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Keyboardist David Paich, son of musician and session player/arranger Marty Paich, rose to fame after having co-written much of Scaggs's Silk Degrees album. Having played on many sessions with drummer Jeff Porcaro (the son of session percussionist Joe Porcaro), whom he met while attending Grant High School, where they formed the band Rural Still Life, Paich began to discuss seriously with Porcaro the possibility of their forming their own band. They brought in bassist and fellow session veteran David Hungate, having played with him in the backing band for Scaggs. In addition, the duo asked fellow Grant High School students, guitarist Steve Lukather (who also played in Scaggs's band as a replacement for Les Dudek) and Jeff Porcaro's brother Steve Porcaro (keyboards) to join the team. Lukather and Steve Porcaro were in the same year at Grant and continued the band Rural Still Life (the name shortened to Still Life) after Paich and Jeff graduated. Fools singer Bobby Kimball, the group began to work on their first album in 1977 after signing with Columbia Records.



The album was a venture into arena rock[15] and featured heavier guitar and fewer keyboards than the previous two albums. Its disappointing chart performance and sales in almost every country except Japan and Norway put the band's career into further jeopardy, as they had not had a hit single in North America in almost two years at that point. The abnormal success of the album's lead single "Goodbye Elenore" in Japan proved to be the band's breakthrough there, and Japan has become a permanent staple of their touring schedule since. Once the band came together, David Paich began composing what would become the eponymous debut album, Toto. According to popular myth, at the first recording sessions, in order to distinguish their own demo tapes from other bands' in the studio, Jeff Porcaro wrote the word "Toto" on them. In the early 1980s, band members told the press that the band was named after Toto the dog from The Wizard of Oz.[9] After the completion of the first album, the band and record were still unnamed.



While Toto topped the charts and dominated both the Grammys and rock radio in the early '80s, sadly the band subsequently drifted into semi-obscurity thereafter, the fate of so many artists who were once on top of the world. The music industry and music consumers are fickle, loving you one minute, totally over you the next. prediksi togel It's a rare band in which the leader is the drummer, seeing as how they're stuck behind a mass of snares and hi-hats way in the back of the stage. Fleetwood Mac was definitely Mick Fleetwood's baby, latter-day Genesis was sticksman Phil Collins' vehicle, and coming in a respectable third on that short list, Toto was Jeff Porcaro's band all the way. He formed the band in the first place, and bandmate Steve Lukather labeled him Toto's "figurehead." It was understandably devastating to the band when Porcaro suddenly died at the young age of just 38 in August 1992.



Simon Phillips suffered from a back problem, so Gregg Bissonette had to fill in for him during the first leg of the tour in late 1995. The rest of the tour personnel remained the same, with the exception of Donna McDaniel who had left in 1994 shortly after the "Night of the Proms" performances (which Douglas-McRae had missed since she was out touring with Joe Cocker). The song "Hold the Line" was now sung as a duet between James and Douglas-McRae.[28]Both James and Douglas-McRae were dropped from the band at the conclusion of the 1997 tour. Steve Lukather released his next solo album on February 22, 2008, titled Ever Changing Times. In October 2003, Steve Lukather released a Christmas album named Santamental, featuring musicians such as Eddie Van Halen, Slash, Steve Vai, and Gregg Bissonette. When the Los Angeles County Coroner released its official report on Porcaro a few weeks later, it ruled Porcaro's cause of death to be occlusive coronary artery disease, in layman's terms a hardening of the arteries, brought on by long-term cocaine use.



On January 21, 2013, Steve Lukather released a solo album, Transition, featuring former Toto touring bassist Leland Sklar, as well as Gregg Bissonette and Chad Smith. togel online In 2013, celebrating their 35th anniversary, the band embarked on tour across Europe and North America, along with Japanese dates to follow in 2014. Their show on June 25, 2013, in Łódź, Poland was recorded for a live release and was released on April 29, 2014. On November 5, it was confirmed both on Toto's and David Paich's official Facebook pages that a new studio album was in the works and that the band planned to go into the studio early 2014.



After the hugely successful Toto IV, the band released eight studio albums (not counting its full-length soundtrack to David Lynch's ill-fated Dune) and four live albums, a new one arriving in stores every couple of years or so, and well into the 2000s. Toto stayed a going concern, an intact, often touring band for more than 30 years, all the way until 2008, which marked the first time the band ever officially disbanded. But by that point, Steve Lukather was the only original member left, but as he later told Classic Rock (via Louder), neither musical nor personnel reasons caused the split. "I was drinking myself to death, I was losing my marriage, my mother was dying," he said. "It was a bad time. I needed to get myself together or I was going to end up killing myself." Happily, Lukather says, he turned things around—he quit drinking, starting going to therapy, and in the process, "exorcised some demons." The members of Toto were regulars on albums by Steely Dan,[5] Seals and Crofts,[6] Boz Scaggs,[7] Sonny and Cher,[8] and many others, contributing to many of the most popular records of the 1970s.



The song was written by David Paich and Joseph Williams, with Paich providing the name 'Pamela'. Williams happened to have a girlfriend at the time named Pamela, and had already written a song for her by the same name. And so, the chorus of Williams's song was used in the bridge, and he wrote new words and melody for the verses. This 1988 track proved to be Toto's final ever hit single, reaching number 22 in the US. Toto are one of the greatest soft rock bands of their generation, and are still going strong to this day. From March to November 1993, Lukather and Phillips teamed up with friends David Garfield and John Pena on the side project Los Lobotomys and recorded the album Candyman.



On October 16, 2019, Steve Lukather stated that after the final show in Philadelphia on October 20, 2019, it would mark the "end of this configuration of Toto".[57] Steve Lukather had also announced that there is a film about Toto in the works, and hinted that he would be writing a new book, titled The New Testament According to Luke. David Paich made another special appearance at the final show in Philadelphia to again perform "Africa" and "Home of the Brave".



This contained the three new tracks already released on 40 Trips Around the Sun plus completed recordings of four other older tracks featuring Jeff Porcaro on drums and either Mike Porcaro or David Hungate on bass plus other new recordings. Lukather claimed that the band was not meshing well with Frederiksen because he had a difficult time recording with them in the studio.[19] The band held an audition and Joseph Williams, son of film composer John Williams and 1950s singer/actress Barbara Ruick, was chosen to take over lead vocals in early 1986. Like the Beatles, Kiss, or the Spice Girls, Toto split lead vocals duties among its members.