Moderator: Andrew
Ash wrote:Ok... I'm at a crossroads.
I love Dennis. I think his getting the axe from Styx was completely unjustifiable.
Why is it then, that I am OK with Geoff Tate getting the shit canned from Queensryche.
Dennis (it has been said) turned Styx into Broadway
Geoff (it has been said) turned Queensryche into a cabaret
Both were accused of being insufferable douchebags to their bandmates.
I *worshipped* Geoff Tate in the early 1990's. Operation Mindcrime is, to this day, my favorite rock album of all time. My lone tattoo is inspired by Operation Mindcrime.
Yet I had grown to regard Geoff as an "out of touch, elitist douche" more concerned with selling wine and cabaret than advancing his art. Many of these accusations were levied at Dennis DeYoung (some of which I don't agree with).
In my head I see the differences as such:
1. Geoff Tate did not write Queensryche's biggest songs (Chris DeGarmo did - who left Queensryche in 1998).
2. Geoff became a chain smoker and it destroyed his once glorious vocal range.
3. Geoff assumed leadership where he haddn't earned it. Mindcrime was a band effort, and tate's mostly solo efforts produced the cataclysmic disasters that became Q2K, Dedicated to Chaos and Mindcrime II. Mindcrime II had moments, but pales compared to the original. Dedicated to Chaos was pure shit.
4. The other guys in QR not named Geoff Tate found a guy who had taken care of his voice and can still sing the songs as they were recorded. So they fired the original and replaced with a copy. Cover Band? I can see the argument - but what do you say when the original guy abused his body to the point of not being able to sing the songs anymore? What choice is left?
I don't know. I'm glad Tate is gone. I'm hoping this lights a fire under the remaining members with the new vocalist to write some killer songs. But time will tell if this is a success or failure.
I'm just puzzled as to how I can justify Tate's firing so easily when I'll defend Dennis to my dying day even though I firmly believe both Styx and Dennis are better off as they are now.
Ash wrote:Ok... I'm at a crossroads.
I love Dennis. I think his getting the axe from Styx was completely unjustifiable.
Why is it then, that I am OK with Geoff Tate getting the shit canned from Queensryche.
Dennis (it has been said) turned Styx into Broadway
Geoff (it has been said) turned Queensryche into a cabaret
Both were accused of being insufferable douchebags to their bandmates.
I *worshipped* Geoff Tate in the early 1990's. Operation Mindcrime is, to this day, my favorite rock album of all time. My lone tattoo is inspired by Operation Mindcrime.
Yet I had grown to regard Geoff as an "out of touch, elitist douche" more concerned with selling wine and cabaret than advancing his art. Many of these accusations were levied at Dennis DeYoung (some of which I don't agree with).
In my head I see the differences as such:
1. Geoff Tate did not write Queensryche's biggest songs (Chris DeGarmo did - who left Queensryche in 1998).
2. Geoff became a chain smoker and it destroyed his once glorious vocal range.
3. Geoff assumed leadership where he haddn't earned it. Mindcrime was a band effort, and tate's mostly solo efforts produced the cataclysmic disasters that became Q2K, Dedicated to Chaos and Mindcrime II. Mindcrime II had moments, but pales compared to the original. Dedicated to Chaos was pure shit.
4. The other guys in QR not named Geoff Tate found a guy who had taken care of his voice and can still sing the songs as they were recorded. So they fired the original and replaced with a copy. Cover Band? I can see the argument - but what do you say when the original guy abused his body to the point of not being able to sing the songs anymore? What choice is left?
I don't know. I'm glad Tate is gone. I'm hoping this lights a fire under the remaining members with the new vocalist to write some killer songs. But time will tell if this is a success or failure.
I'm just puzzled as to how I can justify Tate's firing so easily when I'll defend Dennis to my dying day even though I firmly believe both Styx and Dennis are better off as they are now.
gr8dane wrote: Anyways.I think your love for Dennis and not so much Tate face is more evident.You like Dennis more because,when he wanted to do his own thing, Broadway disc and solo what have you,the other guys did not accept that,and Dennis with that became more of a douche bag.When they did not accept that all of a sudden Dennis for some reason or other (it has been said) got sick.
Him (it has been said),could not do anything else except write solo stuff at the time.
pinkfloyd1973 wrote:gr8dane wrote: Anyways.I think your love for Dennis and not so much Tate face is more evident.You like Dennis more because,when he wanted to do his own thing, Broadway disc and solo what have you,the other guys did not accept that,and Dennis with that became more of a douche bag.When they did not accept that all of a sudden Dennis for some reason or other (it has been said) got sick.
Him (it has been said),could not do anything else except write solo stuff at the time.
(BUZZ) Wrong, try again....(and posting it twice still doesn't make your rewriting of Styx history correct either)![]()
Ash wrote:Nice try. But my tattoo is the Mindcrime Skull and Cross-T's with a backdrop of a tattered American Flag. I should know because I designed it along with the Tattoo artist who placed it on my arm.
There was a time I loved Queensryche more than Styx. Hell, I still tear up when I listen to Eyes of a Stranger off Mindcrime. An incredibly powerful song and very meaningful to me.
I think Geoff choosing to abuse his voice and lose his range was the start. To this day I can't imagine why a singer would do something so detrimental to their instrument. By Q2K he had definitely lost his high end mostly but managed to pull it back for Mindcrime II and AMerican Soldier ... two pretty solid records. But then the wheels came off. Dedicated to Chaos was pure disaster... and their live shows were so de-tuned you didn't recognize the songs half the time. Queensryche still is the best live show I saw in the Mindcrime I/II tour at the Ryman in Nashville. They sounded amazing... and I didn't even care that they piped in artificial backging vocals for "Another Rainy Night". It still sounded killer.
Geoff still has a "good" voice, but he can't hit those early songs anymore... and those are the songs that I and many others grew up on. Plus the stuff they put out after about 1998 really turned into weak sauce. Dedicated to Chaos was terrible.
So the only "difference" creatively between Dennis and Tate's situation was that Dennis was still producing hit songs while Tate haddn't had decent song in almost 20 years. (there were some bright spots... Man Down being one. Breakdown Room being another.) but the wheels came off the wagon after Promised Land (an album for all it's darkness I really, really enjoyed).
And then there is the sticky part about having a "Band agreement" which apparently Tate may not have had. Lots of little nuance differences. but I stand by Dennis but not Tate. And in a lot of ways Tate's Mindcrime Music helped shape some of my views on the world. I was in college when Mindcrime was in my tape deck... and I was very impressionable.
Is it too much to ask our artist friends to take care of themselves so they can keep giving us quality work representative of their god given skills for decades to come?
gr8dane wrote:pinkfloyd1973 wrote:gr8dane wrote: Anyways.I think your love for Dennis and not so much Tate face is more evident.You like Dennis more because,when he wanted to do his own thing, Broadway disc and solo what have you,the other guys did not accept that,and Dennis with that became more of a douche bag.When they did not accept that all of a sudden Dennis for some reason or other (it has been said) got sick.
Him (it has been said),could not do anything else except write solo stuff at the time.
(BUZZ) Wrong, try again....(and posting it twice still doesn't make your rewriting of Styx history correct either)![]()
Zzzzzz,then let us have your take .
I knew you wouldn't get it the first time.
Thought you might get it the second.
yogi wrote:Sometimes it is a shame when things change.
LOVED the Empire Album. One of my all time favorites!
mrsromek wrote:Interesting posts, to say the least. Tell me a singer...other that Geddy Lee...that can still hit the notes they sang 20+ years ago. Paul Rodgers? Yes. Who else? It's sad to say, but I could probably think of 20 that cannot. Vince Neil of the Crue immediately comes to mind. You know what's funny, though? Most fans go and see Motley and could care less. It's about the party, and about reminiscing when they were 13 and were blasting Theatre of Pain out of the boomboxes. I see on Twitter all day fans tweeting about how great Styx was the other night, etc, and guess what? Do they all even realize Dennis is not the singer of Styx anymore?
I think what all of the band 'crap' as I refer to it as boils down to is $. When all of these bands started out, they were hungry to just play gigs. Then the gigs got bigger and they got signed. Then came radio, limos, women, huge checks, etc. They started to NOT LIKE one another...lots of people in their ears telling them how great they are. So many bands are in that trap, or fell into it. You think Diamond Dave and EVH made up because they love one another? Hell no. It's about $.
I could tolerate 2-3 people I cannot stand for 2 hours a night on a stage in front of even a few hundred people (when it's the only time we see each other all day). And that's on the small end...thousands in the crowd screaming, even better. We all could.
I am never in favor of bands being broken up, or having 2 versions, especially when the members are still alive (case in point-Styx, etc). And, I've seen the version of Styx since Dennis was ousted, and honestly, I'd rather go see him solo (which I did a few years ago). He sang the songs I enjoyed most-call them ballads, whatever. A great song is a great song.
masque wrote:nobody ever mentions it but tommy shaw is singing as good or better than he ever did....he has not lost any of his voice that I can tell.
Zan wrote:There is no major difference. You can pick nits all day, but the bottom line is that your perception of the truth will always trump the actual truth. That's why there are sides of the fence and not one all-encompassing truth. Obi-Wan once said "many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view." That is exactly what's happening here. Your perception of the damage Geoff Tate caused is different from the perception of the damage DeYoung caused (or didn't cause, if you choose to word it that way).
It also depends on whether "hits" are what made you love the band or not. For me, my favorites were mostly in the album cuts. I would be ok never hearing "CSA" again. or "Babe." Or "Blue Collar Man." But Just get Through This Night, Why me, Castle walls, Love in the Midnight, Love is the Ritual, Midnight Ride...? That would suck.
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