VOCALS, RHYTHM GUITAR:
Kevin
Cronin
KEYBOARDS: Neal Doughty
BASS, HARMONY VOCALS:
Bruce Hall
DRUMS, PERCUSSION:
Bryan Hitt
GUITAR, HARMONY VOCALS:
Dave Amato
WEBSITE:
REO
Speedwagon |
HITS:
1977 Ridin' The Storm Out
1978 Roll With The Changes
1978 Time For Me To Fly
1981 Don't Let Him Go
1981 In Your Letter
1981 Keep On Loving You
1981 Take It On The Run
1982 Keep The Fire Burnin'
1985 Can't Fight This Feeling
1985 One Lonely Night
1987 In My Dreams
1987 That Ain't Love
1988 Here With Me
3 Top 10 Albums
3 Top 40 Albums |
2005
Since the release of REO Speedwagon's first
record in 1971, the band that started out in a rented Chevy station wagon
playing bars across America, has produced 17 critically acclaimed albums,
scored 13 top 40 singles (including two Billboard #1's) and sold over
40 million records. From their electrifying performance at the historic "Live Aid" concert,
to President Clinton's 1996 Inaugural Ball...From appearances on the
Howard Stern Show, Politically Incorrect with Bill Mahr, VH-1's Rock'n
Roll Jeopardy, and The Today Show, to the acclaimed REO Speedwagon: Behind
The Music, the band has plenty of stories to tell.
The current chapter of the REO story began when lead singer/songwriter
Kevin Cronin, keyboardist and founding member Neal Doughty and bass guitarist
Bruce Hall joined forces with former Ted Nugent lead guitarist Dave Amato
and studio drummer Bryan Hitt to form the new and improved REO Speedwagon.
REO had been on a nonstop touring and recording
schedule since 1971. There have been no farewell tours and no reunion
tours. "We started
out playing local bars in Champaign, Illinois and worked our way up from
there" says Doughty. "We did it the old fashioned way and as
a result we have a following which is still growing to this day."
True. When you look around the audience at a REO
Speedwagon concert these days, you see people who have been with the
band since the early days, singing and dancing along with high school
and college age fans. "It
blows us away", says Hall "we love the fact that our music
brings so many different people together."
When original guitarist Gary Richrath and drummer
Alan Gratzer left the band in the late 1980's, the band made the biggest
decision of its career. "We knew it would be a huge challenge", says Cronin, "but
everywhere we went, people kept telling us 'Please keep on going, don't
stop.' That made us realize that our music meant a lot to people and
gave us the strength we needed to carry on."
After a run of hit records and sold out tours which
began with the release of "Live, You Get What You Play For" in 1977, continued with
1978's "You Can Tuna Piano But You Can't Tune A Fish", the
monumental 10 million seller "Hi Infidelity" in 1981 and culminating
in 1985 with the number one single "Can't Fight This Feeling",
it was time for the REO team to regroup and redefine itself.
It wasn't easy for a band which had grown accustomed
to playing stadiums and arenas all over the world. "We went back to our touring roots
in the Midwest and started the rebuilding process in friendly territory",
says Doughty. "It took a while, but little by little the fans began
to accept that Dave and Bryan were here to stay." The band's spirit
had been rekindled and their sound was as strong as ever. "I discovered
a new appreciation for our audiences and our music…it was fun
again," says Cronin. It showed. The word began to spread and attendance
at REO shows began to grow.
Sold out co-headline amphitheater tours with Fleetwood Mac and Pat Benatar
in 1996 and Foreigner and Peter Frampton in 1997 solidified the resurgence
in REO's nationwide popularity, and a stadium tour of South America showcased
the band in front of tens of thousands of new international fans.
In 1996 the band released its fourteenth studio
album, "Building
The Bridge". The CD has been embraced as one of REO's strongest
ever by fans all around the country, including one very special resident
of our nation's capital. President Clinton adopted the title song as
his campaign theme that year and invited the band to perform along side
him at various stops on the campaign trail, as well as at his Inaugural
Ball.
"We started out as a bar band, playing as fast and loud as we could",
says Hall. "When KC played us his demo of 'Keep On Loving You' in
1980 we thought he was kidding…but one day Richrath cranked up
his Marshall amps, and the rest is power ballad history," says Doughty.
In 1998, with that thought in mind, the band, along with A&R guru
John Kalodner and hit producer Peter Asher, set off to create another
addition to REO's prolific catalog.
Simply entitled "The Ballads", this CD contains eleven of
the group's most popular love songs including "Can't Fight This
Feeling", "Keep On Loving You" and "Time For Me To
Fly" along with two newly recorded Cronin originals, the lush and
powerful "Just For You", and the folk tinged "Till The
Rivers Run Dry". "Our band has two sides", says Dave Amato, "we
rock hard in concert and we released a Ballads CD which is for kicking
back with that special person."
In the spring of 2000, after thirty years as arch
rivals, REO and Styx were set to co-headline a national tour. "It hit me on the first
night of the tour in Phoenix. I looked out from the stage during our
set and saw two girls wearing Styx t-shirts, dancing and singing along
with every word I sang. Then we met a guy at a truck stop in Georgia
who explained that while he had seen each band in the past, REO and Styx
playing together was an event that made his two hundred mile road trip
to Atlanta a no brainer. We were all having big fun, the audiences were
huge, everyone singing and dancing together, REO fans digging Styx and
Styx fans rocking with REO. We had become one big band!" says Cronin
in the "Arch Allies" CD liner notes.
After the 10 month long, hugely successful "Arch Allies" tour,
the band felt the need to reconnect with the "home front". "We
love to play, but we need to keep our families as our top priority, with
the band as a very, very close second.", says father of two young
children, Bryan (Hitman) Hitt.
But even though 2001 was meant to be an "off year", REO kept
busy. "We were waiting for the right time to do Behind The Music,
and this was it. VH-1 did a great job of capturing the band's personality,
spirit and history", says Neal. Kevin appeared as a guest on Politically
Incorrect, VH-1's Rockn'Roll Jeopardy and The Howard Stern Show. The
band released "Plus", a CD and DVD which contains REO's entire
performance from the "Arch Allies" set, plus four exclusive
cuts, extended interviews with Neal and Kevin and the infamous REO Home
Game.
The boys did agree to go out on the road for a few
concert dates in 2001, which turned into a 65 city tour! "How did that happen",
wonders Dave, "Not that I'm complaining. I don't have any kids so
I want to get out and rock."
One of those dates was September 13, 2001 in Salt
Lake City. "With
the horror of September 11 so fresh in our minds, we were not sure if
we could play a show a mere two days later", says Kevin. "The
promoter at the Utah State Fair said they wanted us to come, so we found
an old bus and headed north.", says Neal, "It made me feel
better to know that our spirit, as well as the spirit of the American
people, is still strong".
"The response of REO audiences is always fierce, but since the
9-11 attacks there is a different intensity level. Our songs just seem
to fit right in with the attitude that we need as Americans.", says
Cronin. With that in mind REO joined its Arch Allies, Styx, as well as
Journey, Lynard Skynard, Bad Company and others, for "Rock to the
Rescue", back to back concerts in Atlanta and Dallas, on October
21 and 22. Drew Carey hosted the events. On November 12, 2001 a check
for Five Hundred Thousand Dollars was presented to the New York/New Jersey
Port Authority Memorial Fund.
At the close of another busy "off year" in
2002, (which evolved into an eighty date tour), the Arch Allies reconvened
in October for an encore of the prior year's benefit concert. The shows
moved to The Meadowlands in Jersey, and the Gund Arena in Cleveland,
and The Rock'n Roll Hall of Fame Music Education Fund became the co-beneficiary.
Many of the artists involved in this event came
together to create "A
Classic Rock Christmas", a CD collection of original, as well as
traditional Christmas songs. REO's contribution was "I Believe In
Santa Claus", co-written by Kevin and Bruce. The proceeds once again
went to our "Rock to the Rescue" fund.
"A lot has happened since those days in the old Chevy station wagon.",
says Kevin, "We are thankful for every moment, and we thank you
for your continuing support of our music and our spirit."
Camp Moondance 2024 Lineup
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