Pieces of Eight explained

Pieces of Eight
Type:studio
Artist:Styx
Cover:Styx - Pieces of Eight.jpg
Caption:Cover by Hipgnosis
Released:September 1978
Recorded:1978
Studio:
Length:42:18
Label:A&M
Producer:Styx
Prev Title:The Grand Illusion
Prev Year:1977
Next Title:Cornerstone
Next Year:1979

Pieces of Eight is the eighth studio album by American progressive rock band Styx, released in September 1978.[1]

Like the band's previous album, The Grand Illusion (1977), it managed to achieve triple platinum certification, thanks to the hit singles "Blue Collar Man (Long Nights)" and "Renegade".

The band members produced and recorded the album (like their previous three efforts) at Paragon Studios in Chicago with recording engineer Barry Mraz and mixing engineer Rob Kingsland. "I'm O.K." was recorded at Paragon and St. James Cathedral. This would be the last Styx album to be produced at Paragon Studios.

The album's cover was done by Hipgnosis. Dennis DeYoung stated in the 1991 interview with Redbeard on the In the Studio with Redbeard episode that he initially hated the cover but grew to like it as he got older.

Background

The record is considered by some[2] [3] to be Styx's most obvious concept album, as well as the last Styx album with significant progressive rock leanings. The theme of the album, as Dennis DeYoung explained on In the Studio with Redbeard which devoted an entire episode to Pieces of Eight, was about "not giving up your dreams just for the pursuit of money and material possessions".

Reception

Rolling Stone reviewer Lester Bangs was critical of the album, writing that "what's really interesting is not that such narcissistic slop should get recorded, but what must be going on in the minds of the people who support it in such amazing numbers. Gall, nerve and ego have never been far from great rock & roll. Yet there's a thin but crucial line between those qualities and what it takes to fill arenas today: sheer self-aggrandizement on the most puerile level. If these are the champions, gimme the cripples."[4] The Globe and Mail noted that "when Styx strays too far from its rock and roll foundations ... as on the Gothic-pretentious numbers by Dennis De Young like 'Lords of the Ring', it starts getting less credible."[5]

Mike DeGagne of AllMusic has retrospectively praised the album, saying that the songs on the album "rekindle some of Styx's early progressive rock sound, only cleaner."

The album peaked at No. 6 on the Billboard album chart, and like its predecessor would go triple platinum.[6]

Personnel

Styx

Production

Charts

Year-end charts

Singles

YearSingleChartPosition
1978"Blue Collar Man (Long Nights)"US Pop Singles21
1979"Sing for the Day"41
"Renegade"16

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Great Rock Discography. 798.
  2. Web site: How Styx Kept Getting Bigger with 'Pieces of Eight'.
  3. Web site: Styx and Their Long Fall from Grace. 3 December 2015.
  4. Styx - Pieces of Eight (1978) album review . Bangs . Lester . . . December 28, 1978 . June 23, 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110710184803/http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/pieces-of-eight-19781228 . July 10, 2011 . live .
  5. News: Gilday . Katherine . Styx . The Globe and Mail . 25 Oct 1978 . F9.
  6. Web site: Concert Review: The Grand Illusion/Pieces of Eight Tour - Atlanta, GA . Moseley . Willey . November 13, 2010 . December 26, 2012 . Moreover, the choice of 1977's The Grand Illusion and 1978's Pieces of Eight probably didn't come as any surprise, either—those two releases were STYX's first Triple Platinum albums. . https://web.archive.org/web/20110703122642/http://www.styxworld.com/SilverStripe/concert-review-the-grand-illusion-pieces-of-eight-tour-atlanta-ga/ . July 3, 2011 . dead .
  7. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 299.
  8. Top Billboard 200 Albums – Year-End 1979. Billboard. 2 January 2013. March 8, 2021.