Sure, you can call the members of REO Speedwagon rock stars. But if you have to label them, here's the more accurate term they prefer: Working musicians.
Formed in 1967, signed in 1971 and fronted by iconic vocalist Kevin Cronin since 1972, REO Speedwagon has - for decades - been a confounding blend of consistency and change.
They rode in station wagons, going from tiny gigs to even tinier gigs, just to get the REO name out in the early days. Later they rode the top of the charts with a RIAA certified 22 million albums sold in the U.S. and 40 million around the globe, with a string of gold and platinum records and international hit singles. The 9-times certified Hi Infidelity remains a high-water mark for rock bands.
Make all the "Ridin' The Storm Out" or "Roll With The Changes" cracks you want, but that's exactly what the band has done. REO Speedwagon has that Midwest work ethic.
The band has gone onstage and in the studio and done the work, year after year - dozens of albums, hundreds (or thousands?) of concerts, infinite radio spins. The eyes have always been on the future and on the road - not a year has gone by where REO Speedwagon didn't perform live, thrilling fans with hits like "Keep On Loving You" and "Can't Fight This Feeling."
And yes, they do roll with the changes. With the modern-day music industry disintegrating, the band members recorded Find Your Own Way Home in 2007 and put it out themselves through Walmart - and personally drove to radio stations across the country to get it heard. Ultimately the album (yes, REO Speedwagon still makes albums, not a bunch of songs) had more success than it would ever see with a record company. Whatever the band members need to do to connect with fans, they do it.
"We're still doing it and still going strong," Cronin says.
Cronin (lead vocals, guitar, keyboards) has always cast an eye to the future, along with band-mates Bruce Hall (bass), Neal Doughty (keyboards), Dave Amato (lead guitar) and Bryan Hitt (drums). It wasn't a surprise to Cronin to see the industry run aground.
"I think maybe the music industry needed to fall a little bit because it was getting bloated and there were just too many people putting out CDs with one or two good songs on them and eventually that's gonna backfire," Cronin says.
What never backfires is a great live show. In 2009 REO Speedwagon hits the road on the Can't Stop Rockin' Tour with STYX and 38 Special, three of the hardest working bands in America. Sponsored by VH1 and Rock Band, the tour is a recession-buster night of rock 'n' roll, offering the best value this year, with some tickets as low as $13.50.
What do people want to hear these days? Hope. Passion. A reason to do the things we do. And songwriter Cronin is a longtime fan of hope.
"I am an optimistic person," Cronin says. "In every song I have ever written, no matter the depth of darkness from which it was conceived, there has always been a message of hope. My own songs often serve to remind me that in the toughest of times, hope must remain undying."
To that end REO and STYX have teamed up on a new single, "Can't Stop Rockin'," co-written by Cronin and STYX's Tommy Shaw.
When the talk turns to benefit concerts the names that come to mind are George Harrison, U2 and Bob Geldof. REO has quietly done its share, sans self-serving promotional tours, from appearing at the Live Aid concert in 1985, to a benefit for port authority workers after 9/11 and recent MusiCares shows, along with a "Ridin' The Storm Out" benefit concert that raised more than a half-million dollars for Iowa flood relief in 2008.
In what little downtime he has, Cronin stays busy with appearances on shows like Politically Incorrect with Bill Maher and his own writing on his blog at KevinCronin.com. He recently appeared on FOX-TV's Don't Forget the Lyrics!
It's a busy life, but it always has been for the band. Formed loosely in the late '60s at college in Champaign, IL, REO (famously named after a fire engine) and its fans quickly realized there was much more going on here than your average frat-party band.
By the early '70s the band's unrelenting drive, non-stop touring and recording jump-started the burgeoning rock movement in the Midwest. It carved a path eventually followed by STYX, Kansas, Cheap Trick and more. Platinum albums and freeform FM radio staples such as "Ridin' The Storm Out" followed, setting the stage for 1980's explosive Hi Infidelity.
The band's younger fans might not realize the sheer impact Hi Infidelity had on music and the culture of rock 'n' roll. Its 9 million in sales was fueled by huge hit singles in "Keep On Loving You" and "Take It On the Run." High Infidelity spent months in the #1 slot, a feat simply unattainable in music today. The strong run continued with hits like "Can't Fight This Feeling" up through the new "Can't Stop Rockin'."
Today it's all about what it has always been - taking good care of the band's legacy while keeping the focus on the future. That may be even more important these days, Cronin believes.
"The world is going through a weird phase, and everybody needs music now more than ever
Formed in 1967, signed in 1971 and fronted by iconic vocalist Kevin Cronin since 1972, REO Speedwagon has - for decades - been a confounding blend of consistency and change.
They rode in station wagons, going from tiny gigs to even tinier gigs, just to get the REO name out in the early days. Later they rode the top of the charts with a RIAA certified 22 million albums sold in the U.S. and 40 million around the globe, with a string of gold and platinum records and international hit singles. The 9-times certified Hi Infidelity remains a high-water mark for rock bands.
Make all the "Ridin' The Storm Out" or "Roll With The Changes" cracks you want, but that's exactly what the band has done. REO Speedwagon has that Midwest work ethic.
The band has gone onstage and in the studio and done the work, year after year - dozens of albums, hundreds (or thousands?) of concerts, infinite radio spins. The eyes have always been on the future and on the road - not a year has gone by where REO Speedwagon didn't perform live, thrilling fans with hits like "Keep On Loving You" and "Can't Fight This Feeling."
And yes, they do roll with the changes. With the modern-day music industry disintegrating, the band members recorded Find Your Own Way Home in 2007 and put it out themselves through Walmart - and personally drove to radio stations across the country to get it heard. Ultimately the album (yes, REO Speedwagon still makes albums, not a bunch of songs) had more success than it would ever see with a record company. Whatever the band members need to do to connect with fans, they do it.
"We're still doing it and still going strong," Cronin says.
Cronin (lead vocals, guitar, keyboards) has always cast an eye to the future, along with band-mates Bruce Hall (bass), Neal Doughty (keyboards), Dave Amato (lead guitar) and Bryan Hitt (drums). It wasn't a surprise to Cronin to see the industry run aground.
"I think maybe the music industry needed to fall a little bit because it was getting bloated and there were just too many people putting out CDs with one or two good songs on them and eventually that's gonna backfire," Cronin says.
What never backfires is a great live show. In 2009 REO Speedwagon hits the road on the Can't Stop Rockin' Tour with STYX and 38 Special, three of the hardest working bands in America. Sponsored by VH1 and Rock Band, the tour is a recession-buster night of rock 'n' roll, offering the best value this year, with some tickets as low as $13.50.
What do people want to hear these days? Hope. Passion. A reason to do the things we do. And songwriter Cronin is a longtime fan of hope.
"I am an optimistic person," Cronin says. "In every song I have ever written, no matter the depth of darkness from which it was conceived, there has always been a message of hope. My own songs often serve to remind me that in the toughest of times, hope must remain undying."
To that end REO and STYX have teamed up on a new single, "Can't Stop Rockin'," co-written by Cronin and STYX's Tommy Shaw.
When the talk turns to benefit concerts the names that come to mind are George Harrison, U2 and Bob Geldof. REO has quietly done its share, sans self-serving promotional tours, from appearing at the Live Aid concert in 1985, to a benefit for port authority workers after 9/11 and recent MusiCares shows, along with a "Ridin' The Storm Out" benefit concert that raised more than a half-million dollars for Iowa flood relief in 2008.
In what little downtime he has, Cronin stays busy with appearances on shows like Politically Incorrect with Bill Maher and his own writing on his blog at KevinCronin.com. He recently appeared on FOX-TV's Don't Forget the Lyrics!
It's a busy life, but it always has been for the band. Formed loosely in the late '60s at college in Champaign, IL, REO (famously named after a fire engine) and its fans quickly realized there was much more going on here than your average frat-party band.
By the early '70s the band's unrelenting drive, non-stop touring and recording jump-started the burgeoning rock movement in the Midwest. It carved a path eventually followed by STYX, Kansas, Cheap Trick and more. Platinum albums and freeform FM radio staples such as "Ridin' The Storm Out" followed, setting the stage for 1980's explosive Hi Infidelity.
The band's younger fans might not realize the sheer impact Hi Infidelity had on music and the culture of rock 'n' roll. Its 9 million in sales was fueled by huge hit singles in "Keep On Loving You" and "Take It On the Run." High Infidelity spent months in the #1 slot, a feat simply unattainable in music today. The strong run continued with hits like "Can't Fight This Feeling" up through the new "Can't Stop Rockin'."
Today it's all about what it has always been - taking good care of the band's legacy while keeping the focus on the future. That may be even more important these days, Cronin believes.
"The world is going through a weird phase, and everybody needs music now more than ever