Premise
It is often said to avoid any form of song-by-song description for an album - that is, what with an annoying Anglo-Saxon terminology, is called track-by-track. This is because it makes the reading cumbersome (and I am somewhat of a world champion in this discipline), because often it ends up being more irritating than useful, possibly because it requires a musical cultural background significantly above zero (which I believe I do not have).
Well, in light of all this, I will do what I have almost always wanted to do. To put it like Rhett Butler when he leaves Scarlett O'Hara crying on the red carpeted staircase, frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn.
I warn you: it will be a mess.
En bien
It's nineteen seventy-six; my mother was fifteen, my father was studying cheerfully for his driving test, and I was minus nine years old. The Styx, for a year in the classic lineup with the addition of the blond Tommy Shaw, released their sixth album. "Crystal Ball" opens the golden era (for the avoidance of symbolic-arcane misunderstandings it doesn't involve any 1.6180...) of the band from Chicago, which, through some excellent works (among all "The Grand Illusion" and "Pieces Of Eight"), will culminate in the beautiful "Paradise Theater" of 1980. For further information contact the shooting star, to which this review is also dedicated.
The LP is black and contains a long groove that spirals toward the center on both sides (perhaps some youngsters don't know this). The tracks are seven, just like the seven dwarfs (those of Snow White, neh?), the years in Tibet, the noteworthy pimples on my face today, the municipalities of the Asiago plateau, the brides and brothers, the hills of Rome (city where a lot of ties are sold), the Champions Cups of the odious cousins, Scientology and Freemasonry.
"Put Me On" opens: this track is a suffering and drawn-out ride through synthesized fields and lashing guitars, towards a horizon of melodic openness, where the beautiful voice of Dennis De Young finds refuge in a chorus of lightness, before the rain of rhythm overwhelms it in its progression in an acutely high-pitched groan. The lament is that of a sweet "Mademoiselle": she, urged by a very effective chorus, unfolds among charming guitar appreciations and the pulsating heart of the bass: it is a beautiful track, pompous and clear, in the full style of this great overseas band.
The creative vein provided by the fairer sex is evident also from the next track, "Jennifer"; introduced by a memorable monosyllabic phrasing, the song is a fine A.O.R. (if I really have to make a blind guess into the cauldron of genres). Tommy Shaw and James Young's guitars are flashes of light, the drums are a joyful metronome.
If so far we have talked about good songs but not true gems, "Crystal Ball" blows everything. The title track is a song that, in the musical line - the so-called pomp rock - and the peculiar timbre of the Chicago band, I would dare to define perfect: the sweet piano intro, the impeccable choral refrain, the keyboard solo to anticipate the guitars that first support the singing and then free themselves in flights of carefree fancy. To perhaps a slightly lesser extent, the song presents the characteristics of what is perhaps the true emblem of Styx, namely that "Come Sail Away" that chills the blood in the veins with its beauty.
"Shooz" instead is a dry hard rock that seems to serve the purpose of "breaking" the emotional tension of the previous song (the same "Come Sail Away", after all, regardless of the side change of the vinyl, in the subsequent "The Grand Illusion" will be followed by the very tight "Miss America"). Young's singing becomes hoarse, the guitars churn out riffs, the friendly brothers Chuck and John Panozzo demonstrate their ability in the rhythm rooms, besides creating a funny and curious counterpoint to the tall blondes of the guitars.
"This Old Man" is another great piece of this LP: the evocative singing of the electric guitar gives way to a crystalline acoustic, designed to cloak with warmth the heartfelt story narrated with passion by the talented Alberto Angel... ehm, Dennis De Young. The monosyllabic choral - constant in this work - and the drumroll medieval tournament of the instrumentally crooked John Panozzo lead to an interlude of more extensive breath, before the guitar solo bursts to frame what is the hallmark of these musicians - the vocal polyphony, of rare purity.
It closes with "Clair De Lune/Ballerina", a not-too-hidden homage to the talented French composer Claude Debussy and another qualitative peak of the LP; on the immediate subtlety of organ and piano, first bass and drums and finally the guitars break in for a truly remarkable crescendo. The intensity remains at unbearable levels until everything fades - clearly to monosyllabic chorus, this time on the themes of the classic "la" - into the silence of the moonlight. Simply, a great track.
The Styx, a very talented band and not too well known in Italy, at least by the less seasoned generations, begin to ultimately suggest that they are not second players, but among the protagonists of the North American scene of the seventies and eighties, alongside other valid groups in various shades of genre: among the most famous are remembered Rush, Kansas, Pavlov's Dog, Journey, the A-team, the surgeons of M*A*S*H, the Los Angeles Layers, and the Canadian national team of curling at the Winter Olympics in Calgary.
N'est-ce-pas?
I close with a disturbing question: does it show that, having finished the exams of the first semester and being on vacation for a few weeks, I have a lot of time to fool around?
Tracklist Lyrics and Videos
01 Put Me On (04:55)
Put me on I’m your brand new record album
Side one, cut one listen to the songs
Play me loud don’t you worry ’bout your nieghbors
Hope I make you feel good all day long
All day long
Put me on and play me loud
I’m the madman screaming in your living room
I’ll soon be coming to your town
To sing and play a little tune
I said put me on and play me loud
Turn your stereo up all the way
All the way
Now your body’s immersed in sound
So hear the synthesizers play
And now you’re in the mood
Let the melody just drift your cares away
It’s got to do you good
As it mesmerizes you in it’s own way
So drift away...
02 Mademoiselle (04:00)
Written by Tommy Shaw
Lead Vocals by Tommy Shaw
Tell me where are you going
Sweet mademoiselle
To London or Paris
To the Grand Hotel
Where do you go at the end of the day
Where do you go, when you spend time away
To islands in the tropic sands
Or pleasure trips to distant lands
You're searching for a dream
Well maybe it's me.
I tell you hello
And what do you say
As I stop you go
There's no reason to stay
It all began so harmlessly
You gave me love so easily
I never realized you were just spending time
Tell me where are you going
Sweet mademoiselle
To London or Paris
To the Grand Hotel
Even though you're far away
I think about you every day
And wonder if you're thinking of me
In a fond memory
Sweet mademoiselle
Sweet mademoiselle
Sweet mademoiselle
Sweet mademoiselle
Tell me where are you going
Sweet mademoiselle
To London or Paris
Ou Montreal
Sweet Mademoiselle
Sweet mademoiselle
Sweet mademoiselle
Sweet mademoiselle
Sweet mademoiselle
04 Crystal Ball (04:34)
I used to like to walk the straight and narrow line
I used to think that everything was fine
Sometimes I'd like to sit and gaze for days through sleepless dreams
All alone and trapped in time
All alone and trapped in time
I wonder what tomorrow has in mind for me
Or am I even in it's mind at all
Perhaps I'll get a chance to look ahead and see
Soon as I find myself a crystal ball
Soon as I find myself a crystal ball
Tell me, tell me where I'm going
I don't know where I've been
Tell me, tell me, won't you tell me
And then tell me again
My heart is breaking, my body's aching
And I don't know where to go
Tell me, tell me, won't you tell me
I've just got to know
Crystal ball
There's so many things I need to know
Crystal ball
There's so many things I've got to know
Crystal ball
["extra verse" occasionally used live]
If you should see me walking
Through your dreams at night
Would you please direct me
Where I ought to be
I've been looking for a crystal ball
To shed the light
To find a future in me...
To find a future in me...
Crystal ball
There's so many things I need to know
Crystal ball
There's so many things I've got to know
Crystal ball
05 Shooz (04:49)
Written by Tommy Shaw
Lead Vocals by Tommy Shaw
Well it's Friday night and the streets
are full of the weekenders with their green
Soldier boys looking left and right
at all the sights there to be seen
Well you can be there's a loner
who'd love to see you be so sweet
That's why I'm telling you to get on
your shooz and get out there on the street
And get your rockin'
Rock 'n' Roll Shooz
Up and down around they go with
their heads turning all around
Way down there on the corner
there's a Cadillac that's easy to be found
Way down there in Chicago, down
along Division street
The boys are just looking for a girl
like you to make their stay in town a treat
So get your rockin'
Rock 'n' Roll Shooz
They all love it baby, they keep
comin' back for more
Rock 'n' Roll Shooz
07 Clair De Lune / Ballerina (07:09)
It seems you finally had to choose
I guess there was no other way
Between my love and satin shoes
I knew the words youd have to say
It all began so long ago
That the memorys hardly clear
But when I seen you dance I know
Half your love Ill always share
Ballerina when you dance theres music
Colored lights illuminate your movement
Crowded halls anticipate your gentle smile
Ballerina from the first I knew that
You would always have to dance I knew that
There would surely come a day when you would go
Baby I know...
Dance for me, I beg of you, dance for me
Dance for me, ballerina, dance for me
Ballerina when you dance theres music
Colored lights illuminate your movement
Crowded halls anticipate your gentle smile
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