Label: Universal Music (Japan), UICY-77890/1
Style: Soft Rock, Art Rock
Country: Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Time: 40:59, 42:27
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 275, 295 Mb
Charts: CAN #52, GER #55, UK #44, US #31.
Styx
were just about toast after “Mr. Roboto“, and Tommy Shaw didn’t want to
sing any more songs about androids. (Mars, however, was fine.) He
departed to check out some Girls With Guns, but not before Styx put out
one more product before hiatus. That would be the traditional double
live album, which was actually Styx’s first.
Styx have lots of live
albums now, but only two with Dennis DeYoung. Caught in the Act is
essential for a few key reasons. It sounds great although there are
clearly overdubs in places. It is the only one with the classic lineup
of DeYoung/Shaw/James “JY” Young/Chuck Panozzo/John Panozzo. And it has
plenty of classic Styx songs that still shake the radio waves today.
Like
many live albums, Caught in the Act contained one new song. Dennis
DeYoung wrote the uppity “Music Time”, a very New Wave single without
much of the punch of old Styx. Shaw was so nauseated that he barely
participated in the music video. “Music Time” isn’t one of Styx’s
finest songs. It’s passable but clearly a misstep. No wonder it was a
final straw of sorts for Tommy Shaw.
With that out of the way, on
with the show. Styx opened the set with “Mr. Roboto”, a mega hit that
got a bad rap over the years until nostalgia made it OK to like it
again. Fortunately only two songs from Kilroy Was Here were included,
the ballad “Don’t Let It End” being the other. Live, “Roboto” pulses
with energy, far more than you would expect. The disco-like synthetic
beats complement the techno-themed lyrics. Every hook is delivered with
precision. With the human factor that comes out in a live recording,
“Roboto” could be one of those songs that is actually better live.
Styx
have always been a diverse act, and this album demonstrates a few sides
of the band. Shaw and Young tended to write rockers, and “Too Much
Time On My Hands”, “Miss America”, “Snowblind”, “Rockin’ the Paradise”
and especially “Blue Collar Man” are prime examples of the best kind.
Long nights, impossible odds…yet a killer set of rock tunes. Then there
are the ballads. “Babe” is a slow dancing classic, and “The Best of
Times” is even better. Finally, the tunes that verge on progressive
epics: “Suite Madame Blue”, “Crystal Ball” and “Come Sail Away” have the
pompous complexity that punk rockers hated so much. This album is a
shining live recreation of some of rock’s most beloved music.
(mikeladano.com/2018/10/13/review-styx-caught-in-the-act-live-1984/)
01. Music Time (04:46)
02. Mr. Roboto (04:58)
03. Too Much Time On My Hands (05:00)
04. Babe (04:54)
05. Snowblind (05:59)
06. The Best Of Times (06:29)
07. Suite Madame Blue (08:50)
01. Rockin' The Paradise (04:40)
02. Blue Collar Man (04:46)
03. Miss America (06:13)
04. Don't Let It End (05:26)
05. Fooling Yourself (The Angry Young Man) (06:03)
06. Crystal Ball (06:23)
07. Come Sail Away (08:52)
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