Abitaman wrote:Monker wrote:
The fact is that I hear: Crystal Ball, Renegade, Blue Collar Man, Too Much Time On My Hands, Miss America, Loralie...just as often as any of DDY's 'hits'...and much more often then some of those hits. Babe, Don't Let it End, Mr. Roboto, and Show Me the Way, are perfect examples of songs that are no longer on classic rock radio, even if they once were 'hits'.
Going on about 'hits' that are not being played is irrelevant...especially when the same people who complain about this would complain if they WERE played.
Have to agree, just because something is a hit, does not mean it will be a classic song years from now.
I myself hear Shaw's songs just as much as I hear DDY's on the radio, maybe more so. There is a greater chance of hearing a classic rock song than a classic ballad.
That really depends on what you listen to. I hear Dennis' ballads all the time in this market on the AC station (Mix 92.9), especially "Babe." And I hear "Mr. Roboto" on Jack FM quite frequently. The local classic rock station here (105.9 The Rock) plays CSA, BCM and "Renegade" mostly, with a smattering of others.
What one person considers "classic", someone else considers crap. I know plenty of people who think ALL Styx music is trash. It's just one person's taste vs. another and there is no right or wrong, only opinion. The value of ALL art is in the eye (or ear) of the beholder anyway. What was great about Styx in its day is that it had a wide cross-section of material to offer, and that's part of why the band was so successful. It was a multi-format success.
That said, why do you think almost all of the TV and movie placements for Styx are Dennis songs? Because ad campaigns look for the widest commercial impact, that's why. Most of the songs the average person can hum from this band are his songs. Doesn't make them better, doesn't make them worse, but to argue anything other than that he was by far the most successful writer within the context of Styx is unsupported by historical fact. Look up the numbers for the records that had hit singles, and then look up the numbers for the albums that did not have hit singles, and you'll see what I mean. Styx was a band whose success was driven by hit singles, even if it was an album rock band.
By the way, everyone DOES realize that A&M chose the singles in the classic era, not Dennis, right? They chose them after test marketing them, pure and simple. They did that because they wanted to sell records. Styx went along because THEY wanted to sell records. They could have voted any of it down any time they wanted to, and in fact sometimes they did, for example "First Time." The notion that they were "made" to do anything against their will is pure revisionism. It is impossible for one person to "dictate" in a five-man vote. Perhaps Dennis had a stronger personality and tended to dominate the group because of it, but then, it's that way in every band. And I've said it before, but it bears repeating: the most successful and/or visible guy in every band is the odd man out, every single time. Nothing unusual about that at all. Change the names, but the story is the same.
Sterling