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FormerDJMike wrote:Wow, great read, would love to hear a remix of man Of Miracles from the original masters. Wonder how someone "lost" them?!?
FormerDJMike wrote:Wow, great read, would love to hear a remix of man Of Miracles from the original masters. Wonder how someone "lost" them?!?
Boomchild wrote:FormerDJMike wrote:Wow, great read, would love to hear a remix of man Of Miracles from the original masters. Wonder how someone "lost" them?!?
I wonder what masters were used for the "Complete Wooden Nickel Recordings" release then? I think it would be interesting to see how Dennis would re-master those releases. From this interview you can se how Dennis took Styx' successes and failures so personally. I liked his commentary on how he never wanted to respond to critics and reviewers.
Hollywood wrote:Boomchild wrote:FormerDJMike wrote:Wow, great read, would love to hear a remix of man Of Miracles from the original masters. Wonder how someone "lost" them?!?
I wonder what masters were used for the "Complete Wooden Nickel Recordings" release then? I think it would be interesting to see how Dennis would re-master those releases. From this interview you can se how Dennis took Styx' successes and failures so personally. I liked his commentary on how he never wanted to respond to critics and reviewers.
The original masters for these recordings were remastered and used for the 'Complete Wooden Nickel Recordings'. The parts that are lost are the original tapes. Dennis would need the original tapes to remix the records and then the new mix would be mastered for production.
Although some artists are involved in mastering and remastering the vast majority of the times they are not.
BlackWall wrote:Darren, thank you for posting this link. Wow.. great interview. I agree with DDY's take on a lot of the songs, and also thought it was interesting that they wanted "Superstars" to be the first single from "TGI". "TGI" only had two singles(which has always seemed insane to me). It seems like they never had more than three per album, but for such a smash success as "TGI", they should have released more songs. I think that both "Superstars" and the title track could have been hits(not before "Come Sail Away", however).
Dennis does seem to come across as... well, a little.. hmmm, let's say, "confident" in his contribution to the band.. not that he shouldn't be, but I also wonder if some of that stems from the events of the last 13 years. It would have to. How would anyone respond to a band they more or less created trying to rewrite history without them? Truth be told, he's also probably not too far off with his perspective, either. Even if he didn't sing lead on a lot of the early songs, he wrote most of them.. This was long before Tommy was part of the equation. Tommy brought a great deal to the band, but the sound was already there. This is not to diminish anyone's role in the band, I think they all were important, but.. "Suite Madame Blue", "Come Sail Away", and "Lady"? All are trademarks of the classic Styx sound, and what they are identified with.
Boomchild wrote:BlackWall wrote:Darren, thank you for posting this link. Wow.. great interview. I agree with DDY's take on a lot of the songs, and also thought it was interesting that they wanted "Superstars" to be the first single from "TGI". "TGI" only had two singles(which has always seemed insane to me). It seems like they never had more than three per album, but for such a smash success as "TGI", they should have released more songs. I think that both "Superstars" and the title track could have been hits(not before "Come Sail Away", however).
Dennis does seem to come across as... well, a little.. hmmm, let's say, "confident" in his contribution to the band.. not that he shouldn't be, but I also wonder if some of that stems from the events of the last 13 years. It would have to. How would anyone respond to a band they more or less created trying to rewrite history without them? Truth be told, he's also probably not too far off with his perspective, either. Even if he didn't sing lead on a lot of the early songs, he wrote most of them.. This was long before Tommy was part of the equation. Tommy brought a great deal to the band, but the sound was already there. This is not to diminish anyone's role in the band, I think they all were important, but.. "Suite Madame Blue", "Come Sail Away", and "Lady"? All are trademarks of the classic Styx sound, and what they are identified with.
I think that this comes from Dennis being very proud of what they did and doesn't see the logic in bashing things that were successful for the band. Dennis clearly feels that a good song is a good song no matter what style or label you attach to it. He didn't like putting boundaries on the types of music Styx could present while the other seemed to want to do that.
BlackWall wrote:Boomchild wrote:BlackWall wrote:Darren, thank you for posting this link. Wow.. great interview. I agree with DDY's take on a lot of the songs, and also thought it was interesting that they wanted "Superstars" to be the first single from "TGI". "TGI" only had two singles(which has always seemed insane to me). It seems like they never had more than three per album, but for such a smash success as "TGI", they should have released more songs. I think that both "Superstars" and the title track could have been hits(not before "Come Sail Away", however).
Dennis does seem to come across as... well, a little.. hmmm, let's say, "confident" in his contribution to the band.. not that he shouldn't be, but I also wonder if some of that stems from the events of the last 13 years. It would have to. How would anyone respond to a band they more or less created trying to rewrite history without them? Truth be told, he's also probably not too far off with his perspective, either. Even if he didn't sing lead on a lot of the early songs, he wrote most of them.. This was long before Tommy was part of the equation. Tommy brought a great deal to the band, but the sound was already there. This is not to diminish anyone's role in the band, I think they all were important, but.. "Suite Madame Blue", "Come Sail Away", and "Lady"? All are trademarks of the classic Styx sound, and what they are identified with.
I think that this comes from Dennis being very proud of what they did and doesn't see the logic in bashing things that were successful for the band. Dennis clearly feels that a good song is a good song no matter what style or label you attach to it. He didn't like putting boundaries on the types of music Styx could present while the other seemed to want to do that.
I can see that. I've always been a little torn on how I feel with that perspective. On one hand, I can totally appreciate the idea of not putting limits on creativity, but then, if you're supposed to be part of a unit, shouldn't everyone be on board with the direction of the group? Maybe when DDY got an idea like "Babe" or "Mr Roboto", those directions should have been held back for a solo project? I think he definitely had a keen sense for what would be successful, but it wasn't just about Dennis, or at least, it wasn't supposed to be. I can see, though, where the need to try to stay on top, and keep pumping out hits to stay relevant could get to anyone. I wonder what kind of pressure he got from A&M?
gr8dane wrote:Nice find Darren.
I did not read the whole thing this time around.It was a long interview and I just did a scan.
Liked the way Jeb's daughter, who is in law school thought all art should be free.
I wonder how she would think about getting lawyers to work for free,since they are helping the unjust?
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
StyxCollector wrote:gr8dane wrote:Nice find Darren.
I did not read the whole thing this time around.It was a long interview and I just did a scan.
Liked the way Jeb's daughter, who is in law school thought all art should be free.
I wonder how she would think about getting lawyers to work for free,since they are helping the unjust?
That part was interesting. <soapbox>We've raised a whole generation of kids that barely knows what physical product is, maybe never used iTunes to buy, and has done a lot of pirating. Music has always been "free" to them - so they can't fathom someone needing to actually make money doing it. </soapbox>
RedWingFan wrote:Can't believe he admitted to voting for Obama.
Now "Boomchild" is his life's 2nd biggest mistake!
masque wrote:Zan wrote:What's wrong with Boomchild? I don't get it.
well other than Harry's Hands it sucks as an album......
Hollywood wrote:This is totally a sad, but true statement. I understand that I am in the minority of music fans who spends their entire disposable income on either concerts, Music CDs, Music DVDs, or musical instruments, but people just ten years younger than me have never been to a live show and really have no interest. They are not vested into their music because they have not invested anything into their music.
I had an 18-year old cousin brag that his music collection was larger than mine, and although he was sadly mistaken, he had over 15,000 songs on his PC and none of them was paid for. The sad thing was that as I looked through what he had most of it had never been played. Who cares if you have something if you never listen to it. He is not interested in live music at all.
Most illegal downloaders will justify that they are not stealing from the artist, but the record company, because artists make no money on their records. Part of this myth was the artists' fault for claiming poor, but their are plenty of musicians that are rich off of album sales and never tour so this is a fallacy. Artists today do make most of their money touring, but starting artists are having an incredibly difficult time getting anywhere to play because they do not draw. The new bands that are drawing have a much older fan base. The Avett Brothers are doing very well in 2,000 - 4,000 seat venues, but the crowd is in their 40s.
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Abitaman wrote:masque wrote:Zan wrote:What's wrong with Boomchild? I don't get it.
well other than Harry's Hands it sucks as an album......
I like the whole CD, excerpt for Outside Looking In...
Some good piano work on it, something that was missing from his first two solo Cd's.
pinkfloyd1973 wrote:Abitaman wrote:masque wrote:Zan wrote:What's wrong with Boomchild? I don't get it.
well other than Harry's Hands it sucks as an album......
I like the whole CD, excerpt for Outside Looking In...
Some good piano work on it, something that was missing from his first two solo Cd's.
Boomchild and Back to the World are two of his better early albums
masque wrote:where am i going with all of this??? take the best that each of them had to offer from all of that and you have about two additional really good styx albums......what could have been
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