Posted on 03/09/2007 9:02:49 PM PST by WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
ATKINSON, N.H. --Brad Delp, the lead singer for the band Boston, was found dead Friday in his home in southern New Hampshire. He was 55.
Atkinson police responded to a call for help at 1:20 p.m. and found Delp dead. Lt. William Baldwin said in a news release that there was no indication of foul play.
(Excerpt) Read more at boston.com ...
Britney loves you too, I'm sure. :P
Hey Lurker,,,how does it feel to be like, the only poster who doesn't dig Boston?
Quantity is not quality. Check out the sales numbers for Brittany Spears last album and then get back to me.
I remember being stuck at work in a small pizza place when that misbegotten first Boston album came out. A co-worker played it endlessly over and over and over on the 8 track.
One day before he arrived the tape had a terrible accident involving a pizza peel, the deep fryer, and a turn or two in a 550 degree oven.
Tragic....
L
Dude, if you were truly punk, you wouldn't even own a computer, let alone post anything. Everyone knows this. I'm sure upon reading this, you're gonna get all upset and stuff, so, oh well, lol. Why don't you just fly away homeslice, and be real for a change, go squat underneath an overpass and share some 3 day old Top Raman, and then you can call yourself a real punker. pffft......
They suck. And same for Tom Scholz who refused to tour
It was a phase.
Besides Punk died with Sid and Joey.
L
Scholz made a stand against CBS because they were trying to rip him off. If he wanted to, he could have had Boston tour endlessly, playing giganto-stadiums, playing "More Than A Feeling" into the sunset. It would have been pretty easy for him to have done that, instead, he held out, for income and art, and also created tech stuff for musicians who weren't as lucky as he was.
Their album was about the only thing I heard echoing amongst the dorm buildings my freshman year in college in '76. Sad to hear of him passing so early in life. Someone who contributed so much deserved better.
Sorry Dennisw, that was meant for lurker, lol
Oh no, I guess I have to go to rehab now. lol
R.I.P. Hopefully he's found his Peace Of Mind...
RIP Brad. You made Geddy Lee sound like a baritone.
You know, I went back to listen to Andy's greatest hits recently and I was blown away by the tunes.
Little did I appreciate back in the day how damned good the Bee Gees writing and production skills were.
There's an uncanny excellence about all of Andy's tracks and tunes.
Of course Barry Gibb was the genius behind much of it.
Don't Throw it All Away; Shadow Dancing.....great music indeed.
Wow...Boston was a big part of my misspent youth. I was always partial to "Hitch a Ride". Mellow vibe, yet rippin' guitar.
Had "Boston" on vinyl, 8-Track (no snide comments, please), cassette, CD and now .mp3.
Well now I did actually have a crush on Andy Gibb but I had a boyfriend and brother who introduced me to Boston in '81 or so and the number one CD I still listen to is Boston's Greatest Hits ('The Best of Kansas' is #2). The two are not incompatible!! LOL
RIP Brad.
YOU killed Brad...you dirty rat.
This was also the fastest selling debut in rock history up to that time. I think they moved something like 6 million albums within the first two months of release.
Boston was also one of the first rock bands I ever saw live. It was in November 1978 during the "Don't Look Back" tour. I also think it was the first time they even went on tour! They were not your typical rock band. Just regular guys playing music in their garage. But that show they put on was first-rate. They took the stage as a giant spaceship decended from the rafters.
The band Boston took over two years to release their second album ("Don't Look Back") which was unheard of back in those days when top rock stars were expected to produce an album every year.
Boston's third album "Third Stage" didn't come out until 1986 as Scholt'z preoccupation with "studio perfection" combined with getting the band tied up in lawsuits perpetually delayed the album from coming out. Which is a shame because Boston was perceived as a "dinosaur act" by then and so the album was overlooked by many.
They would have probably put out a lot more music if Thomas Scholz wasn't such an ass. Scholz also went off the rails with his politics and I think his last album had an anti-capitalist theme which is kind of ironic considering all the cash he pulled in with Boston's music. I actually met Scholtz in the summer of 1979. I was working at the Cloud 9 restaurant at Logan Airport and he came into the bar while waiting for a flight to Europe. He was kind of standoffish but all the waiters and dishwashers (of which I was one) kept peeking into the bar to get a look. Just a regular guy other than the fact he had the money to do pretty much whatever he wanted!
Anyway, three near-perfect albums is a legacy that most rock bands cannot lay claim too. Even decades later, most of the tracks from those first three albums still sound fresh today.
Apparently Boston has recently recorded new music with Brad Delp. Hopefully they will see fit to release it one of these days.
As I stated in another post, I believe Brad's last concert was last Saturday in my hometown here in NH. He led a band called Beatlejuice that did Beatles covers about as good as anyone. In fact I believe they were actually endorsed by Paul and Ringo.
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