“A
gathering of angels appeared above my head
They
sang to me this song of hope and this is what they said
They
said, ‘Come sail away, come sail away
Come
sail away with me.’”—“Come Sail Away,” written by Dennis De Young, from the
Styx LP The Grand Illusion (1977)
As
a high-school freshman, I nodded in agreement as a friend, Dan, hearing “Lady”
come on the radio again, trashed its creators, Styx, as a “one-hit wonder.”
Fast-forward
two decades later. Another friend asked me to buy her a Styx CD—but not just any Styx CD. It had to have a later song
by the band, “Come Sail Away.”
“Good
choice,” I thought to myself.
The
other night, I saw a PBS ad for a concert special featuring Dennis De Young and
the music of Styx. Far from being a “one-hit wonder,” as Dan and I fully
expected, Styx has become a band beloved by many baby boomers—in no small part,
I’m convinced, because of “Come Sail Away.”
Youth
is a time of chasing dreams, of setting forth for a “virgin sea.” It is fraught
with peril the way that the newfound freedom promised by adulthood is. That is
why, as songwriter Dennis De Young reminisced in an interview for the Web site “Classic Rock Revisited,” “Come Sail
Away” represents, despite the losses and disappointments following the journey
embarked upon by youth, an anthem of “guarded hope.” Released the summer before
my senior year of high school, it sustained me all the way through to
graduation--and, in certain ways, maybe well beyond it.
In
fact, it is the second time that the lyrics “to carry on” are used that the
song shifts irrevocably from piano-based ballad to a guitar-centric explosion
of exhilaration. To continue in the face of defeat (“somehow we missed out on
the pot of gold”) becomes the ultimate act of courage.
The
creators of the short-lived, long-lamented cult TV classic Freaks and Geeks knew what they were doing when they used this song
to close out their marvelous pilot. It comes after one of the “geeks” has
summoned up the nerve to ask a stunning cheerleader to dance. The song is so
meaningful in this moment because in adolescence, even conquering social unease
can, for the one afflicted, require “a gathering of angels.”
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