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SuiteMadameBlue wrote:Here's the article:
Flashback: Styx Perform a Soaring ‘Come Sail Away’ in 1996
Three years after this performance, Styx threw Dennis DeYoung out of the band and have since ignored all his pleas to be let back in
By ANDY GREENE
Two weeks ago, Styx founder Dennis DeYoung posted a solo rendition of the band’s 1981 hit “Best of Times” onto YouTube that he recorded in his house. Much to his amazement, it quickly racked up 847,000 views and inspired him to post another song (the band’s 1990 tune “Show Me the Way”) and start his own YouTube channel. “Thank you for everything you’ve done with the ‘Best of Times’ video,” he said. “I can’t believe it. I’ve read all the comments.” (There’s 6,015 of those and climbing.)
The success of the video proves that there’s still a lot love out in the world for DeYoung even though his own band kicked him out 21 years ago and have refused all of his pleas to let him back in. They point to personality clashes on their reunion tours in 1996 and 1997 along with lingering bitterness over the group’s 1983 concept album Kilroy Was Here. “It cut our album sales in half because the male audience was absolutely alienated by ‘Mr. Roboto,’” Styx guitarist J.Y. Young said in 2019. “Not all of them but a large chunk.”
They’ve toured heavily these past two decades with replacement vocalist-keyboardist Lawrence Gowan while DeYoung has played the band’s music at solo shows. “I’m not even in the band I made famous,” he told Rolling Stone earlier this year. “I don’t want to sound like a whiner. I have moved on.”
Many fans have not moved on and continue to hope the group will let him back in at some point. To see what that might look like, here’s video of the band playing “Come Sail Away” on the 1996 Return to Paradise reunion tour. This is before South Park and Freaks and Geeks brought the song back into the public consciousness, but it still gets the entire amphitheater joyfully swaying and singing along.
With all due respect to Lawrence Gowan, who is a fine singer, it’s just not the same when they play it these days. Like so many Styx classics, DeYoung wrote the song and sang it on the record. Not letting him back for one more tour feels almost cruel at this point. They haven’t spoken in 20 years, but when we recently asked DeYoung what he’d like to say to them. “‘Let’s get together and give the fans one more run at this thing and then I’ll ride off into the sunset,'” he said. “‘You’ll keep doing your Styx thing and using the name. I don’t care. I want it one more time for our fans.'”
Gentlemen of Styx, Dennis has put the ball firmly in your court here. What do you say? Will you try the best that you can to carry on as you are? Or will you think of childhood friends and the dreams you had and let him back in? Together you can once again search for tomorrow on every shore.
SuiteMadameBlue wrote:Monker,
Rolling Stone wrote the article. You obviously didn't read the bottom of the article
"Gentlemen of Styx, Dennis has put the ball firmly in your court here. What do you say? Will you try the best that you can to carry on as you are? Or will you think of childhood friends and the dreams you had and let him back in? Together you can once again search for tomorrow on every shore."
The writer/Rolling Stone suggested the reunion and put it out there for the public!
StyxGuy wrote:I can't remember if it was a live interview or article, but what seemed to make things "worse" was when they kicked him out of the band in 78/79 for a few weeks, then when they couldn't find a replacement asked him back. He was so resentful and hurt by them doing that, he basically told JY "I'm in control moving forward or I'm not coming back". JY agreed to this.
So really... Tommy and JY haven't wanted him in Styx for 40 years, opportunity finally struck in 1999 when they had a good and proper reason. Dennis says he's "sick"? Well, sorry Dennis, get well soon and make sure the door hits you on the way out, we have a tour to do!
Monker wrote:StyxGuy wrote:I can't remember if it was a live interview or article, but what seemed to make things "worse" was when they kicked him out of the band in 78/79 for a few weeks, then when they couldn't find a replacement asked him back. He was so resentful and hurt by them doing that, he basically told JY "I'm in control moving forward or I'm not coming back". JY agreed to this.
A version of this was in the "Behind the Music".So really... Tommy and JY haven't wanted him in Styx for 40 years, opportunity finally struck in 1999 when they had a good and proper reason. Dennis says he's "sick"? Well, sorry Dennis, get well soon and make sure the door hits you on the way out, we have a tour to do!
That's an exaggeration for what happened. Dennis wanted them to reschedule the tour and/or delay the album because of his light sensitivity (which he says he STILL has), Tommy and the label said they couldn't do that..what's the point of releasing an album if you are not going to tour for it? So they brought in Gowan to tour. Then, as JY said in the BTM, Dennis had no idea when he was going to be better. Tommy posted on his old blog that he talked to Jonathan Cain for advice on what to do, I assume because Steve Perry did exactly the same thing to Journey. So, they ended up firing Dennis. Then Dennis cried (according to him) and then sued the band to get his share of royalties.
I don't think it was just "an opportunity". IMO, as was said back then - maybe the BTM, it was a "here we go again" moment. Remember, there was all kinds of bullshit going on because of Hunchback. Dennis' time was split because of Hunchback, and at times it seemed to take priority over Styx. Even Dennis has admitted in interviews that he was burned out from doing both and that may have contributed to his health issues. Even BNW has a Hunchback song on it. His first tours FEATURED Hunchback songs. On his PBS tour he was promoting the idea of a PBS production of Hunchback. The '97 tour was originally not going to happen because of Hunchback, and was a short tour because of Hunchback. As you said, there was the incident prior to Paradise Theater. Then everything around Kilroy. All of Styx' misery revolved around Dennis and canceling the BNW tour was the last straw...especially since Gowan worked out so well for them.
brywool wrote:FFS, move. on.
SuiteMadameBlue wrote:Moving on would be easier if all those who have bashed Dennis based on lies and distortions would just admit they were duped. Yet they hide behind the fallacy that we are Dennis fans only instead of actual Styx fans, which is who we are. One million Styx fans recently watched him sing BOT from home. The comments were so numerous and positive they could not have been only so called Dennis fans. They were Styx fans wanting a reunion. Even Rolling Stone.
When Tommy and JY replaced Dennis while he was ill, they told lies as to the reasons. I kept those posts. Dennis passes the baton to Tommy etc. When we learned the truth this divided us. Many who were Styx fans who communicated and were friends were forced to choose. Why? Mr.Roboto, Kilroy and Babe, please this does not make sense. They played Babe on the 96 and 97 tours and no one mentioned Kilroy Was Here. And now they even play Mr. Roboto.
Those of us who like Dennis never hated the other guys we loved the band. But because of all the constant negativity toward Dennis by Tommy and JY, fans of the new band must denigrate Dennis and not just musically but personally. We Styx fans want one last chance to experience what we loved. Please watch the 1996 reunion tour and read those comments. They overwhelming want that experience again
Jodes wrote:So.. is it the author or Dennis saying "Larry is a fine singer"????
Monker wrote:What a bunch of complete bullshit. All you are doing here is playing politics and repeating what Dennis said in recent interviews as if they are some talking points from a politician.
It doesn't make sense to you because you refuse to understand that it isn't just the songs "Babe" and Mr. Roboto, or the KWH album...it is the circumstances that revolve around those entire experiences, and Dennis acting like a controlling, manipulative, ego driven ass.
The very fact that he is begging for a reunion shows that he is STILL trying to control Styx
You never hated the "other guys"? How many times in this forum was Stynx posted? It was you who started "carrot Styx" and carrot Styx fans after Cyclorama was released. Glen had months of anger directed at him because of the belief "Killing the Thing That You Love" was insulting Dennis. Then Dennis himself made the 'bathwater' comment,
and people used that to describe Styx fans. So, don't play innocent because it's bullshit.
This has nothing to do with the fans. It has to do with what Dennis wants and using fan comments in a manipulative and controlling way to try to get it.SuiteMadameBlue wrote:Moving on would be easier if all those who have bashed Dennis based on lies and distortions would just admit they were duped. Yet they hide behind the fallacy that we are Dennis fans only instead of actual Styx fans, which is who we are. One million Styx fans recently watched him sing BOT from home. The comments were so numerous and positive they could not have been only so called Dennis fans. They were Styx fans wanting a reunion. Even Rolling Stone.
When Tommy and JY replaced Dennis while he was ill, they told lies as to the reasons. I kept those posts. Dennis passes the baton to Tommy etc. When we learned the truth this divided us. Many who were Styx fans who communicated and were friends were forced to choose. Why? Mr.Roboto, Kilroy and Babe, please this does not make sense. They played Babe on the 96 and 97 tours and no one mentioned Kilroy Was Here. And now they even play Mr. Roboto.
Those of us who like Dennis never hated the other guys we loved the band. But because of all the constant negativity toward Dennis by Tommy and JY, fans of the new band must denigrate Dennis and not just musically but personally. We Styx fans want one last chance to experience what we loved. Please watch the 1996 reunion tour and read those comments. They overwhelming want that experience again
Jodes wrote:Thank you Allan.. Always the voice of reason!
It's Styx - it's always going to be controversial!
Stay safe man.. I hope all is well.
That goes for all of you.. well except for the DB that joked about my mom's Alzheimer's that guy can go straight to Hell! (No I won't let that one go)
StyxCollector wrote:Is this 1999 or 2020?
We've been hashing this same stuff for over 20 years now.
Disclaimer: I'm credited in the BTM as I provided material for them to use. That said ...
BTM tells a story. They made entertainment. None of us - me, Laurie, Monker, the man on the street corner - lived through it. They did. Was DDY difficult to work with? Maybe. Were JY and TS peaches to work with? Maybe, maybe not. Are *you* always pleasant to be around? I know I have my moments. You'd be lying if you're a ray of sunshine 24x7.
Look at the Michael Jordan documentary, especially the last two parts. I saw that bit of the end of Episode 7. There's a guy who STILL has that competitive fire. Did it make him a jerk to some? Hell yes. Am I saying DDY is MJ? No. But don't delude yourself that bands can always effectively work as a democracy, either. Look at the gaffes of many bands and how most of them hate each other these days. They hang on for a couple of hours on stage and then go their separate ways.
I can tell you that post-Po8 you can hear a difference in the way the band wrote and recorded. Demos and such pre-Cornerstone for the most part sound different and I'll leave it at that. At some point ALL bands become about business - even in ones like Rush where they genuinely did like each other but still almost split apart in the mid-80s. The Styx you hear on the Mantra show - hungry, ready to break it big - is not the same band you hear at Chicago Stadium basically 18 months later which seems to be on automatic pilot. Styx, give or take, has been doing a variation of that '78 show now more often than not for 40 years with some songs rotating in and out.
I think we all know a reunion won't happen. It doesn't mean *some* fans or even Dennis on some level don't want it - many do. Just like other fans hate DDY and ballads, and just want to hear Styx as it is today. Neither viewpoint is wrong, but neither is necessarily right. At the end of the day they are both opinions. Opinions are like a$$holes. Everyone has one.
None of them are spring chickens, and with the state of the world today, I'm thankful I got to see them on EOTC, both reunion tours in 96 and 97, and both DDY and Styx numerous times post-99. All of this back and forth and bickering is tiring at this point. Like what you like, hate what you hate, but who gives a flip? There's a very real chance none of us may see DDY or Styx live for the forseeable future ... or ever again.
SuiteMadameBlue wrote: But because of all the constant negativity toward Dennis by Tommy and JY, fans of the new band must denigrate Dennis and not just musically but personally.
SuiteMadameBlue wrote:Politics? These were simply facts.
Any anger directed at them after they lied was understandable given the love true Styx fans had for the whole band.
Remember the vitriol was started by those who joined in with Tommy and JY after BTM and made Dennis into a villain.
Please remember without Lady hardly anyone would know Styx or Tommy Shaw.
Dennis was correct in calling those who excepted whatever Tommy and JY said as “bath water drinkers”. They lied and some fans believed them. He never called all Styx fans that but if the shoe fits.
Have you read the comments on his YouTube BOT home video. These countless fans want a reunion. Plus over 4 million views of the 1996 Return to Paradise reunion all saying that this is the Styx they want.
To constantly refer to Dennis as a controlling ego maniac simply reinforces the distortion and lies you accepted from Tommy and JY!!!!
Let’s assume he was the controlling dictator they claim
then at the very least he should receive enormous credit for that string of albums we all love.
They replaced a sick colleague in a power and money grab nothing more. Need proof, the first corporation formed by them after Dennis was replaced was called TMB. Two man band. Not three that would have included Chuck. Follow the money.
Read Alan Hirt’s interview with Tommy where he admits that Dennis was the leader and the one who spent the time in the studio making those albums we love.
[/quote][/quote]Dennis is not trying to control Styx he wants one last tour for the fans and the vast majority of fans want the same thing. Should a tour happen stay home if you like. But I don’t think you will. Before BTM we all loved the same thing. Styx.
brywool wrote:
The ONLY reunion I am interested in with JY, Tommy, Dennis, and Chuck is one offstage where they can at least be friendly, civil, have a drink and remember the good things that they did do. If they can't work together, that doesn't bother me. But if those truly were 'friendships' and not just business, THOSE would be good to mend. It sounds like Dennis had good moment with Chuck about the photos used for the album and if you've seen the video of Dennis' new song, Chuck and John are prominent throughout. So it seems like they are at least on speaking terms. That is great to know.
yogi wrote:Monker makes alot of decent arguments, but obviously based on Tommy doing 7 Deadly Zens in 97/98 he too like Dennis ( Hunchback) had other outside interests. What If ( Horrible album) the following happens:
Tommy's 7 Deadly Zens album hits BIG and now Tommy's a BIG solo star. Dennis doesnt get sick flying back & forth for Hunchback but Disney still causes Hunchback to fail. Now Cartman, Big Daddy, Freaks & Geeks & the VW commericial all happen and Styx is in vogue again. Based on Cartman, Big Daddy.... Tommy keeps his word to Styx & agrees to make the BNW album but wont tour because he's a now a solo star & 7DZ demands a tour. What happens??
Is Tommy now the BAD guy in JY's world? I think the answer is absolutely yes, because the real money is going to be made touring. Only now, on the Behind the Music we are hearing about all of Tommy's faults along with a bunch of thrown in vicious lies.
Remember just one year prior Tommy & Dennis were friends with Dennis helping Tommy out in Chicago on Tommy's Borders tour. Before that, they were on tour reliving Paradise Theater & The Grand Illusion and before that JY & Chuck had no problem doing Edge Of The Century & they would have done Edge ll.
Why wasnt Dennis such a tyrant then??
As for Dennis demanding the spotlight I would say ANY group doing anything worthwhile MUST have a leader. If he was such a tyrant why would he allow the first album with Tommy in the band to be titled Crystal Ball with the first single being Mademoislle. Then later Glen enters the band and the album is titled Edge Of The Century and the first single released is Love Is The Ritual.
That's not a tyrant that's a team player.
Finally, if my above scenario would have happened with 7 Deadly Zens hitting I believe Dennis wouldnt of gone on tour to support Brave New World until Tommy was good to go. Again thats not a tyrant thats a TEAM guy.
gr8dane wrote:StyxCollector wrote:Is this 1999 or 2020?
We've been hashing this same stuff for over 20 years now.
Disclaimer: I'm credited in the BTM as I provided material for them to use. That said ...
BTM tells a story. They made entertainment. None of us - me, Laurie, Monker, the man on the street corner - lived through it. They did. Was DDY difficult to work with? Maybe. Were JY and TS peaches to work with? Maybe, maybe not. Are *you* always pleasant to be around? I know I have my moments. You'd be lying if you're a ray of sunshine 24x7.
Look at the Michael Jordan documentary, especially the last two parts. I saw that bit of the end of Episode 7. There's a guy who STILL has that competitive fire. Did it make him a jerk to some? Hell yes. Am I saying DDY is MJ? No. But don't delude yourself that bands can always effectively work as a democracy, either. Look at the gaffes of many bands and how most of them hate each other these days. They hang on for a couple of hours on stage and then go their separate ways.
I can tell you that post-Po8 you can hear a difference in the way the band wrote and recorded. Demos and such pre-Cornerstone for the most part sound different and I'll leave it at that. At some point ALL bands become about business - even in ones like Rush where they genuinely did like each other but still almost split apart in the mid-80s. The Styx you hear on the Mantra show - hungry, ready to break it big - is not the same band you hear at Chicago Stadium basically 18 months later which seems to be on automatic pilot. Styx, give or take, has been doing a variation of that '78 show now more often than not for 40 years with some songs rotating in and out.
I think we all know a reunion won't happen. It doesn't mean *some* fans or even Dennis on some level don't want it - many do. Just like other fans hate DDY and ballads, and just want to hear Styx as it is today. Neither viewpoint is wrong, but neither is necessarily right. At the end of the day they are both opinions. Opinions are like a$$holes. Everyone has one.
None of them are spring chickens, and with the state of the world today, I'm thankful I got to see them on EOTC, both reunion tours in 96 and 97, and both DDY and Styx numerous times post-99. All of this back and forth and bickering is tiring at this point. Like what you like, hate what you hate, but who gives a flip? There's a very real chance none of us may see DDY or Styx live for the forseeable future ... or ever again.
Exactly.None of us were in Styx and lived it.
So for the Dennis fans who wants him back in Styx,don't have any idea.
All I can say, he must have been ass enough, for them not wanting anything to do with him.
Simples.Get over it.Move on.
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