Showing posts with label "The Great Divide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label "The Great Divide. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Tommy Shaw interview: Part II (Styx, Yes announce summer tour)

Styx guitarist Tommy Shaw in concert at USANA Amphitheater in 2007. (Photo by Doug Fox)

Styx announced its U.S. summer tour plans this morning, releasing dates for a 22-city co-headlining tour with Yes. The one-month jaunt, dubbed the "Progressive U.S. Tour," will kick off July 4 and conclude Aug. 3.

While Styx's tour with Yes will not have a Salt Lake City date, local fans of the band can look forward to a co-headline outdoor date with another well-known band in the fall.

When I interviewed Styx guitarist Tommy Shaw on March 12, we mainly discussed the impending release of his new solo bluegrass album, "The Great Divide." The album, incidentally, debuted at No. 2 on Billboard's Bluegrass Albums chart, coming in behind "Rare Bird Alert," by Steve Martin and the Steep Canyon Rangers.

The last portion of our interview, however, touched on Styx's tour with Yes, as well as other projects the band and Shaw have in the pipeline. Styx has probably been one of a handful of bands that have most taken advantage of the popular double- and triple-bill format — aggressively touring in packaged formats nearly every summer. Past Styx touring partners include REO Speedwagon, Def Leppard, Journey, Foreigner, Kansas, Boston and many others.

One touring package that is kind of the Holy Grail for Shaw fans would put Styx with Night Ranger and Ted Nugent. Once those lynchpins were in place, you could add on Damn Yankees (the 1990s supergroup that featured Shaw, Nugent and Jack Blades of Night Ranger) and also Shaw-Blades (the Tommy-Jack enterprise that has released two albums to date with a third in progress). What a night of music that would be — well, if you didn't have to sing and perform most of the night. As Shaw was quick to point out when I raised the possibility, such a nightly grind would certainly exact a physical toll. Still, for fans, it's a fun prospect to think about, even if it never materializes.

Also in the works, a DVD of last fall's "Grand Illusion/Pieces of Eight" theater tour and "Regeneration, Volume 2," a CD which features eight re-recorded songs from the Styx and Damn Yankees catalog. The CD, which will be available at tour stops this summer, includes new versions of "Renegade," "Blue Collar Man," "Too Much Time on my Hands," "Queen of Spades," "Snowblind," "Miss America" and Damn Yankees tunes "Coming of Age" and "High Enough."

Here's the concluding portion of my interview with Shaw:

DOUG FOX: I would probably be remiss if I didn’t ask you about Styx’s summer tour plans ... and I know the Yes thing is not announced yet, but in this part of the interview I’m hoping to get a few more updates and then when things become available kind of plug them in.

TOMMY SHAW: Well, we’ve been saying that we should do this for years, and it never would come through — I don’t know if schedules just wouldn’t allow or you couldn’t get everybody on board to do it. I don’t know your experience with Yes, but I just remember getting that first Yes album and putting that on and hearing that music and thinking, “Where did this come from? This is, like, music from another planet ... it’s better than anything I’ve ever heard.” It’s taken rock music to a level that I didn’t even know is possible. And Styx was influenced by Yes. If you listen to songs like “You Need Love,” you can tell they were listening to Yes. So we’re very excited about going on tour with them. 

DF: Is there a third band, too?


SHAW: There’s probably going to be an acoustic act or just someone to play, you know, to get people in the building. It’s a great opportunity for, like, an acoustic guy to come in and warm everybody up and introduce themselves.

DF: So will that mean that each of the bands, you and Yes, obviously, would get maybe a little extra time on stage as opposed to the triple bills?

SHAW: That’s exactly the plan. That’s exactly what the intent is.

DF: Can you just comment generally about co-headlining tours and how popular they’ve become in the last, what’s it been, seven or eight years?

SHAW: Yeah, we would join forces with people, and as fan bases get older, you know, some people, their life just dictates that you’re not going to as many shows as possible. It gives people a reason to go, “Wait a minute, these are two of my favorite bands, I’ve got to go see this.” And you wind up playing to their fans, and hopefully they become your fans and vice versa. It’s a great way to keep constantly infusing the genre with new fans. It’s a great idea because it’s working. We’re constantly looking out there, and I’ll say, “How many people are seeing Styx for the first time?” Routinely, it will be 20 to 50 percent of the people are first-time concert-goers to a Styx concert. That’s pretty amazing.

DF: And you’re playing with Journey and Foreigner in Europe.

SHAW: Yes.

DF: And you’ve been with both of those bands before ...

SHAW: Yes ... we all light a fire under each other, which is only that much better for the fans that are coming to see it.

DF: And I guess Night Ranger is playing with Journey and Foreigner during the summer in th U.S.

SHAW: I think that’s awesome.

DF: Now, I always thought ... and this is probably just my thought in looking at the tour schedules and what not, but Night Ranger has maybe never been involved, perhaps, with Styx as a full-time touring partner because it seems like they don’t do full tours very much but just kind of weekend dates and things like that.

SHAW: Right.

DF: Is this a change for them ...

Tommy Shaw stomping out "The Grand Illusion."
SHAW: Yeah, it’s a change. I’ve always encouraged Jack, you know, Night Ranger is such a great band, you really should do something like this. Not that I’m taking credit for it, but I’m just glad that he’s finally pursuing it like that, because they have the music, they have the hits, and they have a great band, and everybody’s still in great shape. When you go hear them, you’re singing along to every song — you’re getting your face ripped off by the guitar shredding. “Sister Christian” is in “Rock of Ages,” and it’s a pivotal song in that play. So I’m really happy to see them getting the recognition they deserve.

DF: You know, people think that Styx and Night Ranger would be the perfect touring couple.

SHAW: I don’t disagree. I’ve been saying that for years. Fortunately, they don’t listen to me because I don’t necessarily know what’s going to make up a successful tour. But I think eventually, I’m going to be proven right on that one.

DF: Because that’s the one a lot of fans are holding out for.

SHAW: For one thing, you know you’re going to get a third act out of it! (laughs)

DF: Exactly!

SHAW: Whether it’s on the bill or not.

DF: I think that’s why everybody wants it.

SHAW: Yeah, I would love to see that.

DF: Of course, I know the schedules lining up are probably the big thing that would prevent this, but people are also looking at the fourth and fifth act ... by inviting Ted [Nugent].

SHAW: They want me to die! (laughs) “Maybe he’ll keel over on stage and I want to be there!”

DF: They better get tickets for the first part of the tour!

SHAW: Oh crap! It’d be great for the first three days, and on the fourth one I’ll be on a gurney up there. (laughs) I like the concept of that, though.

DF: And then if you could just tell me what are the future plans for Shaw/Blades. I’m sure people would be interested in that.

SHAW: Well, there is a future, definitely. We just suddenly got sidetracked doing other wonderful things. But there is a record that was started already, that has some great songs on it, which I told you about. Once this [bluegrass project] has run its course for the time being, then that will be the next thing we jump on. We’ll finish that. We want to go play some shows, and offers are out there. So it’ll happen.

DF: And then the DVD of your theater tour [doing "The Grand Illusion" and "Pieces of Eight" albums in their entirety]?

SHAW: We’re in post-production with that right now.

DF: I know we’ve talked before, but you said the great thing about being where you guys are right now is there’s no set timetables or deadlines, things just kind of happen when you can do them.

SHAW: Yeah, there’s no rush to kind of put it out prematurely. So we can take our time and produce it the way we want it to be. We’re recording our old masters because the record company, there aren’t really any original people who were there during the days when we made those records — so whoever has the masters has not stepped forward. So we’re just redoing them. It’s actually better because it’s the guys who you’ve been coming to hear play it for the last generation are playing on it. So they sound very much like the original, except it’s like we put a bigger engine in it.

DF: So you really don’t know where any of these masters are?

SHAW: No.

DF: Wow.

SHAW: It’s pretty amazing isn’t it?

NOTE: If you missed the first part of the interview, you can find it HERE.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Tommy Shaw: Bridging 'The Great Divide'

Styx guitarist Tommy Shaw releases "The Great Divide" on Tuesday.

Tommy Shaw has spent most of his career cruising down the proverbial rock 'n' roll superhighway, foot heavy on the accelerator as he's helped steer the fortunes of successful mainstream bands such as Styx and Damn Yankees, not to mention other solo and side projects.

Now, he's signaling a significant musical detour.

"It's like I'm making a left-hand turn," the guitarist/vocalist said of his new solo bluegrass record, "but I'm putting on the signal about three blocks ahead."

For Shaw, recording "The Great Divide," which will officially be released on Tuesday, was not only a labor of love but a return to his roots and the music he listened to growing up in Montgomery, Ala. -- just 280 miles from Nashville. The record features several prominent bluegrass players, including the likes of Jerry Douglas, Stuart Duncan, Rob Ickes and Sam Bush, as well as some background vocal appearances by Alison Krauss and Dwight Yoakam.

Shaw was gracious enough to spend nearly an hour on the phone with me early Saturday morning for one of his first in-depth interviews on the bluegrass project. His enthusiasm for the release was obvious, even as he admitted that he didn't necessarily know how the record would ultimately be received -- whether in the bluegrass community or by Styx fans.

"Maybe I'm creating a side door -- at least with Styx fans and people who trust me, who've enjoyed my solo work through the years," Shaw mused."Maybe they trust me one more time to come in through this door and get a little taste of bluegrass."

If anybody can bridge "The Great Divide" between rock and bluegrass, perhaps it's Shaw.

And rest assured, Styx fans, we also discussed the band's summer tour plans, Styx projects currently in the pipeline, the status of the next Shaw/Blades project and a dream future co-headlining tour many fans -- and Shaw himself -- would like to see. All those things will be included in the second part of the interview, which will run in the days ahead. (The second part of the interview can now be read HERE.)

DOUG FOX: Well, first of all, let’s get the obvious question out of the way — what possesses a rock and roll guitar hero like yourself to venture into bluegrass?

TOMMY SHAW: Well, like any other major thing in your life, you often ease into it, to the point where you almost don’t realize that you started it. And this was one of those deals. Back in 2002, [my wife] Jeanne and I went to a Hank Williams tribute concert at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland. And I was asked to sing a couple of Hank songs, and Marty Stuart was there, and Billy Bob Thornton, who was friends with Marty, and they’d just done a record together, and Billy was hosting it, and Marty and his band were there. Billy’s using some of Marty’s guys ... so I just fit in with all of them. And so Brad [Davis] had played with Marty and was now playing with Billy, and so this led to us becoming friends with Billy, who lives in L.A. So we would go over to his house in the studio, working on a new album, and Brad had heard me sing some high part on one of Billy’s songs, and he said, ‘I need some high harmonies on this bluegrass project I’m working on, would you mind singing on it?’ So he gave me the file, I took it home and did it in my studio and gave it back to him. It was pretty straight-forward. You know, I knew what to do, I just followed him along, but it’s not the kind of thing that everybody can do. But he loved it, and he suggested we get together and try our hand at writing something. So the next time he was in town, because I think he was living in Nashville at the time, the next time he was in L.A., he came over and we wrote this song, “I’ll be Coming Home.” In fact, that vocal that’s on there is the vocal that’s on the writing demo. So, it just happened, I sat down and picked up the resonator guitar and played [hums guitar riff from the song]. It was one of those songs that kind of wrote itself. We just sort of sat there and out it came. And those are the best kind. I’m probably like a stuck record saying that, but, you know, I’ve been on a lot of albums and done a lot of records over the years -- not every song is like that, trust me. (laughs) And so when you get one like that, it, like, comes out fully formed, and so there’s not a lot of wondering, “Does this go with that? Does this flow?” Because it did, it just flowed. So we were off to kind of the start. We didn’t realize it, but we agreed, "Next time you’re around maybe we can write another one." And that wound up being about 10 months. Then he came back and we wrote “Afraid to Love.” We worked on that one a little bit, but we kept working on it cause we liked it, and it turned out really good. And then probably six months later he came back with [hums another guitar riff]. This is going to read funny with all the [humming]!. So he had the early makings of “Umpteen Miles,” and so he and I finished that one. And every time we would do one, we would record and mix a little writing demo, so we’d have something to listen to. So now we had three songs, and as far as I was concerned, three songs, you know, even when you have a whole album, a lot of times all you’ll send somebody is three songs so they can get a taste of it. So I figure we’ve got a story now, let’s play it for people. And that’s when it took seed, because we got so many good responses from people — all kind of the same like we’re getting now, you know, with me doing this, it’s like, “Huh?” And then people hear it, and they go, “Well, yeah, OK, I get it.” And so people were saying, “When are we going to hear more?” But it took probably another year and half, maybe longer, before Brad and I both had an opening in our schedule where we could actually pursue it. And that day came, and Brad just started coming, and that’s when we were really committed to it.

DF: And, so, how long ago was that?

SHAW: It was the end of 2009 ... the winter of 2009. Within a few weeks, I’d say the winter of 2009 we really started getting into it. He started coming, and we would write a song and do a demo. He would leave and come back the next week, 'cause he was having business with Coffee Fool company that makes the Styx coffee. That’s also how I wound up getting the Styx coffee was through Brad because he was working with Coffee Fool. So I would write stuff or get a little thing started, and he would come back and we’d finish it, or help me do the demo. Fairly quickly we wound up with about 15, 16 songs in various states of completion.

DF: As for the songwriting process itself, and you kind of touched on this with some of the songs, but were the differences in writing for this format simply subtle or were they more wholesale than what you would normally find writing rock songs?

SHAW: Subtle. That was the tricky part because I have a deep respect for the bluegrass community because it’s so ... when I first got my biggest taste of it, and I’d seen it for years as a little kid at bluegrass festivals out in the woods up north of from where I lived in Alabama. But I didn’t really get the full grasp of it until we saw Alison Krauss and Union Station in 1997 and heard these orchestra-level virtuosos just standing there, just quietly ripping the roof off the place. You know, I realized the depth of this music for it to affect people where they pursue it like that. So I wanted to be very cautious if I was going to do this, to not make the mistake a lot of people do, doing something that’s out of their realm. Like, when you’ve seen a lot of musicians probably go to Broadway, who were very successful, legendary songwriters and performers go to Broadway and they kind of take the attitude, “Well, I’m going to show you, this is how we’re going to do it downtown now.” And they come walking out of there with it kind of shoved, the little community there that goes, “No, this how you’re supposed to do it.” And I didn’t want to have that happen. I just wanted to be respectful. So we were very careful about, “Does this make sense? Would you do this on a bluegrass record?” And so one day I said, “Let’s just keep doing the next right thing and you can’t go wrong doing that, right?” So, that became what we said every day. At least once a day we’d go, “Just do the next right thing.” You hear that a few times and you realize, “Well, that should be a song.”

DF: So that’s where that song came from?

SHAW: Yeah. Then again I picked up the acoustic, and what I thought, this not only should be a song, this should be the lead song because I always envisioned, you know how you see some of the old bluegrass bands before they’d have electronic pickups on acoustic elements, they’d just have a few mikes around front and guys, when it came time to sing, they would all lean in and sing, and when it came time to play a solo, they’d kind of lean in and raise up their instrument and play it like that?

DF: Right.

SHAW: They would take turns playing solos. It’s kind of like an introduction to the band. Everybody takes a little four bars or something like that. And that’s how I wanted “The Next Right Thing” to be — the first song, “Here’s a little taste of what you’re going to hear the whole album.”

DF: I know you’ve mentioned before that you wanted to be very respectful to the genre and not be perceived as someone who’s achieved a certain level of notoriety in rock, or in another aspect of music, to where you would naturally think, like you said, “I’m just going to come in and do it my way and not their way.”

SHAW: Exactly. And I’m not naive enough to expect that they’re going to believe I’m a seasoned bluegrass artist, because I’m not. But this music does have a certain history in my life experience. It’s part of the texture of music that I heard growing up. This was as big a part of it as anything else. It was mixed with gospel, country and bluegrass, and even standards like Frank Sinatra, because we would listen on television to variety shows and that was all there on local AM radio. You would hear Roy Acuff and you’d hear Minnie Pearl on comedy shows. Then you’d hear Porter Wagoner, we always watched Porter Wagoner, and I liked Sammy Davis Jr. I loved the  gospel shows on Sunday morning. There was always a guy like Ralph Stanley and Bill Monroe with the high voices, and the same thing in the gospel community. I always loved that. So, this was nothing new to my ears and my musical tastes growing up. I was just new to writing and performing it. I just wanted to be like a respectful visitor coming in with my hat off and wiping my feet before I walk in the door.

DF: So, you’re telling me your musical career didn’t start with “Crystal Ball”?

SHAW: (laughs) Well, some might think it did — but there were some steps along the way getting to there.

DF: I know when you release a Styx album, you probably have a certain idea of what the reaction might be and how it will be received by your fan base. But I imagine that in this case, this is a totally different scenario ... what kind of expectations do you have for the album?

SHAW: Well, just because I had this reawakening, I don’t expect everybody to follow it. But I do have a feeling, just from my own experience over the last few years when I asked people what do they feel about bluegrass, almost every one of them said, “I love bluegrass.” People I would never in a million years expect it, because they’d say, “I have an uncle that played it all the time when I was little.” Everybody would have, kind of like me, a little story about bluegrass in their life story. So that’s one of the reasons why I think this could wind up being the first bluegrass album that a lot of people buy, just because they do like it, and they just haven’t gone out and bought any of it yet. Maybe I’m creating a side door — at least with Styx fans and people who trust me, who’ve enjoyed my solo work through the years. Maybe they trust me one more time to come in through this door and get a little taste of bluegrass. And so far, that’s what’s been happening.

DF: Well, I can attest to that. As you know, I have no background in bluegrass whatsoever ...

SHAW: Yeah.

DF: I’m a rock guy through and through. In fact, I think one of my friends said it best, when he said he tried to picture me listening to bluegrass. And he compared it to a vampire looking at the sun ...

SHAW: (laughs) That’s a great analogy.

DF: So, admittedly, I’ve had a lot of learning curve with this album, and I am finding the more I listen to it, the more I’m getting it. What would be your message to other rock fans like me, or Styx fans in general, who may be a little reticent to open their ears to something along these lines?

SHAW: Well, the songs are three minutes long, you know. You can try something for three minutes. You can hold your breath for three minutes if you really try. So this is a lot easier than that. (laughs) And the songs are enjoyable. They’re story songs. If for nothing else, to hear some of the best bluegrass musicians on the planet taking solos and playing some of the most beautiful, melodic things in the background on this record. It’s pretty stunning. And I can tell you that because of my respect for them.

DF: You just touched on it, but I think one of the things that really drew me in to these songs initially was the storytelling element — songs like “Sawmill,” “The Great Divide,” “Give ’Em Hell Harry” — is bluegrass as a genre more amenable to spinning tales like those or is it just kind of how things worked out here?

SHAW: Bluegrass, in the same way gospel is, you know, gospel there’s always a little more dramatic stories, almost a more narrow kind of a story. But at the same time, you can have these great tragedies going on -- you know, love and loss and death and pain, and then get to a chorus and have this happy, it’s-all-gonna-be-all-right chorus. Between the gospel, and the country and bluegrass music that I heard when I was a kid, there is that, there’s that uplifting thing. I remember when I was a little boy, my grandfather passed away, I was about ... 8 years old, and I’d never been to a funeral, never seen a person in a casket before, and there I was, and there’s my grandfather lying there in this box, and I was, like, “Why doesn’t he just get up and go home? Why doesn’t he wake up and go get out of here?” And it dawned on me what this whole thing was. And on the way home, this song came on called “I Remember You.” For the first time in my life, this music, it was like it was talking to me in this car. It was like, “This is exactly what I’m going through -- and this music, it’s like it knows how I’m feeling. And it’s just telling my experience through this pretty, this beautiful melody. And, you know, that’s always stuck with me. And there’s even a little yodel in that song, actually quite a bit of yodeling in that song. So that’s always stuck with me and to see how gospel singers do the same thing, these stories of death and pain, but there’s an uplifting chorus. I was drawn to that for writing these songs. And the song “Sawmill” is the best example of it because in the song, a guy gets, basically, sawn in two right in front of a child. But then there’s this happy chorus, “Have a drink of water ... ”

DF: Now that child in the song, that was your dad, right?

SHAW: Yeah. That was something that came to me because I was enjoying the idea of telling stories in this, and, like, “What stories do I remember?” That was one that always stood out with me. For one thing, the idea of a little kid ... it’s hard to imagine him and his father out there in the woods. And then these lumber camps, you know it's just sweaty, dirty, and it’s hard work all day. And then to have this happen right in front of you ...

 DF: It occurred to me this morning -- and, again, this may damage my rock street cred a bit -- but one of the first records I ever bought was Vicki Lawrence’s “The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia.”

SHAW: Oh yeah.

DF: And I realize it was all because I was intrigued by the story in the song. Not necessarily the music itself, but the story it was telling, and how it kind of creates a whole place in your imagination.

SHAW: What was that song, (sings) “The night that Billie Joe McAllister jumped off the Tallahatchie Bridge”?

DF: Oh, yeah. Is the name of the song in that?

SHAW: Oh, you know it will come to me in a minute.

DF: It was in a movie, they made a movie out of that song.

SHAW: Yes, they did. And the girl had a name like Bobbie or something. We’ll figure it out in a second, even if we have to Google it. (laughs)

[EDITOR'S NOTE: We forgot to revisit it in this interview, but later figured out it was titled “Ode to Billie Joe,” released in 1967 by Bobbie Gentry. A movie of the same name was released in 1976.]

DF: Yeah, I had forgotten about that one, but the second you mentioned it, that song came right back to me. You know, in a small way, I think that’s why my initial favorite song on here is “Shadows in the Moonlight.” I kind of get the same kind of vibe from that song.

SHAW: It’s like a little movie, isn’t it?

DF: Uh-huh.

SHAW: But you want to know what happened! How did it end? (laughs)

DF: Yeah.

SHAW: It’s a cliffhanger.

DF: Yeah, in fact I’d been thinking, “I don’t think this question has ever been answered about what happened here. I’m going to have to go to the lyrics [when they’re printed] and see if I’m missing something.

SHAW: Yes. Not only does it have stories, it has a cliffhanger.

DF: Obviously that was intentional then?

SHAW: Yeah, we did like that. We thought about doing a last verse and we were like, “Nah, let’s don’t.” (laughs)

DF: How many different instruments did you personally play on this album?

SHAW: I played some acoustics, like an acoustic 12 string and a Dobro resonator guitar. Which I’ve been playing that chrome Dobro resonator guitar on records since I bought it years ago. Remember “I’ll Always Be With You,” the Shaw-Blades song?

DF: Oh yeah.

SHAW: It’s that same guitar. I played it on “I’ll Be Coming Home” and I played it on a solo, the first solo in “Shadows in the Moonlight” is that guitar. And I played Dobro on “Sawmill” and “Back in Your Kitchen.”

DF: Did you play any mandolin?

SHAW: I played a little bit of mandolin, but I left all the heavy lifting to the Nashville guys. I’m on it, but when it comes to a lot of those blistering solos, I went to the best guys I could find. I mean, I can play some solos, but I wanted it to be just shredding.

DF: Interesting. I was going to ask you about that next. You were able to lasso a bunch of co-contributors ... how did they all become involved and who are they?


SHAW: Well, they’re all friends of Brad Davis. They’re my buddies now, but Brad had worked with all of them before. And he’d worked in that studio. The ones that I kept hearing about were Chris Brown and Byron House — about what a killer rhythm section they were. Brad was always looking at them, kind of, as the core. Him and those two guys could really be the foundation of the sessions. Then the rest of it, we tailored that recording session around what dates were as many of those guys available, if possible.

DF: And I know Alison Krauss was also involved.

SHAW: Well, Alison, she sang on my solo album in 1998. She came and sang with me on “Half a Mind.” And we had met a year before in ’97, maybe I told you, when we went to see Union Station. My next-door neighbor is a casting agent, named Nancy Foy, and she was the one who turned me on to Alison Krauss and Union Station, their music. There was a rumor that Alison Krauss came to see Damn Yankees, and I just thought it was a bunch of bull because why is a bluegrass girl coming to see Damn Yankees? You know, a lot of times people say there’s somebody and you get there and it’s not. So, I didn’t believe it, but I guess she did come. My neighbor said, “Did you get the Alison Krauss record?” I said, “No.” She finally came over, put two of them in my hand and said, “Listen to these.” So I put them in the stereo and Jeanne and I listened, and it was like “Holy ... ! Wow!” And not long after that, Nancy said they’re coming to the Wilshire Theatre, and I said, “Let me talk to Charlie [Brusco], our manager, and see if we can get some good seats.” That’s what happened. So we went down there, and it was a very eclectic crowd, and, of course, an absolutely amazing show. And the band left the stage, hopefully returning for an encore, and a lot of times you make that decision, do you want to leave and try and beat traffic, and all of us said, “No, let’s stay. This is too good, we’ve got to stay.” So, Alison comes out and she says that, “I just wanted to let you know that one of my all-time favorite singers is in the house tonight” and it was a five-minute story about how “My brother and I used to listen to this music, and there was a health food store in Nashville, and these snobby people used to go in there and get their health food. And one day we went over there and we played one of his songs.” Well, I didn’t know who she was talking about until she said, “We pulled our car up in front of the store, put ‘Renegade’ on the radio, turned it up and then got out of the car — just to piss everybody off.” So she’s talking about me. I was just looking around thinking, “Who is it? Is it, like, Kris Kristofferson?” It could have been anybody like that. And that’s how she and I met. So we kind of go way back now, way back to ’97. And she and Jeanne are best friends, and that’s really kind of how it happened. Alison and Jeanne like hanging out so much, I was just lucky enough to be there when she came to see Jeanne, and she sang on my record. (laughs) What happened, she comes over and sings it, blah, blah, blah, then that’s done, then Jeanne and she are out in the lobby talking for the next two hours.

DF: Was there any hesitation to maybe ask her to be involved, even to the extent that she was, just based on her collaboration with Robert Plant [on 2007’s “Raising Sand”]?

SHAW: Well, yeah, exactly. I hate asking friends to do stuff. Especially on the heels of the Robert Plant record, I didn’t want people to think, now I’m just trying to ride on the coattails of that. And so, it eventually came up and she said, “Yeah, but we just won’t do a duet. I’ll just sing harmonies on there.” And I’m thinking, “Like no one’s going to notice Alison Krauss is on the record!” But she came in, and like I said, on one of the last days, she came in and within 45 minutes she had done these beautiful harmony parts. And then, there was another song Jeanne sent to her, “Afraid to Love,” and she said, “Sure.” Actually, Gary Burr had her come over to his house and she sang it over there. But it was very casual the way that all went down.

DF: I was actually going to mention this before because I remember you wrote briefly about it on one of your previous Comet.com articles, but it was about thinking about leaving early at a Fleetwood Mac concert ...

SHAW: Yes.

DF: Because I always make fun of people that leave early (laughs). Because they’re missing the best part of the show in many cases.

SHAW: Yeah. And I understand, you know, everybody’s got a story. Everybody’s not necessarily being rude, sometimes they’ve got babysitters and they’ve got whatever, but a lot of times you do miss something really good at the end because you save your good stuff to the end. There’s psychology [involved].

DF: You have a show coming up [on March 26] at the Grand Ole Opry ...

SHAW: Yes.

DF: Could you ever have imagined such a thing before?

SHAW: Not in a million years. No. I mean, no. Well, I couldn’t imagine a scenario that would put me there.

DF: So how thrilling is it to get that chance?

SHAW: It’s just ... kind of shock and excitement and disbelief and anticipation. It’s really kind of a bluegrass debut, other than the little thing that I did singing “Rank Stranger” at Station Inn. I haven’t played this in front of anybody except in the studio. So, yeah, I’m going to be boning up between now and then. It’s only playing two songs in two different shows.

DF: So two songs in each show?

SHAW: In each of the two shows that day.

DF: So, will it be four total or will you do the same two each time?

SHAW: [I’ll] probably pick the two songs and do those twice because it will be the house band doing it so they’ll have to learn the songs in the afternoon. They’ll probably just want to do the same two. It’s two different audiences. I thought it was funny, I don’t know if you saw that ad where it says my bluegrass debut on the Opry website, and at the bottom it says something like, “Also appearing that night, Carrie Underwood and Pam Tillis.” (laughs) You say, “What was that?” (laughs)

DF: That’s an eye-opener. Well, do you have any plans for any other promotional solo shows at all?

SHAW: You know what, we’re going to let this thing tell us what to do. We’re ready to do, again, the next right thing, because you don’t want to come this far and do a bunch of wrong things. It’s going to take a while for this really to get out there. This is not going to be a tsunami of a release, it’s going to be like a slow-rising river, hopefully. I want people to have a chance to listen to it and make up their minds, and then have there be a demand for me to go play. If that happens, then we know what we would do and know how we’d go about it, but we don’t just want to go out ... I think if we went out and put shows on sale, there’d be a lot of people, who’d come expecting me to do a solo show with an electric band, that would be confused and then I’d have this bluegrass band who didn’t sound like what they were expecting to hear, you understand? It could be a conundrum of a show, so I want there to be an expectation for it to be this music. So we’re just waiting to see if it continues along the path it’s on right now, which is nice, slow and steady and people get that kind of “Huh?” look on their face, and then they hear some of it, and it starts to grow on them, and then they want to hear another one. That’s one of the reasons we’ve rolled it out so slowly, you know, a little here, a little there, just ease people into it. It’s like I’m making a left-hand turn, but I’m putting on the signal about three blocks ahead ... so you don’t run and crash into the back of me when I just made that left-hand turn with no signal.

Related links:

Tommy Shaw is doing a daily song-by-song synopsis of "The Great Divide" on the Comet website. Check out his thoughts and listen to the songs here.

To read Tommy's blog post about possibly leaving early from a Fleetwood Mac concert, referenced in the interview, go here.

For the official "The Great Divide" website, go here.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Styxmen in the Wilderness

Photo by Ash Newell


In more than 35 years of attending concerts, I have seen Styx more than any other band.
Friday’s Styx show at the Wendover Concert Hall marked the 25th time I’ve seen the veteran rock band perform live, dating back to October of 1978, when I first saw the band on its “Pieces of Eight” tour.

A lot has changed since then, not the least of which is Styx’s lineup. In addition to core members, guitarist/vocalists James "JY" Young and Tommy Shaw, the group features drummer Todd Sucherman, keyboardist/vocalist Lawrence Gowan and bassist Ricky Phillips. This lineup is now in its eighth year together and is a perfectly oiled machine in concert.

Since Gowan replaced co-founder Dennis DeYoung in 1999, Styx has become a veritable road warrior, performing more shows in the last 12 years than in the previous 27 combined. The band also has a unique historical bond with Utah, as Provo was one of three U.S. cities where the song “Lady” first became a hit before breaking nationally in the early 1970s. Combine those two facts, and it’s easy to see why Styx passes through the Beehive State a couple times a year while crisscrossing the country.

When you’ve seen a band so often, it’s easy to find yourself anticipating certain nuances or “tells” — to borrow a poker term, this being Wendover and all — of the show that may go unrecognized or unappreciated by the more casual fan. For example, Shaw changes up guitars often during the course of the concert, and I’ve learned that you can often correctly predict which song will be next by studying which guitar he has strapped on for the upcoming number.

Another solid Styx song predictor is simply knowing what section of the show the band is in, and noting who is handling the preliminary introduction. In nearly all cases, the person who introduces a particular song is going to be singing lead vocals on it. Applying those indicators with a little band background knowledge is easy, yet can seem like quite the parlor trick when employed correctly.

Several years ago, for example, I was taking notes while covering a Styx show at the Depot in Salt Lake City. A nearby audience member had noticed my in-concert scribblings and turned to me between songs to ask why I was taking notes. When he learned I was writing the setlist in progress, he, half-jokingly, half-condescendingly, asked me what the next song would be. I saw that Gowan was going to introduce the song, knew that he’d already sung “The Grand Illusion” and “Lady,” as was typical, earlier in the set, and figured there was a good chance the band would do the lead single from its then-recent covers album, “Big Bang Theory.” Taking all that into account, I said with some surety the next song would be “I Am the Walrus.”

I wish I could adequately describe the incredulous look on this man’s face as he flat-out scoffed at me and dismissed my prediction as pure baloney. Admittedly, if someone were completely unaware of this Beatles classic being on Styx’s covers album, as this man certainly was, it would have seemed an outrageous – and perhaps mocking — guess. But should I be held up for public ridicule because there were no vowels for sale at the merch stand? He challenged, after all, and I merely answered. What more did he expect?

I felt immediately vindicated when Gowan, without naming the tune title in his intro, started in on the familiar keyboard beginning to the two tusks-inspired ramblings of the Eggman. As the first verse began, my new acquaintance turned around and shot me a smart-aleck look that seemed to say, “Gotcha, fool!” That’s when I realized he didn’t even recognize the song. I mean, come on, it’s not like they were playing a more obscure Beatles number like “Norwegian Wood.” Finally, when it got to the chorus, the man turned around and acknowledged defeat with a somewhat bewildered look on his face — an expression, I mused, with which he was probably well-acquainted.

Why am I relating this story now — other than the fact that I’ve been looking for a good place to work it into a narrative for years? It stems from knowing that a couple friends of mine were at last weekend’s show, some who had never seen the revamped Styx lineup before and a few others who had only witnessed the group a couple times. During the course of the concert, I found myself trying to evaluate the proceedings through their eyes and run the unfolding events through a somewhat different filter.

So, while I may have witnessed a thousand and 15 revolutions of Gowan’s quirky rotating keyboard setup over 21 concerts in the past 12 years, I took a moment to appreciate the initial thought that went into the instrument’s design and how the artist sometimes known as the Strange Animal utilizes it to great effect in myriad ways throughout each show. Whether he’s using it to jumpstart the concert with the opening chords of “Blue Collar Man” or using it as his footstool to belt out the third verse of “Come Sail Away” at the end of the main set, I find it’s clearly more a fun, visual attraction than an unwanted distraction.

One should also never take the talents of Styx stars Shaw and Young for granted. Each has their own unique style of playing guitar, but those talents meld in harmony as they easily switch off between lead or rhythm duties, often within the friendly confines of the same song. Shaw enjoys strutting across the stage, from his normal position at stage left to the right, while rifling off blistering solos in songs such as “Blue Collar Man,” “Too Much Time on My Hands” and “Crystal Ball.” During many of his solo turns, Young prefers standing stoically at center stage, held tilted back in a pose that exudes pure freedom and spontaneity. (I once asked him to describe those burst-of-expression moments, and he said he envisioned it being like Leonardo DiCaprio on the bow of the Titanic — an apt description indeed.)

The rhythm section of Sucherman and Phillips is also a sight — and sound — to behold. Sucherman, who last year was voted the No. 1 skinsmith by Modern Rock Drummer magazine, is a blast to watch in concert. Like many drummers, he must be viewed live to be totally appreciated. Phillips, a former member of well-known 80s bands The Babys and Bad English, has been holding down bass duties in Styx since late 2003 and has created his own niche in the live show while playing off the antics and complementing the skills of everyone else.

Last fall, Styx embarked on a limited-run theater tour through the East that featured “The Grand Illusion” and “Pieces of Eight” albums played in sequence and in their entirety. The Wendover show included a four-song suite in the middle of the set with songs straight from the fall jaunt, ones that hadn’t been in Styx sets for many years. I found this section — which included the epic “Man in the Wilderness,” “I’m OK,” “Sing for the Day” and the killer “Queen of Spades” — a clear highlight on the night. Shaw told me after the show that Styx is rotating these songs nightly, shuffling them with other tunes from the fall tour that are otherwise not standard setlist selections.

Shaw also said the fall tour was so successful that the band is hoping to revisit the double-album theater presentation next year, possibly for a full U.S. tour. (For an inside look at the background of and planning for the fall tour, click here.)

In addition to his busy Styx schedule, Shaw also has a couple solo projects in the pipeline, including the scheduled March 22 release of a bluegrass album, titled “The Great Divide.” Also on the horizon, possibly next year, is an additional Shaw/Blades covers album, a followup to the successful 2007 collaboration, “Influence,” featuring Shaw and his former Damn Yankees compatriot Jack Blades, of Night Ranger.

Shaw shared a few more song choices that he and Blades had settled on, and I will just say there are some very exciting prospects in the works.

Styx
Peppermill Concert Hall
Jan. 14, 2011

Blue Collar Man
The Grand Illusion
Too Much Time on My Hands
Lady
Lorelei
Man in the Wilderness
I’m OK
Sing for the Day
Queen of Spades
Crystal Ball
Fooling Yourself (The Angry Young Man)
Miss America
Come Sail Away

Encore
I Am the Walrus
Renegade

Performance time: 1 hour, 35 minutes