Styx
Styx Gold
Label:  061002_1933 
Date:  5/4/2004
Length:  0:00
Format:  FLAC
Genre:  Classic Rock; Rock
  Category:  rock flac
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Best Thing    
      2.  
      You Need Love    
      3.  
      Lady    
      4.  
      Winner Take All    
      5.  
      Rock & Roll Feeling    
      6.  
      Light Up    
      7.  
      Lorelei    
      8.  
      Prelude 12    
      9.  
      Suite Madame Blue    
      10.  
      Shooz    
      11.  
      Mademoiselle    
      12.  
      Crystal Ball    
      13.  
      The Grand Illusion    
      14.  
      Fooling Yourself (The Angry Young Man)    
      15.  
      Come Sail Away    
      16.  
      Miss America    
      17.  
      Man In The Wilderness    
      18.  
      Blue Collar Man (Long Nights)    
      19.  
      Sing For The Day    
      20.  
      Renegade    
      21.  
      Pieces Of Eight    
      22.  
      Lights    
      23.  
      Babe    
      24.  
      Borrowed Time    
      25.  
      Boat On The River    
      26.  
      A.D. 1928    
      27.  
      Rockin' The Paradise    
      28.  
      Too Much Time On My Hands    
      29.  
      The Best Of Times    
      30.  
      Snowblind    
      31.  
      Mr. Roboto    
      32.  
      Love Is The Ritual    
      33.  
      Show Me The Way    
      34.  
      Dear John    
      35.  
      One With Everything    
    Additional info: | top
      Styx may have had their musical roots in the UK's burgeoning late-'60s/early-'70s prog-rock bombast, but they were true pioneers in at least one sense: The Chicago-bred quintet virtually defined the hugely successful "corp rock" boom that followed a decade after prog's original fortunes tarnished. And if that label suggests a certain sense of the formulaic, in Styx it actually denoted a band with sharp ears and a shrewder sense of rock history, attested to immediately here by the Yes-inspired harmonies of "You Need Love" and the staccato rhythms of the Beatles' "Getting Better" on "Winner Take All." This 35-track double-disc anthology charts a course from sudden fame to its sometimes stormy aftermath, spanning the band's 1972 debut and its resilient 2003 comeback contender, Cyclorama. But after working their way up from the Grand Funk-worthy, meat 'n' instant potatoes of "Rock and Roll Feeling" and bald-faced melodramatics of "Lady" and "Come Sail Away" to the gutsier edge of "Blue Collar Man" and "Too Much Time on My Hands," rising tides of punk and new wave began to erode their younger demographic. And by the time "Babe" gave way to the faux techno of '83's "Mr. Roboto," even those sympathetic to the band's hook-rich, prog-lite sensibility seemed restless. Still, their Tommy Shaw-dominate output in the '90s and beyond showcased a band that had subtly matured from their arena-rock cliché salad days. --Jerry McCulley
    Links/Resources | top