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| Michael Sweet |
Michael Sweet
(vocalist, guitarist) and Robert Sweet
(drums) became born-again Christians in 1975. Inspired by the burgeoning nearby
Los Angeles hard rock bands such as Van
Halen, but distressed by their message, the Orange County-based Sweet
brothers formed a band that would extol their worldview and religious beliefs.
With a bassist, the Sweets originally formed Roxx Regime in 1983 as a trio. When the band began looking to add a
guitarist, rumors exist that future Dio
and Whitesnake guitarist Doug Aldrich and future Poison
member C.C. DeVille
auditioned. Oz Fox landed the position.
With Tim Gaines on bass, Stryper was complete. Stryper adopted
its name from an Old Testament prophecy, wore black and yellow-striped outfits
fitting the name, tossed New Testaments into the audience and became the first
overtly Christian heavy metal band to sell more than 10 million records. In the
mid 1980s, Stryper had the most requested videos on MTV, but popularity waned by
the end of the 1980s hair metal era. Michael Sweet left the band to pursue a
successful solo career, and later a four-year stint co-fronting the classic
rock band Boston. Stryper disbanded shortly thereafter in 1992. After
a sabbatical for much of the 1990′s, Stryper resurrected in the early 21st
century, reuniting several times since 2000. The band's newest album, No More Hell to Pay, was released in
November 2013.
At a splendid new ballroom-styled venue in midtown Manhattan
called Stage 48, Stryper tonight
fulfilled an earlier winter commitment that was cancelled due to a severe
snowstorm. The quartet's classic lineup performed old hits and new songs, and
even included a rocking cover of Kiss'
"Shout It Out Loud." The stage set was less elaborate than in the glam
metal heyday, and instead of bi-colored spandex, the four musicians dressed
mostly in black cotton and denim, each wearing only a subtle stripe of yellow
here or there. Beginning with "Loud 'n' Clear," Stryper refused to
simply press "replay," and played like a hungry band breaking into
the 21st century. Building on the band's signature sound of clear singing, big
melodies with rousing choruses, and seamlessly entwined twin guitar harmonies, the
band incorporated a modern and rougher alternative-rock-almost-grunge edge to the
presentation as the show launched further with "Reach Out",
"Calling on You" and "Free." Midway in the show, in an
unrehearsed moment, actor/comedian/drummer Richard
Christy, formerly of Iced Earth
and other extreme metal bands, and currently a side player on The Howard Stern Show, joined what he later said was his favorite band on
"Sing Along Song." The power ballad "Honestly" was not
performed and would not have fit into the aggressive hard rocking performance,
but fan favorites "Always There for You", "To Hell with the
Devil" and "Soldiers under Command" helped rally the end of the
17-song set with an anthemic, arena-ready flare.
Unlike typical heavy metal concerts, fans did not raise devil
horns to the band, instead poking stubby "one way" fingers heavenward.
The musicians tossed New Testaments to those near the stage, ending with
Michael Sweet stretching over the edge of the stage to hand one to a young girl
sitting on her dad's shoulders. After 30 years in the heavy metal scene, Stryper
still moshed extremely well for the glory of God!
Visit Stryper at www.stryper.com.

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