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"One man's dream, and everyone else's nightmare"
SuiteMadameBlue wrote:Yes, they signed up with other email addresses, Yahoo, Hotmail, their own, work emails, etc. Also I know a few asked their spouses, friends and co-workers to sign up too, more chances.
I think it would be very funny if Froy and I won tickets
ChicagoSTYX wrote:So... over 16,000 people have signed up to win the free Styx tickets.
We all know the last Styx show at the VIC did not even sell out
If 16000 people were asked to pay for the tickets then you would see about 2000 just like the Vic ,.
It sounds to me like there is a lot of intrest in Styx these days.
"That happens virtually never in this day and age," Young said. "It's like 'Lady,' back in 1974, when we walked into WLS Radio to promote our fourth album and Bob Sirott said he really liked the song and was going to play it every day."
The constant play made "Lady" the band's first hit and ignited a career that included four consecutive triple platinum albums, each selling more than 3 million copies, in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
"I wouldn't have believed it if you had told me a year ago that we'd be recording an album of other people's music.
Why would we do that
But then, I wouldn't have expected our cover of 'I Am the Walrus' to hit No. 2 on the charts," Young said.
Re-recording classics is dangerous, he acknowledged, because some fans don't like their favorite songs touched
I've seen other people pay tribute to other artists and, many times, I've felt that the large majority of covers don't measure up to the original," he said. "Our collective goal was to have everything measure up, if not exceed the originals. It's tough.
The album is the 15th released by various incarnations of Styx, which saw its first wave of popularity dwindle in the mid-1980s. Dennis DeYoung, the band's original founder, singer and keyboardist, was still with the group then.
A bitter breakup ensued in the 1990s. While DeYoung played a huge role in the band's success, with songs such as "Lady," "Come Sail Away," and "Grand Illusion," he also steered his bandmates toward more theatrical productions they did not care for, with the campy "Kilroy Was Here" tour of the early 1980s prime example.
One man's dream, and everyone else's nightmare," said Young, who has not spoken with DeYoung since June 1999.
But Styx prevails.
The band will perform in England, Germany, Sweden, Belgium and Holland in June.
Styx will play at WDRV's fourth birthday concert May 25 at the Rosemont Theatre. The radio station bought all 4,400 tickets and will distribute them to randomly selected listeners
More than 16,000 fans already have registered.
You'd be surprised at how many kids you'll see at Styx shows these days,"
[We signed our first record contract in 1972. Now, 33 and one-third years later, here comes the 'Big Bang Theory,' " Young said. "We've profoundly affected a couple of generations. I'm amazed
Quote:
"One man's dream, and everyone else's nightmare"
Well, ok, a small slam. And I know how upset JY was as he went to cash his Kilroy checks at the bank. It must have been soooo hard. But I digress....
Adam wrote:Froy: Young forgot to mention that that band broke up 6 years ago when they decided to throw out the lead singer who sang Lady and all the other hits because they were so broke they needed to tour endlessly
Adam: Not true. None of it. You’re wrong.
Ash wrote:responding to every statement made by someone in an interview via quoting it and then replying is a sign of mental disease.
froy wrote:Ash wrote:responding to every statement made by someone in an interview via quoting it and then replying is a sign of mental disease.
No that's called the american way
You say something stupid and Im there to shove it down your throat.
Learn quotes or get lost
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