John Panozzo
played drums for the rock band Styx. He was born on September 20, 1948,
90 minutes apart from his twin brother Chuck. He along with his brother
and Dennis De Young formed Styx in the late 60’s. For three decades they
made incredibly diverse successful records. John Panozzo died on July 16,
1996 from a gastrointestinal hemorrhage. Naturally I was devastated. I
felt so lost and hurt that I would never get to see him in action again.
In my personal grief, I decided to write many different magazines to see
if they would write a fitting tribute. I realized that no one recognized
just how brilliant a drummer he was. To my disappointment I haven’t received
any response to my letters, now I have the opportunity to write
my own tribute to a true giant.
John Panozzo was
a musical genius. His energy and incredible creative style have bought
Styx to the map. Earning him and his band mates four consecutive triple
platinum albums and selling over 20 million albums world wide, securing
their place in rock history. For me personally they were one of the quintessential
progressive bands of the 70’s,80’s and 90’s. John’s drumming was just insane.
It’s like the guys in the band would give him a song and would go “do what
you think is right or what ever you want”; and boy would he ever. From
Dennis De Young’s beautiful ballads and his power house rock songs, including
“Lady” from Styx II , to J.C. and Tommy Shaw’s melodic acoustic rock songs
including “Cold War “ from “Kilroy Was Here” to the metal madness
and excitement of J.Y.’s songs including the best drumming songs
ever: “Queen of Spades ” and ‘Great White Hope” from “Pieces of Eight”
and “Heavy Metal Poisoning” from “Kilroy”.
John Panozzo
had absolutely no problem keeping up with four very different prolific
songwriters andto top it off, had no problem keeping up with his amazing
bass playing twin brother Chuck. Chuck and John, in my view, were
the best rhythm section of all time, and certainly deserve a place in rock
history. I discovered Styx in 1980, when I was discovering that women could
play drums too. I found everything in John that I was looking for in a
male drummer.(God knows, I didn’t find any other male drummers as interesting
till much later.) He didn’t sing or write any of their songs, but if you
listen carefully to their material you’ll find that none of the other guys
told him how to play the drums or write those incredible fills. That to
me is a songwriter, even if his name doesn’t appear on the writing credits,
it should have been there. He was happy and showed it. He was never worried
about what show-off fill he could use to show him up. He was one of the
very few drummers out there who really love drumming and the drums. He
didn’t just think of it as his job (like Charlie Watts) and he didn’t just
play that day because it was his job.
John was a smooth
, creative and powerfully distinctive drummer. I challenge anyone to take
his music on. As for my music, he has been a total inspiration and
will forever be one of the all time greats. In 1991, when Styx played the
Beacon Theater here in New York, I had the absolute pleasure of meeting
John and Styx .Meeting John that day, made it one of the greatest days
of my life, and for that brief moment I was in heaven. I was so nervous
finally meeting my hero , that I didn’t get to tell him exactly how much
of an inspiration he was to me. I did however, make sure that he
knew that I knew he was the best. For anyone out there who
doubts his ability, they should look for the “Caught In The Act Live “
double album and video, which includes the “Kilroy Was Here” movie they
did for the album. This movie was his acting debut. Seeing him act
in this movie, you knew he had a great sense of humor. He wasn’t one of
those “stuck- up”, serious drummers that never smile, (I hate that).
John Panozzo was
a beautiful man and he knew exactly what the songs needed. I’ve lost my
hero and I will never ever get over that. I will never , ever forget John
for giving me my extra start. I have been playing drums for 17 fun and
mad years. I still have difficulty with some of his songs. There are a
lot of bands that I play, including the so called “best bands” out there.
None of them ever present a challenge for me like Mr. Panozzo’s music has
. For this, I am saluting him by trying to live up to what he represented.
I’ve never felt so awful and saddened by any one’s passing. I truly feel
that I’ve lost a real “hero and legend” in my eyes (as Styx said in their
1990 hit “show me the way”) unfortunately I know I will never hear
Styx the same way again but I’ll always think he’s the greatest. I know
“he’s Rockin’ in Paradise”. My heart goes out to his brother Chuck , Styx
and his family.
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“STYX” - 1972 ; “STYX II” - 1973 ; “THE SERPENT IS RISING” - 1973 ; “MAN OF MIRACLES” - 1974; “EQUINOX”-1975; “CRYSTAL BALL”- 1976 ;“GRAND ILLUSION” - 1977; “PIECES OF EIGHT” - 1978;“CORNERSTONE” - 1979 ; “PARADISE THEATER” - 1980; “KILROY WAS HERE” - 1983; “CAUGHT IN THE ACT - LIVE” - 1984 “EDGE OF THE CENTURY” - 1990 ; “GREATEST HITS” - 1995 ; “GREATEST HITS PART TWO” - 1996 - JOHN PANOZZO PLAYED RIGHT UP UNTIL THE END. HE WAS AMAZING! - Roz |
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