Yes Chris, thanks, but what I mean is if they would had planned more gigs further than Zaragoza, they would had to ask and sign a new contract, or that's automatically extend.
Sure. I can't remember. Maybe there was an option to extend?
I'm not sure I would have committed to 2 years, which was more 2.5 years with rehearsals etc. Maybe I did???
At the time (80's and 90's), most huge bands would undertake a 12 or 14 month world tour. These days bands are almost permanently on tour (U2, Taylor Swift, Coldplay etc). But in the vinyl/CD era bands made more money from record sales and tours weren't as profitable.
So maybe that's why I assumed it was going to be around a 12 month tour?
Thanks for all your explanations. It's priceless to have information from someone that was IN the tour.
There is something curious for me. After they asked Jeff Porcaro and Manu Katché, the drummers in the OES record first, their first choice was you, and as you said you refused, they insisted, you refused again, and they insisted until you said yes... that made me wonder, how is it possible they didn't had any plan B in case you kept saying no?
It's great to know they wanted you that much but with a tour being planned, a musician says no to you several times, and instead of search for another, you insist asking the same musician...