Editorial Reviews
About the Artist
When the name REO Speedwagon is mentioned, it tends to conjure many different images. One might first recall the power-pop ballads Keep on Loving You, Cant Fight This Feeling, or Time For Me to Fly. Others may find themselves remembering rockin anthems such as Roll With the Changes, Ridin the Storm Out, or Dont Let Him Go. Visually one may remember long, wavy hair and a Fender Stratocaster as easily as blue jeans, tux tails and a grand piano. Memories of a raucous live concert can be as pervasive as the thoughts of a warm, starry night a couple spent listening to the radio. The truth is REO Speedwagon is all of these things. The party band-turned-rock-and-roll-juggernaut from Champaign, IL has been busy for over 30 years.
The original members all lived near or attended the University of Illinois. REO Speedwagon was formed to play frat parties, sorority parties, dances, keggers, heck, any kinda party! After several years of playing the local bar scene and a lineup change or two, the band created a reputation as a great live show. Its first six albums met with spotty national success. But in 1977 that changed with the release of the highly successful Live - You Get What You Play For. Although the project wasnt as successful as the previous years Frampton Comes Alive or Bob Segers Live Bullet, the American publics newfound acceptance of live recordings benefited Champaigns finest nonetheless. The album eventually became a million-seller and identified the REO sound.
The next project, You Can Tune a Piano, But You Cant Tuna Fish, was an exercise in capturing the live REO sound in the studio. They most certainly did! And thus, the Tuna lbum became a template for the bands upcoming successes. Success is really an understated way to describe the overwhelming power that circulated around 1980s mega-platinum Hi-Infidelity phenomenon. The project stayed perched at #1 on Billboards album chart for months while it spawned a Texas handful of pop and rock radio hits which fueled the REO touring machine from that point on.
REOs hey day lasted well into the mid-1980s as long as radio embraced the groups efforts. As the 80s wound down, so too did radios fascination with the straight-ahead rock and roll bands. The radio industry became increasingly fragmented and REO Speedwagon found its songs being played on Classic Rock stations. Although there are thousands of these types of stations in the U.S., they carry only a fraction of the overall market share of the pop and rock powerhouse stations that supported REO throughout the earlier part of the decade.
But like many of its contemporaries, REO Speedwagon continues to be a very successful band by continuing to tour and release album projects in deference to radio. This is possible in large part due to the extremely loyal support of its massive fan base. Music Mill Entertainment is proud to bring you this package of great REO Speedwagon songs we call Keep On Rollin.
Product Description
These 10 songs are all ORIGINAL SONY MASTER RECORDINGS. There are no re-cuts or odd-ball live versions here. "Ridin' The Storm Out" is the only live cut and it was taken directly from "Live, You Get What You Play For."
Pure rock 'n roll satisfaction.
Keep on Rollin',REO Speedwagon,Music Mill,Adult Contemporary,Album Rock,Arena Rock,Hard Rock,Pop,Pop/Rock,Rock,Rock/Pop,Soft Rock
Rock Music:
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