer wrote this based on his research. Most likely based on the fact that it was not a Top 40 single. The writer is incorrect here not JY.
Whatever...Doug Fox is a paid pawn for the band...always has been. Whatever was said in that article was blessed by the band.
That's actually unfair to Doug, he's pretty unbiased in his coverage. When he did those pieces for Billboard, the band wanted him not to speak to Dennis, and he told them he couldn't possibly do a piece on the history of Styx and not give Dennis a chance to have his say, so he spoke to him against their wishes. And when my book came out, he did a very nice review of it, even after I warned him the band was probably not too thrilled about it. Doug is pretty independent as far as that kind of thing goes.
Sterling
If it is true that the band didn't want him to speak with Dennis, then that is just petty and childish. What are they so concerned about? I don't not believe that Dennis has spoken baldy about or gone on a personal attack on any members of Styx past and present.
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