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Goo Goo Dolls >> Goo Goo Dolls >> Goo Goo Dolls grow up - article
(Message started by: Shannon on Aug 1st, 2011, 10:55am)

Title: Goo Goo Dolls grow up - article
Post by Shannon on Aug 1st, 2011, 10:55am
Goo Goo Dolls grow up

Married couples could learn a lot from the Goo Goo Dolls.

Formed in 1986 in Buffalo by John Rzeznik and Robby Takac, the band has been together for more than 25 years.

�I think it�s a great milestone, but we never really celebrate any particular day. It�s been an amazingly long amount of time. I think it�s just sort of what we do,� Takac said.

Along with drummer Mike Malinin, who joined the group in 1994, Takac and Rzeznik have had a career made in rock �n� roll heaven.

Rising to the top of the charts in 1995 with the album �A Boy Named Goo,� the band has managed to survive the treacherous waters of the music industry for more than two decades.

�I think a lot of bands couldn�t have managed some of the transitions over the years. At times it has been incredibly challenging. This band has had some very unique phases,� said Takac, bassist with the group.

The Goo Goo Dolls will headline the �99.5 The River�s Summer Night Out� concert on Sunday
at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center in Saratoga Springs. The lineup also will include Barenaked Ladies, Michelle Branch and Parachute.

Takac expects to see several generations of fans at the show.

�We have amazing folks who come out to see us play. You hope you can drag your fans around with you through the years, but obviously you lose some along the way. I think there have been some folks who have been with us for a really long time,� he said.

Despite their years together, the group is far from an oldies band.

With releases like 2010�s �Something for the Rest of Us� and �All That You Are,� a song on this summer�s �Transformers 3� soundtrack, the veteran rockers continue to be relevant.

Although the band is still cranking out songs, Takac is realistic about making the charts.

�There are so many components to making a hit song. It�s not always just about being a great song. We�ve written tons of songs that were good that weren�t a hit. A good song is a good song, but a hit song is a minor miracle,� he said.

Takac said touring isn�t the party it was in the early days, and the musicians approach the travel with a different perspective.

�You figure out how to make it work. It involved way less getting hammered out of your mind than it used to. After 20 years, I started saying to myself, �We need to be out there doing our best.� It�s about making the shows great,� he said.

Since the paradigm has shifted in the music industry and concerts are now more profitable than recordings for performers, Takac is grateful to be able to be out on the road.

�I think we are just fortunate that we can go out and make money doing shows that allow us to keep our machine running,� he said.

For Takac, performing on stage is an integral part of his identity.

�I�ve been doing it for my entire adult life. I don�t know any other way,� he said.


Read more: http://poststar.com/lifestyles/today/goo-goo-dolls-grow-up/article_a3e8d87e-b976-11e0-95e3-001cc4c03286.html#ixzz1TnEUotYd[b][/b]



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