38 Special is coming to Desert Diamond Casino on Thursday, Sept. 12.

It might be one of rock โ€™nโ€™ rollโ€™s great mysteries: What happened to 38 Special frontman Don Barnesโ€™ 1989 solo album โ€œRide the Stormโ€?

It was mixed and mastered and ready to go when his label, A&M Records, was sold to PolyGram and the album was shelved along with a record by R&B great Janet Jackson.

Barnes offered to buy the masters so he could shop the project to another label.

No dice.

Then there was a fire and tales of the masters being destroyed.

โ€œI was heartbroken,โ€ Barnes said, mostly because brothers Mike and Jeff Porcaro of the band Toto who recorded with him had died before the project could be released. โ€œRide the Stormโ€ also featured Dann Huff, who went on to become an award-winning producer in Nashville (Keith Urban, Rascal Flatts); keyboardists Alan Pasqua and Jesse Harms; and former Heart drummer Denny Carmassi.

โ€œWe had all these songs. We slammed them out. Everybody had a great time,โ€ he recalled.

Fast-forward to 2016 when Andrew McNiece of the Australian Melodic- Rock Records reached out to Barnes. He had heard a couple of the albumโ€™s tracks online and felt the project just had to see the light of day.

They tried to track down the masters; no luck. They were destroyed in that fire, the label insisted.

And then Barnes got to digging around in his basement. In a bin where he stored old junk, he came across a reel-to-reel audiotape.

After more than 30 years, lying in a junk heap was the long-gone unmixed and mastered studio recordings of โ€œRide the Storm.โ€

MelodicRock mixed and mastered the recordings and released the album in June 2017 to rave reviews.

A few cuts from the album will be on the set list when Barnes and his 38 Special bandmates take the stage at Desert Diamond Casino on Thursday, Sept. 12.

โ€œThe songs are just as relevant today. They donโ€™t sound dated,โ€ said the 66-year-old Barnes, who started the band in 1974 with his Florida neighbor Donnie Van Zant. Van Zant retired in 2013.

Barnes said he had initially wanted to infuse some Brit-rock sensibilities into the solo project, but โ€œas much as I tried, it was my guitar playing, my voice, so it still sounds like 38 Special,โ€ he said.

Which makes for a nice mix with 38 Specialโ€™s hits โ€” โ€œHold On Loosely,โ€ Teacher, Teacher,โ€ โ€œRockinโ€™ Into the Night,โ€ โ€œWild-Eyed Southern Boys,โ€ โ€œBack to Paradise,โ€ โ€œSame Old Feelingโ€ โ€” that landed in the Top 30 at least 15 times in the 1970s and โ€™80s.

โ€œWe just go out and unfold that history, one after another,โ€ Barnes said. โ€œSongs bang into each other. Itโ€™s been 40 years or so. Itโ€™s a lot of hit songs. We take the audience for a ride.โ€

Truth be told, they also take themselves on a ride.

โ€œOnce you get (on stage), you can crank your guitar up to 10 and youโ€™re 19 years old again,โ€ Barnes said. โ€œItโ€™s what we as boys dreamed back then, to just go out there and kill it. Itโ€™s always the greatest time when the lights go down and itโ€™s your time.โ€


Become a #ThisIsTucson member! Your contribution helps our team bring you stories that keep you connected to the community. Become a member today.

Contact reporter Cathalena E. Burch at cburch@tucson.com or 573-4642. On Twitter @Starburch