A penetrating , sharp guitar rockin' and rollin' in mid tempo together with
straight drums (Mike Baird) and a dark bass (John Pierce) into the first lines
of Richard Marx: "Have you heard the news? I'm doing what I said I would."
We're talking about
Nothing you can do about it here, the overture of
Marx' second album
Repeat offender (1989). Further on we hear Marx
singing:
"But I'm here to make a big, big sound." And during the whole
song that creepy guitar sound of... indeed, mister Steve Lukather. In the
centre of this song one of my favourite solos of a guitarist on his musical
crusade to a big, big sound. I think that Marx is verbalizing here the leading
thread running through Lukather's musical career.
On his way to that desirable sound, Lukather took broadly outlined four musical
roads: the road of Toto (from the beginning), the road of a first-call studio
musician (introduced by Jay Graydon, David Paich and Jeff Porcaro among other
musical friends), the road of jam-sessions ("kicking off asses" like playing
with Carlos Santana and Jeff Beck in Japan or with some of his musical friends
in Los Lobotomys, Karizma or Doves of Fire) and the road of his solo albums.
And fortunately every road had his spin-off on the other ones. As a studio
musician Lukather contributed to hundreds and hundreds of songs on hundreds of
albums with well known artists like George Benson, Diana Ross, Boz Scaggs,
Michael Jackson, Paul McCartney, Barbra Streisand, Quincy Jones, Elton John,
Aretha Franklin, Chicago and Cher. For a good survey take a look at the amazing
discography.
Lukather himself looked back very double-hearted on his career as a session
guitarist. In an interview in
Guitar in September 1993 (a duologue with
Eddie Van Halen) he said: "Some were great sessions, some were great records,
particularly in the late '70s and early '80s. That was the peak of when I was
doing it. I would look forward to being there and then sometimes the artist
would be terrible - you didn't understand how these people got record deals!
We'd sit there and make the most of it. This is a time before drum machines and
before people had sophisticated home studios. There would be a piano/vocal demo
or acoustic guitar demo. Or they would play the song for you. We'd basically
rearrange and rewrite the song for them, just because we wanted to get the hell
out of there. Most of it was bad; maybe 15 percent of the sessions were great,
the rest were forgettable. That's when it got to the point where I stopped.
Some of the more fun records we did were Don Henley, Boz Scaggs and Elton John.
Those records were really creative." Four years before this interview Lukather
came to a comparable conclusion in the song
Got my way (co-written with
his friends Michael Landau and Randy Goodrum) on his first solo album
Lukather
(1989): "I can't take no more. I'm so tired of running in somebody else's
shoes. What's it all been for. What's the use of playing for somebody else's
dues. I've been on the road for somebody else's dreams. Now I'm trying to find
my way back again. It's time to break some rules. And stop before the fire in
me cools."
Among the 15 percent of great sessions were in my opinion (just listening what
and how Lukather was playing and what mutual influence was going on between the
guest and his hosts), next to Bozz Scaggs, Don Henley and Elton John, people
like Fee Waybill, i-Ten, Jay Graydon (Airplay), Randy Goodrum, Michael Landau,
David Garfield and Jon Anderson . And of course the partners in Toto and the
people he played the jam-sessions with. After 1989 Lukather primarily played
with people he musically felt connected with, like Richard Marx, Kurt Howell,
John Wetton, Gregg Bissonette, Simon Phillips, Pat Torpey (Mr. Big), Niacin,
Mike Terrana, Larry Carlton and Derek Sherinian.
To get a rough view of Lukather's musical development, I made a virtual cd
section with the most important contributions, a chronologically and
alphabetically ordered discography and a facts section. In the facts section I
listed all the Toto and solo songs (co-)written by Steve Lukather.
When you take the
facts section in one glance, you can
see that as far as Toto is concerned Lukather started very slowly as a
(co-)writer. No written song on the first Toto album, one on
Hydra, two
on
Turn back, three on
Toto IV etc. From
The seventh one Lukather's
production increased clearly, six out of eleven songs, on
Kingdom of desire
nine out of twelve, on
Tambu twelve out of twelve and on
Mindfields
thirteen out of fourteen. On
Lukather, released one year after
The
seventh one, Lukather co-wrote eleven out of eleven songs, on
Candyman,
released between
Kingdom of desire and
Tambu, nine out of eleven
and on
Luke, released between
Tambu and
Mindfields, ten
out of eleven. On the thirteen Toto studio albums Lukather (co-)wrote
altogether 76 songs out of 140. On his four solo albums he (co-)wrote 34 out of
55 songs. The songs on his solo albums he didn't wrote, are covers: Jimi
Hendrix (Freedom and Red House), Joe Walsh (The bomber), Stephen Stills (Blue
bird), Jeff Beck (The pump) (some important favourites from his youth) and some
Christmas tunes.
It's also obvious that Lukather only wrote three Toto songs and two solo songs
all by himself:
Live for today on
Turn back,
I won't hold you back
on
Toto IV,
How does it feel on
Isolation (with a
melodical flash forward on
Stop loving you),
Always be there on
Luke
and
Smell yourself on the 1989 Los Lobotomys album. In an interview in
Frankfurt on 25 June 1997 (
toto99.com) Lukather explained how he did the
writing of the songs on
Luke: "I had ideas for the stuff but to have
guys help me finish it… cause lyrics are hard for me, lyrics are very hard to
write, and the guys that know me… all the guys I wrote with are my friends,
they know what I went through the last few years. I wanna write about life.
Kind of reflecting on my whole life. It's about that." In the duologue with
Eddie Van Halen (one year after the release of
Kingdom of desire),
Lukather answers on Eddie's question about the difference between a Toto record
and a Steve Lukather record: "As far as song writing goes I get to play a
little more. And the type of compositions I can do, I've got 10-minute songs. I
don't write songs and say "I'll save this for me" or "This is a Toto song".
When I write for Toto I write whatever comes. With Toto we write the songs all
together. Here (on
Candyman, A.S.) I'm writing most of the stuff with
David Garfield."
Lukather started his musical career at the age of seven. His father bought him
a guitar and a copy of the album
Meet the Beatles. "Just the sound of it
overcame my whole soul, if you want to call it that. I knew that's what I
wanted to do. I remember George Harrison played a solo in
I saw her standing
there and just the sound of the guitar bending and the reverb struck a
nerve inside of me," Lukather explained to Eddie Van Halen. In the next years
he taught himself how to play, learning from older kids and in high school from
among others Jeff Porcaro and David Paich (a couple of years older and already
doing sessions). At the age of 15 he started taking lessons with Jimmy Wyble
(classical/jazz/country player). In his duologue with Eddie Lukather recalls:
"He taught me how to read and I took a lot of other classes, like
orchestration. I wanted to learn. At that point I was really intrigued by the
whole session thing. It wasn't something I wanted to do since I was a little
kid. I didn't know anything about it until I was in high school. I always
thought it was kind of cool to be able to play on all these great artists'
records." In those years Jeff Porcaro and David Paich already appeared on
albums like
Diamond girl (1973) by James Seals & Dash Crofts,
Pretzel
logic (1974) and
Katy lied (1975) by Steely Dan and Jeff on the
underestimated album
Teaser (1975) by guitarist/vocalist Tommy Bolin (he
also died too soon!).
In the years following Lukather became the first-call studio musician as
already mentioned. From the beginning of his career he turned out to be an all
round guitarist playing rock, pop, jazz, funk, classical riffs, blues etc.
During the first interesting contributions Lukather played (rhythm)guitar on
the background, sometimes with sharp accents on a more heavy straight rock song
like
Stranded from the album
Airplay by Airplay (1980, with Jay
Graydon, David Foster and Tommy Funderburk), sometimes more subtle with
staccato funk riffs in a song like
Miss Sun by Bozz Scaggs (1980) or
with a clear guitar sound in the beautiful Scaggs ballad
Look what you've done
to me (1980).
In 1977 Lukather (he was only twenty years old by then) joined Toto and one
year later the band released their first album simply called
Toto. It's
easy to hear that Lukather, although he didn't participate in the song writing,
got a lot of possibilities to expose his wide talent. From the beginning of his
Toto career he carries out a huge technique, a lot of inventiveness, a lot of
knowledge of his equipment and an own recognizable style. A style that is
characterized by a natural merge of blues, rock, jazz and classical themes,
always resulting in (sometimes complicated) melodious patterns and riffs. In
this context it's very clarifying to watch Lukather's
Master Session (1985,
after the release of
Isolation), the Star Licks Guitar Video-Tutor and
see how he's in control of everything he's doing on guitar and with his
equipment. Lukather's sound (in my opinion the result of his style, his
technique, his equipment, his personality and his experience) at the moment
Toto
was released was however too smooth, too "in the clouds" to be already really
"big, big". In the years following there are several musical meetings that seem
to give Lukather impulses to develop his sound to a more down to earth one,
right from the heart.
The first meeting I'm aiming at is Lukather's contribution to the Tubes album
The
completion backward principle (1981), produced by David Foster.
Lukather co-wrote the opening song
Talk to ya later, together with lead
singer Fee Waybill and the rest of the band, and played rhythm and solo guitar
in a direct, dirty way he didn't do before. Especially the up tempo solo is ass
kicking. Sixteen years later (1997) Lukather contributed again to
Talk to ya
later, on the fifth Richard Marx album
Flesh and bone, in top
gear (with Simon Phillips on drums), very aggressive, staccato, with unexpected
changes of tempo and the only possible duet on this song: Richard Marx and Fee
Waybill. When you compare the Tubes version with the Marx version it's obvious
that the big difference is the sound of Lukather. In the 1981 version Lukather
is passing the treshold, discovering new possibilities for his sound. In the
1997 version we can hear Lukather already found his big, big sound, showing us
the results of years of hard labour, experimenting and living, just knowing
that this big, big sound could be possible after all. Just because of the
fabulous contribution of Lukather this Richard Marx version of
Talk to ya later
is one of my all time favourites.
On the next Tubes album
Outside inside (1983) almost the whole Toto gang
appeared. Lukather co-wrote again the opening song
She's a beauty and
played guitar as sharp and dirty as two years before. But the most surprising
co-operation of Lukather in those years was the one with Fee Waybill in 1984 on
Waybill's first solo album
Read my lips. Lukather co-wrote six songs
(more than Lukather did on any Toto album till that moment) and played his
guitar so powerful and varied, together with his old schoolmate Michael Landau,
that from that moment he was ready to play a more influential role in Toto.
Probably it was the select combination of the musical all rounder Lukather and
the intellectual Fee Waybill with his sharp, cynical and sometimes surrealistic
texts, sharing their love for music and for life. No matter if he's rockin' the
zip out of his pants (in up tempo rockers like
You're still laughing or
Thrill
of the kill), going commercial in
Saved my live, or going Tubesk
in
Star of the show ("… With no place to go / In your gilded cage / The
star of the show / But nobody knows / You're the star of an empty stage"),
Lukather is playing striking exuberant, with high edged chords and solos, and
where necessary gratifying melodious. It all comes together in the dreamy,
drifting
Caribbean sunsets, also one of my all time favourites,
sub-tropically backed by people like David Foster, Steve Porcaro, Jeff Porcaro,
Bobby Kimball and Richard Marx. And of course the star of the show, Fee
Waybill, singing from the bottom of his belly: "I will return, I can't forget
Caribbean sunsets, I will return." Waybill indeed returned: on
Kingdom of desire,
Candyman,
Tambu and
Luke as a co-writer of songs like
Never
enough,
Extinction blues,
Time is the enemy and
The real
truth (and as a shadow in
Mr. Friendly on
Isolation; it's
like a mirror song of
Mr. Hate on the Tubes album
The completion backward
principle).
After the appearance of almost the whole Toto gang on
Outside inside by
the Tubes, the evolution of the Toto sound in general and Lukather's sound in
particular quickened. The majority of the Toto fans and followers confirm that
Isolation
is the most heavy Toto album. I'm sure that there's a lot of influence of the
Tubes involved. Luke's sound on
Isolation is pretty much the same as his
sound on
Outside inside and
Isolation songs like
Lion,
Stranger
in town (with guest appearance of Mike Cotton, the Steve Porcaro of the
Tubes) and
Endless do have a high Tubes grade.
Fahrenheit (1986)
seems to be a stopping place in the development of Lukather's sound. It's a
very well-balanced album with a integrated exposition of Lukather's wide talent
and his musical experiences untill then, from the timeless ballad
I'll be over
you, via the high edged guitar sound (like on
Read my lips) on
Can't
stand it any longer and the clear reggae chords on
Somewhere tonight
up to the modest jazz ballad with that mellow trumpet sound of Miles Davis. It
all fits very well, but the album sounds more polished than
Isolation.
In 1987 Steve Lukather played as a guest guitarist at the
Lotus Gem concert
with the Santana Band and the Jeff Beck Band (with Simon Phillips on drums).
Another boost for Lukather, to play together with one of his 'masters' (next to
for example Jimi Hendrix, Jimmy Page, Larry Carlton, Jay Graydon, Eric Clapton
and David Gilmour). You can hear clearly that Santana was easily played away by
Lukather. The competition between Lukather and Jeff Beck was more complicated.
In a speed boogie like
Freeway jam or
Super boogie there's the
pointed, sharp sound of Jeff Beck and the more sliding sound of Lukather. It's
obvious that Beck doesn't matter to give in his stability in search for
creative and unexpected peaks. Lukather on the other hand plays like the
talented, skilled professional, the craftsman with his own style and a big
sound. The choice is yours.
From this moment Lukather starts to write more songs and is apparently
searching for a more down to earth sound, on guitar and on vocals.
The seventh
one (1988) is in this respect a key album. Lukather co-wrote six out of
eleven songs, like the romantic ballad
Anna (again with Randy Goodrum),
the super hit
Stop loving you (with David Paich), the guitar based rock
song
Only the children and
Home of the brave, one of the
favourites of many hardcore Toto fans. The power of attraction of this album is
the tension between the more powerfull rhythm section (Jeff and Mike Porcaro)
in combination with a less polished guitar sound of Steve Lukather on one side
and the spacy keyboard contributions of David Paich and Steve Porcaro on the
other side. One of the special guests on this album is Jon Anderson, front man
of Yes, backing lead vocalist Joseph Williams on the single version of
Stop
loving you. In the same year Joseph Williams was backing Jon Anderson
on
Top of the world, together with David Paich, Jeff and Steve Porcaro
and Steve Lukather (trying to lighten this bombastic song with sharp chords and
high solo's) on Anderson's solo album
In the city of angels.
In 1989 Lukather was ready for some musical exploring expeditions. He invited a
lot of serious (musical) friends to make his first solo album
Lukather,
for example Eddie Van Halen, Carlos Vega, Prairie Prince (Tubes drummer), Will
Lee, Steve Stevens (Billy Idol guitarist), Jan Hammer, John Pierce, Richard
Marx, Randy Goodrum, Mike Landau, John Keane, David Paich, Randy Jakson, Danny
Kortchmar and Jeff Porcaro.
Lukather turned out to be a heterogeneous
album, not in terms of quality but in terms of the great variety of songs,
techniques and musical styles. Another important expedition was the 'hobby
club' Los Lobotomys, again with Jeff Porcaro, Carlos Vega, Lenny Castro and
Will Lee, completed with David Garfield, Brandon Fields, Joe Sample and Vinnie
Colaiuta. Striking during this exploration is the fact that Lukather is at this
stage very affected with the music and the sound of Jimi Hendrix. At the Los
Lobotomys album (predominantly jazz rock and fusion), recorded live at the
Complex in West Los Angeles, there's a (funny) fragment of
Purple haze and
an instrumental cover of
Little Wing. On
Lukather there's a lot
of Hendrix influence, most explicit on
Fall into velvet, where Lukather
is alternating solos with Jan Hammer and Steve Stevens.
During the Toto
Planet earth tour in 1990 Lukather presented his own
version of
Little wing on guitar and vocals as a demonstration of
surpassing himself and one of his most important masters (and he proved it
again on
Candyman in 1994 with his excellent cover of
Freedom).
From that moment he really got his own way, ready to convince that he could
manage every song at his will. No mather if he had to play dark and dirty with
Terry Bozzio on
Playing with fire and with Tommy Lee and Randy Jackson
on
Streets of pain (on the Richard Marx album
Rush street in
1991, a must for every hardcore Toto fan), balladesk with one of Lukather's
best slow solo's on
Does love not open your eyes (on Kurt Howell's solo
album in 1992) or baroque and dragging on
Right where I wanted to be (on
John Wetton's
Battle lines in 1992), they all are songs with clear
Lukather stamps.
With this rucksack it's only logical that Lukather became Toto's new front man
before starting a new musical phase with
Kingdom of desire (1992).
Simultaneous with his guitar sound his voice became more deep, warm, emotional
and scouring and at the same time more stable. For a lot of first hour Toto
fans
Kingdom of desire was too drifted off, too heavy and too
restricted. But according to the development of especially Steve Lukather
Kingdom
of desire was the only possible album to go on with for Toto. More than
any other Toto album
KOD is a guitar based album in the first place.
Indeed there are no horns on this album, not that many guest appearances and
more direct rock arrangements, but that's also the strength of this album.
Because every individual musician seemed to be more triggered to give the best
at that moment, resulting in masterpieces of rock (
Gypsy train and
Never
enough), rock ballads (
2 Hearts and
The other side) and
jazz rock (
Jake to the bone).
After loosing one of his most important friends and 'masters' Jeff Porcaro
Lukather was very close to his final sound. Looking back now you can label his
second solo album
Candyman (1994) and the Toto album
Tambu (1995)
as very important and necessary final rehearsals to achieve the big, big sound
he displayed on
Luke (1997) and
Mindfields (1999) and of course
on his contributions to songs like
Talk to ya later (
Flesh and bone,
1997),
Big bone (
Tribute to Jeff, 1997),
Hangover (on Pat
Torpey’s
Odd man out, 1998) and albums like
No substitutions (Larry
Carlton & Steve Lukather, 2001) and
Inertia (Derek Sherinian, 2001).
With
Luke Lukather made an album, again with a bunch of friends like
Gregg Bissonette, Phill Soussan, John Pierce, Jim Cox and David Paich, that's
as coherent as can be, because Lukather is completely in charge and everyone
knows exactly what he wants and how his sound has to be done. In the
Luke
review on
melodicrock.com the writer was hitting the nail on the head by
writing: "It's the first time I have ever heard any Toto or related artist
sound 90's, with a much more in your face guitar sound. In fact the sound is so
raw and hard edged,
Kingdom of desire would be the closest reference
point. It is truly a guitar driven album. There are less big choruses and an
overall mellow sound, but the tracks remain heavy and raw, even in this slow
mellow vein. The drum rhythms are as complex as I ever heard, and the soloing
is just magnificent. There are new solos discovered with every new listen.(…)
This is Luke's best album since
Lukather and
Kingdom of desire.
Personally I love it, for it is big, it is loud, it is in your face and it is
still Lukather all over."
Mindfields shows Lukather's big, big sound in a different way,
integrated in the teamwork on a classic Toto album. Classic because of the
possibilities of the return of Bobby Kimball and the way all the Toto boys
merged their own musical history and the most important musical influences
through the years.
Mindfields became the most versatile, complex,
approachable and positive album Toto has ever made. It brings musical delight
and at the same time astonishment to hear how clever they translated their
influences in such a natural way, while Lukather's sound (his guitar as well as
his voice) is bigger than ever, raw, hard edged and (most important) more
emotional. Just check out
After you've gone (voice) and
High price of
hate or
Better world (guitar).
So in brief Lukather became more and more bluesy, open, sensitive and pure. His
voice developed strong and warm and his guitar sound became more and more
direct and sharp, no matter if he's raging or playing tender ballads. All these
developments seem to come together on Lukather's contributions to Sherinian’s
album
Inertia, with Simon Phillips, Zakk Wylde, Jerry Goodman and Tom
Kennedy. "Derek's cd is probably my best recorded work in my whole career.
Simon got the best outta me. It's just me playin’ thru a 1/12 Marchall with my
guitar, no efx, just a little delay from the board. Great cd! I'm very proud of
it!" (Lukather, 2001).
For a final explanation of the development of Lukather's music and his guitar
sound, I'll quote Ewan Smith from an analysis of some technical aspects of
Lukather's sound he made for
Total Guitar (February 2000) and a personal
comparison of Luke's development with the stages of development of the
Renaissance artists.
Smith is going in for a bluesy basis in Lukather's playing: "For all his
versatility I tend to think of Steve as a turbo-charged blues player: all the
standard blues ideas are present - bends, vibrato and pentatonic scales but
they are played with a modern tone and some serious bursts of tricky alternate
picking. In short, loads of fun!
One of the main facets of Lukather's lead style is the blending of pentatonics
and modal scales which gives his lines a more sophisticated sound without
trespassing into jazz-territory (though he can do this as well... grrr!).
Soundwise, it's fair to say that Steve is not afraid of technology - he was one
of the first to popularise the Ridiculously Huge Effects Rack (TM) and for a
long time was associated with Valley Arts guitars. These days he has a
signature model MusicMan guitar, the 'Luke' plugged into Rivera Knucklehead
amps."
In the Renaissance period that started in the 15th century in Italy a lot of
artists (writers, painters, sculptors) reverted to the old Greek and Roman arts
and artists. They pursued the method of translatio, imitatio and emulatio. So
first of all they translated or transcripted pieces of arts. In the next phase
they imitated the ancient examples and in the last phase they tried to surpass
their classical masters. A lot of Renaissance artists we consider nowadays to
be great masters succeeded in their surpassing phase: Michelangelo, Leonardo da
Vinci, Donatello, Raphaello, Dante and Petrarca for example. Some of them
developed into a "uomo universalis" too (Michelangelo, Leonardo).
Listening to the music and the contributions of Steve Lukather I often had to
think of these Renaissance principles. There are a lot of similarities. Luke
had and maybe still has his "classical" examples: The Beatles, Jimmy Page, Eric
Clapton, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Joe Walsh, Jimi Hendrix and Jeff Beck, to
mention some of the most important ones. In the first phase of his musical
development Luke transcripted riffs, sounds, technical tricks, pieces of
arrangement and melodies. In the phase of imitatio he covered songs like
Eleonor
Rigby (The Beatles),
Stairway to heaven (Led Zeppelin),
The
bomber (Joe Walsh),
Bluebird (Stephen Stills),
Red house (Jimi
Hendrix),
Behind the veil (Jeff Beck) and several other Beck and Hendrix
songs (with the live version of Hendrix's
Little wing as a highlight
where imitatio and emulatio melted together). In the final phase Luke emulated
his masters where he definitely succeeded in creating his own mastership. A
beautiful example of this development is
Tears of my own shame. As I
mentioned before Luke's
Little wing cover was half imitatio, half
emulatio.
Tears of my own shame (written by Luke and his friend Phil
Soussan) is completely Luke with refined Hendrix influences admitted in a way
only a emulated master can manage.
Another great example is the way Lukather was dealing through the years with
Jeff Beck. In several interviews Luke stated how important Beck was to his
musical development. In 1987 Lukather played together with Jeff Beck and Carlos
Santana as a guest guitarist in Japan. In 1995 Shrapnel released a tribute
album to Jeff Beck,
Jeffology. Lukather made a cover of
Behind the veil,
from the famous Beck album
Guitar shop from 1989 (with Terry Bozzio on
drums and Tony Hymas on keyboards).
The original Beck version is a pretty quiet, slow motion reggae instrumental
with a catchy melody and a lot of Beck effects played in the "minimal art" way
that makes Jeff Beck the unique guitarist he is. The Lukather version is also a
slow motion reggae instrumental, but from the beginning more heavy, sharper,
more pointed and more emotional. In the first part Lukather follows the
original melody. In the middle of the song he is offering us a flamboyant
showcase of the old Beck licks from
Ain't superstitious, via
Blow by blow
and
Wired to
Guitar shop. In the final part it's Lukather as
"himself" bringing his Music Man guitar into ecstasy. This is translatio,
imitatio and emulatio concentrated in one song. In songs like
Big bone (on
the
Tribute to Jeff album),
Hangover (Pat Torpey),
High price of
hate (on
Mindfields),
The pump (Carlton/Lukather) and
Inertia
(Sherinian) we can hear that Lukather also mastered this master and finally
entered the small scene of musicians that can call themselves "universalis". Or
in Sherinian words after working with Lukather on
Inertia: "What makes
Lukather so great, is that he can take someone else's piece of music, and make
it sound like he has lived it a million times, and plays a perfect track for
you instantly. (Young musicians, please re-read the last paragraph in case you
missed that)."
The only item left now is this question: when do people in mass mention the
name of Steve Lukather next to for example Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Jimmy
Page and Jeff Beck? Through the years there allways was a love-hate
relationship between Lukather/Toto and a lot of their critics. I think it's
because of the quintessence of the musicianship of Lukather and the other Toto
guys. Neither Lukather nor Toto were trendsetters (like Hendrix or Page).
Lukather and his musical mates are first of all music lovers and all round
musicians, they managed a high class band for more than twenty years and they
did hundreds of sessions and they were (and still are) the best. That's the
difficulty by judging them and trying to give them the place in modern music
history they deserve. I think we have to judge Lukather as an oeuvre musician
and Toto as an oeuvre band. I think we have to take a lot of pain to lose
ourselves in Lukather's music, before we can judge him and build the monument
that fits in with his works. It will not only bring in a reward for Lukather,
but also for ourselves!