"Boston" in chaos after Brad Delp's suicide

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • fryingdutchman
    Full Member Status

    • Feb 2005
    • 4133

    "Boston" in chaos after Brad Delp's suicide

    Looks llike Brad Delp's suicide will continue to reverberate through Boston for some time to come.

    Read on.



    CONCORD, N.H. - The band Boston spoke to people's souls during the 1970s with smash hits like "More Than a Feeling" and "Peace of Mind." But two weeks after lead singer Brad Delp's suicide at his New Hampshire home, bad feelings abound. Current members of the band, including the chief songwriter and founder, Tom Scholz, were not informed about or invited to Delp's funeral, which was attended by early band members who opposed Scholz in a 1980s legal battle.

    Last week, Delp's ex-wife Micki was quoted on a radio station saying Delp was distressed about the conflicts in his professional life and became despondent after a longtime friend, Fran Cosmo, was cut from Boston's summer concert lineup. The story spread online, where fans trying to figure out the reason for Delp's suicide took up the cudgels.

    Scholz, who called Delp his "closest friend and collaborator in music for over 35 years," said he was crushed by Delp's suicide and his exclusion from the funeral. Now he feels he is being unfairly blamed for Delp's death.

    "It went from devastating on the initial phone call to an absolute nightmare," Scholz told The Associated Press on Friday in a tearful telephone interview, his first since Delp's death on March 9. (An interview conducted by e-mail was published earlier in Rolling Stone.)

    "We had been told it would only be his immediate family (at the funeral), and of course it wasn't," he said.

    A lawyer for Scholz sent a letter to Micki Delp on Friday demanding a retraction. She did not immediately respond Friday to an e-mail message from The Associated Press via the publicist who has handled statements for the family.

    Boston has canceled its summer engagements, and Scholz said he still hopes the rift can be mended and the band can be part of a public memorial service that Delp's children, their mother Micki, and Delp's fiancee, Pamela Sullivan, said last week was in the works.

    Sullivan said no one intentionally excluded the current band members from the funeral.

    "It was about getting the children through it as quickly and quietly as possible with the people they were up to facing at the time and the people who could be the most comfort to them," she told the AP in a telephone interview.

    Tensions between Scholz and some of the early band members date from the early 1980s, when CBS Inc. sued the band over delays in recording new albums. The company's Epic Records label recorded the band's first two releases: "Boston," in 1976, and "Don't Look Back," in 1978.

    Scholz countersued for the rights to the band's name and music. Three members of the original band _ Barry Goudreau, Sib Hashian and Fran Sheehan _ testified for the record company, which lost. Goudreau is Micki Delp's brother-in-law, and she reportedly remains close to the ousted band members.

    Delp, the only band member besides Scholz whose name was on the CBS recording contract, remained friends with everyone, touring and recording with Scholz and the others over the decades. He also started a Beatles tribute band, Beatle Juice.

    Scholz wrote, engineered, and laid down nearly all the instrumental tracks on the first album, but he said Delp helped him refine the songs and brought his music to life.

    "It went from a guitar lick that didn't mean a thing to a real song as soon as he opened his mouth. That was always the case," Scholz said. "We had a very, very close working relationship. I swear it was like we were hooked up by a cable. We didn't even have to talk most of the time."

    Scholz and Delp were both vegetarians and pacifists, both dedicated their money and talents to causes they believed in, and both proposed to their longtime girlfriends on Christmas Day 2006 by putting rings in their stockings _ only learning about the coincidence in a conversation afterward.

    The band's first album was wildly successful, and remains one of the best-selling debut albums of all time, according to Billboard, selling more than 16 million copies. Boston's early music also remains a staple on classic rock stations, especially in New England.

    96.5 FM ("The Mill") in Manchester plans a two-hour tribute to Boston on Sunday featuring excerpts from the station's interviews with Delp over the years. Program Director J.C. Haze said he remembers hearing the first album.

    "Tom and Brad, they made such a unique sound it just took the world by storm," Haze said. "Nothing ever sounded like it, and nothing ever did since."
    Originally posted by perilouspete
    fryingdutchman you pretty much own everyone.....sick comebacks, well put. top class wit.
  • DrMaddVibe
    ROTH ARMY ELITE
    • Jan 2004
    • 6686

    #2
    Wasn't invited to the funeral? Damn, where have I heard that before?

    Nice. Real nice.
    http://i185.photobucket.com/albums/x...auders1zl5.gif
    http://i24.photobucket.com/albums/c4...willywonka.gif

    Comment

    • FORD
      ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

      • Jan 2004
      • 59606

      #3
      Don't know whether or not Tom can come to terms with Brad's family, but one thing is definitely true.....

      Boston died with Brad. Let it go, Tom. Go build some new amps or cameras or whatever, but don't destroy what's left of Boston's musical legacy by trying to carry on without the one man who OWNED as much of the Boston sound as you did.
      Eat Us And Smile

      Cenk For America 2024!!

      Justice Democrats


      "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

      Comment

      • Terry
        DIAMOND STATUS
        • Jan 2004
        • 12125

        #4
        Boston's first album was a monster. Basically eclipsed everything else the band did.

        Have to go with FORD on this one. Best just to hang up the band name. Think they had been touring sporatically over the years under the moniker, but that should cease now out of respect for Delp.
        Scramby eggs and bacon.

        Comment

        • VanHalener
          ROCKSTAR

          • Nov 2006
          • 5451

          #5
          I am so
          Originally posted by FORD
          Don't know whether or not Tom can come to terms with Brad's family, but one thing is definitely true.....

          Boston died with Brad. Let it go, Tom. Go build some new amps or cameras or whatever, but don't destroy what's left of Boston's musical legacy by trying to carry on without the one man who OWNED as much of the Boston sound as you did.
          Originally posted by Terry
          Boston's first album was a monster. Basically eclipsed everything else the band did.

          Have to go with FORD on this one. Best just to hang up the band name. Think they had been touring sporatically over the years under the moniker, but that should cease now out of respect for Delp.
          Damn, this is proving to be a tough year! Boston was a class act that I was looking very forward to seeing this year. I love the music very much and feel an emptiness knowing it's over.

          I hope the right things are done in regards to the name, the surviving musicians, and the recordings: new, and old.
          ~Only you can prevent low volume~

          Comment

          • katie
            Crazy Ass Mofo
            • Nov 2004
            • 3072

            #6
            fryingdutchman thanks for finding this.

            Am still gutted by the news.

            Katie

            Comment

            • Antman
              Commando
              • Jan 2004
              • 1261

              #7
              Did Brad Delp ever leave the band at one point in the 90s. I swore on the greatest hit album there was another singer on some songs. Could be wrong. Anyone know.
              When the shit hits the fan, close your mouth and duck.

              Comment

              • PumpedUpMidget
                Head Fluffer
                • May 2005
                • 469

                #8
                In my opinion, no big loss.....if I were in Boston, I would have committed suicide as well....

                Comment

                • BrownSound1
                  ROTH ARMY FOUNDER
                  • Mar 2003
                  • 3025

                  #9
                  There was at least one Boston studio album that Brad Delp did not do the vocals for, it was titled "Walk On." The album sucked in my opinion. I bought it and listened to it maybe two times, but it just wasn't the same. I think there was one song that Delp co-wrote on that album, and you can tell it by the way the vocal harmonies are done, but he didn't perform on it.

                  Comment

                  • Nickdfresh
                    SUPER MODERATOR

                    • Oct 2004
                    • 49565

                    #10
                    Originally posted by FORD
                    Don't know whether or not Tom can come to terms with Brad's family, but one thing is definitely true.....

                    Boston died with Brad. Let it go, Tom. Go build some new amps or cameras or whatever, but don't destroy what's left of Boston's musical legacy by trying to carry on without the one man who OWNED as much of the Boston sound as you did.
                    Didn't he already try once?

                    I think I even own that hideous fraud of an album...

                    Comment

                    • bueno bob
                      DIAMOND STATUS
                      • Jul 2004
                      • 22951

                      #11
                      Originally posted by BrownSound1
                      There was at least one Boston studio album that Brad Delp did not do the vocals for, it was titled "Walk On." The album sucked in my opinion. I bought it and listened to it maybe two times, but it just wasn't the same. I think there was one song that Delp co-wrote on that album, and you can tell it by the way the vocal harmonies are done, but he didn't perform on it.
                      He rejoined the band halfway through the tour, though, as memory serves...

                      All this is a bunch of shit, but it's not surprising. In light of his recent passing, there was bound to be somebody trying to point an accusatory finger in one direction or another, and Tom is probably being unfairly singled out.

                      It's a tragedy, but...you can blame "internal strife" in Boston all you like, but fuck, every succesful band has internal strife to some degree or another, and not everybody kills themselves over it. There was more going on in Brad's life that lead him to making his decision, and the sole responsibility does NOT belong on Tom Scholz or internal conflicts within the Boston camp.

                      From losing a friend, excluded from his funeral while being blamed for his suicide...that just speaks of low class on the part of Brad's ex wife, I think. But, like I said, it's not surprising - when you lose somebody suddenly to suicide, you always try and figure out what or who's to blame for it, and often times people just point the finger at the nearest possible culprit.

                      Just a sad situation all around.
                      Twistin' by the pool.

                      Comment

                      • DrMaddVibe
                        ROTH ARMY ELITE
                        • Jan 2004
                        • 6686

                        #12
                        Damn, Brother Bob...it's hard to take you serious when I read your comments and have to look at one of the 7 Wonders of the World in your sig!
                        http://i185.photobucket.com/albums/x...auders1zl5.gif
                        http://i24.photobucket.com/albums/c4...willywonka.gif

                        Comment

                        • Viking
                          Veteran
                          • Jan 2004
                          • 1774

                          #13
                          Fran Cosmo was the other singer - did the vocals on their last two albums. Apparently, he and Delp were really good friends - there's a whole marital and musically incestuous history between most of these current and former members, and their families. And on the historical periphery of it all is our favorite putz, the Ched Rocker. Google it.

                          Comment

                          • FORD
                            ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

                            • Jan 2004
                            • 59606

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Viking
                            Fran Cosmo was the other singer - did the vocals on their last two albums. Apparently, he and Delp were really good friends - there's a whole marital and musically incestuous history between most of these current and former members, and their families. And on the historical periphery of it all is our favorite putz, the Ched Rocker. Google it.
                            Unfortunately true....

                            His Cheddarness toured with Boston in the late 70's and became friends with the band. Tom Scholz was actually supposed to produce Spammy's "Danger Zone" album in 1980, but was forced off the project by the CBS legal team, which wanted the third Boston album.

                            Which, of course didn't come out for another 6 years anyway. Maybe Scholz could have given Hagar's record a decent guitar sound, but I doubt he could have done a damn thing to improve the lyrics.

                            Even though Scholz was kicked off the project, Boston members DID manage to make one appearance on a Hagar record. Brad Delp, Barry Goudreau, and Sib Hashian sang background vocals on the Ched Rocker's version of "Sittin' On The Dock of the Bay" - which also featured the original Stax Memphis house band who played on the original Otis Redding single.

                            It would have been a masterpiece of a record if it had a REAL lead singer :D

                            And in the final note of incestuousness, when Spammy broke up his 80's band to join Van Hagar, his guitarist Gary Pihl put in a cameo appearance on Third Stage, and was offerred Barry Goudreau's job on the following tour. He took it, and has been gainfully employed (every 8 years or so) ever since. Without having to play behind a cheesy singer in Ronald McDonald jumpsuits.....

                            Actually, knowing all of this useless trivia, I was actually surprised that the Spamster didn't give some kind of a shout out to Brad Delp at the Hall of Lame performance
                            Eat Us And Smile

                            Cenk For America 2024!!

                            Justice Democrats


                            "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

                            Comment

                            • bueno bob
                              DIAMOND STATUS
                              • Jul 2004
                              • 22951

                              #15
                              Originally posted by FORD
                              Unfortunately true....

                              His Cheddarness toured with Boston in the late 70's and became friends with the band. Tom Scholz was actually supposed to produce Spammy's "Danger Zone" album in 1980, but was forced off the project by the CBS legal team, which wanted the third Boston album.

                              Which, of course didn't come out for another 6 years anyway. Maybe Scholz could have given Hagar's record a decent guitar sound, but I doubt he could have done a damn thing to improve the lyrics.

                              Even though Scholz was kicked off the project, Boston members DID manage to make one appearance on a Hagar record. Brad Delp, Barry Goudreau, and Sib Hashian sang background vocals on the Ched Rocker's version of "Sittin' On The Dock of the Bay" - which also featured the original Stax Memphis house band who played on the original Otis Redding single.

                              It would have been a masterpiece of a record if it had a REAL lead singer :D

                              And in the final note of incestuousness, when Spammy broke up his 80's band to join Van Hagar, his guitarist Gary Pihl put in a cameo appearance on Third Stage, and was offerred Barry Goudreau's job on the following tour. He took it, and has been gainfully employed (every 8 years or so) ever since. Without having to play behind a cheesy singer in Ronald McDonald jumpsuits.....

                              Actually, knowing all of this useless trivia, I was actually surprised that the Spamster didn't give some kind of a shout out to Brad Delp at the Hall of Lame performance
                              Wow...I didn't know it ran that deeply...I was aware of the Gary Pihl connection (and, truth be told, Gary's a great guitarist in his own right, always has been), but didn't know that the rest of classic Boston tied in that deeply.

                              Thanks, Ford.
                              Twistin' by the pool.

                              Comment

                              Working...