Styx: Difference between revisions

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The band had a string of top 40 hits throughout the 1970s and into the 1980s, including such mainstays as "Come Sail Away", "Renegade" and "Snowblind". Internally, the group was wracked with tension. DeYoung, who had begun to take onto himself the role of "band leader", attempted to steer Styx into a dramatic, almost operatic direction. This brought him into direct conflict with most of the rest of the band, who were more interested in a harder, rocking sound than the soaring balladic style DeYoung envisioned. The tensions came to a head in the form of the tour for ''[[Kilroy Was Here (album)|Kilroy Was Here]]'', an early-80s concept album cast around a [[Twenty Minutes Into the Future]] scenario in which [[Moral Guardians]] had succeeded in outlawing [[Rock and Roll]]. DeYoung managed to turn the concert into a ''musical'' telling the story of the album; this pleased neither his bandmates (who felt profoundly uncomfortable trying to ''act'' in between songs) nor the fans (who felt they were being cheated). The tour failed miserably, and in its wake the band broke up.
 
In the middle 1990s the hard feelings had faded enough for Styx to reunite to tour and record again, but DeYoung's control freakery began to raise its head once more not long after. Unwilling to put up with it, the rest of Styx expelled him from the band. They now tour as Styx with a new lead vocalist/keyboardist --- Lawrence Gowan, formerly a major Canadian solo act in his own right back in the 80s --- while DeYoung tours with an orchestra performing Styx songs and new material more in keeping with his personal artistic vision.
 
Some classic Styx songs: