by yogi » Fri May 06, 2016 12:40 am
[quote="Monker"][quote="Toph"]\
Here is what I will have to say ONCE AGAIN!
8 top 10 singles, Shaw wrote 1
Production of all albums was DDY
All concept albums were DDY
Greatest Hits - 16 songs, 10 by DDY
Oh, and yes, Tommy TMTOMH has some cultural relevance right now, but Roboto, Babe, CSA all have had their day in the sun as well. So, like everything else 75% of cultural reference go to DDY songs.[/quote]
And, since I reread this recently, I'm going to quote the below. None of this hit song bullshit you keep quoting matters as much as pretend. Styx was an AOR band. They prided themselves on having 5 double platinum albums in a row. It's not these "hit" songs by DDY that solely propelled Styx success. It's the total package, which you (and DDY) fail to see or admit. In fact, those 'hit' songs, Roboto and Babe in particular, did more harm for the band than good.
[i]"I used to say it at the time, and saying it now is even harder to understand. But, there are certain types of artists that have certain kinds of records. Even though Steve Perry would get all over my ass because I was unable to get songs like "The Party's Over" from Captured much higher than #35 in the singles charts - man, I'm telling ya. On an act like Journey, a mid-chart hit is more desirable than a real hit. Cause once you have a real hit, and if we ever do have one, then we'll always have to have them. They'll think that you were born by the hits, and you'll die if you don't have one. And that will be true. So, as long as we can keep doing mid-charters, I can promise you sold-out tours, and multi-platinum releases. Just like "Turn Me Loose" by Loverboy, or "The Stroke" by Billy Squier. Peaked at #36 - but both - the albums were multiple platinum, even though they were mid-charters. You remember them as pretty big hits, don't you? So you know what I'm talking about. So you know, the lack of sophistication on the part of the artist was such that I couldn't explain that too well to a guy like Steve Perry. He hardly had a high school education, you know. "F.O.B." we used to say. "Fresh off boat." But anyway, "Lovin', Touchin', Squeezin'" put Evolution over three million. And then Departure - we had "Any Way You Want It." I got it to the top 25, and it did two million headed to three, (which) wasn't too much of a falloff in a bad economy. Then, "The Party's Over" from the live double album which was also double platinum, Captured, which came out with every other group in the world - everybody had the same idea at the time to release a live album."[/i] -- Herbie Herbert
The point is, which I know you will either ignore or it will go over your head, you diminish the band as a whole by constantly counting writing credits and hit songs. Styx was more than that (as was Journey) and seriously question your ability to appreciate the band when all you do is prop up one member above all else.[/quote]
Herbie & The Monkster are 100% correct on this. IMO the album Equinox is a PERFECT example of this > Suite Madame Blue and Born For Adventure never charted Lorelei charted at 36 or something. Off the Grand Illusion Come Sail Away was huge but songs like The Grand Illusion,Man In The Wilderness, Castle Walls, Fooling Yourself etc really sent that album into orbit( sales wise). Pieces Of Eight had mid level charting single success but the album was a MONSTER.
I couldnt agree more