Moderator: Andrew
Whatever, Augeri exited soon enough, to be replaced by Jeff Scott Soto.
"Jeff did a great job," says Schon. "He came in, got us through a tour and got paid very, very well for it. But
personality-wise he was not right. After we asked ?Jeff to leave it got nasty and he decided to sue us. Which
was a shame because he had already been taken care of very well.
Did Journey always regard Soto as something of a stop-gap frontman ?
"I think for a second we thought it was going to work," Schon admits. "He was a very good showman. But what
turned my head around was when we wrote a couple of new songs. We sent them to Jeff... he laid down some vocals...
and it didn't sound like Journey at all. Jeff didn't have to be a clone of Steve Perry, but his register was more like a
baritone. We needed an alto-tenor... that timbre of voice that everybody's used to. So that was the problem. It didn't
sound great. It didn't sound like Journey.. It was just very nondescript."
Since 78 wrote:Well this is a little different from the first post about the article! Comments?
![]()
MRMUSIC413 wrote:Since 78 wrote:Well this is a little different from the first post about the article! Comments?
![]()
I looked for a similar post but didn't notice one. Have a link ?
texafana wrote:"He was a very good showman. But what turned my head around was when we wrote a couple of new songs. We sent them to Jeff... he laid down some vocals... and it didn't sound like Journey at all. Jeff didn't have to be a clone of Steve Perry, but his register was more like a baritone. We needed an alto-tenor... that timbre of voice that everybody's used to. So that was the problem. It didn't sound great. It didn't sound like Journey.. It was just very nondescript."
Is that a real Neal quote? That's pretty fkin harsh.
wednesday's child wrote:texafana wrote:"He was a very good showman. But what turned my head around was when we wrote a couple of new songs. We sent them to Jeff... he laid down some vocals... and it didn't sound like Journey at all. Jeff didn't have to be a clone of Steve Perry, but his register was more like a baritone. We needed an alto-tenor... that timbre of voice that everybody's used to. So that was the problem. It didn't sound great. It didn't sound like Journey.. It was just very nondescript."
Is that a real Neal quote? That's pretty fkin harsh.
Keep in mind that when Neal spoke of "it" not sounding great or being nondescript, he could easily
have been referring not solely to JSS'voice, but the overall "sound" of the band with JSS' voice.
Printed interviews sometimes compress the verbatim answer, with less than satisfactory results.
-wech
Memorex wrote:Saint John wrote:Ms_M wrote:Memorex wrote:Fuck Neal.
How can you improve on that comment?
Easily...Fuck Memorex.
I can't argue with that.
Since 78 wrote:Whatever, Augeri exited soon enough, to be replaced by Jeff Scott Soto.
"Jeff did a great job," says Schon. "He came in, got us through a tour and got paid very, very well for it. But
personality-wise he was not right. After we asked ?Jeff to leave it got nasty and he decided to sue us. Which
was a shame because he had already been taken care of very well.
Did Journey always regard Soto as something of a stop-gap frontman ?
"I think for a second we thought it was going to work," Schon admits. "He was a very good showman. But what
turned my head around was when we wrote a couple of new songs. We sent them to Jeff... he laid down some vocals...
and it didn't sound like Journey at all. Jeff didn't have to be a clone of Steve Perry, but his register was more like a
baritone. We needed an alto-tenor... that timbre of voice that everybody's used to. So that was the problem. It didn't
sound great. It didn't sound like Journey.. It was just very nondescript."
Well this is a little different from the first post about the article! Comments?
![]()
Onestepper wrote:Not sure what people are not seeing in those comments. They are not mean spirited or even 'harsh'. It appears to be a diplomatic way of saying what everyone was looking for as a reason to let JSS go. He didn't say 'he sucked' or anything close to that. Just that it didn't fit their sound. I think that is reasonable.
My belief is that most people would have a completely different feeling about those comments if they had handled the termination more professionally, and actually discussed the issue of why they wanted to go in a different direction to JSS one on one. I don't think how or what he said in the interview was that bad.
Saint John wrote:Onestepper wrote:Not sure what people are not seeing in those comments. They are not mean spirited or even 'harsh'. It appears to be a diplomatic way of saying what everyone was looking for as a reason to let JSS go. He didn't say 'he sucked' or anything close to that. Just that it didn't fit their sound. I think that is reasonable.
My belief is that most people would have a completely different feeling about those comments if they had handled the termination more professionally, and actually discussed the issue of why they wanted to go in a different direction to JSS one on one. I don't think how or what he said in the interview was that bad.
Agreed on all counts.
WykkedSensation wrote:Saint John wrote:Onestepper wrote:Not sure what people are not seeing in those comments. They are not mean spirited or even 'harsh'. It appears to be a diplomatic way of saying what everyone was looking for as a reason to let JSS go. He didn't say 'he sucked' or anything close to that. Just that it didn't fit their sound. I think that is reasonable.
My belief is that most people would have a completely different feeling about those comments if they had handled the termination more professionally, and actually discussed the issue of why they wanted to go in a different direction to JSS one on one. I don't think how or what he said in the interview was that bad.
Agreed on all counts.
Ditto.
WykkedSensation wrote:Saint John wrote:Onestepper wrote:Not sure what people are not seeing in those comments. They are not mean spirited or even 'harsh'. It appears to be a diplomatic way of saying what everyone was looking for as a reason to let JSS go. He didn't say 'he sucked' or anything close to that. Just that it didn't fit their sound. I think that is reasonable.
My belief is that most people would have a completely different feeling about those comments if they had handled the termination more professionally, and actually discussed the issue of why they wanted to go in a different direction to JSS one on one. I don't think how or what he said in the interview was that bad.
Agreed on all counts.
Ditto.
Tito wrote:Neal has NEVER been a buffoon. Unless you consider being too loyal - buffoonery.
Tito wrote:WykkedSensation wrote:Saint John wrote:Onestepper wrote:Not sure what people are not seeing in those comments. They are not mean spirited or even 'harsh'. It appears to be a diplomatic way of saying what everyone was looking for as a reason to let JSS go. He didn't say 'he sucked' or anything close to that. Just that it didn't fit their sound. I think that is reasonable.
My belief is that most people would have a completely different feeling about those comments if they had handled the termination more professionally, and actually discussed the issue of why they wanted to go in a different direction to JSS one on one. I don't think how or what he said in the interview was that bad.
Agreed on all counts.
Ditto.
Count me in.
Saint John wrote:Tito wrote:Neal has NEVER been a buffoon. Unless you consider being too loyal - buffoonery.
Everyone has been a buffoon at one time or another. Thank you for being so kind and using yourself as an example just now.![]()
![]()
![]()
Arkansas wrote:
Yeah, ditto ditto.
I don't see at all why people bash NS for this. He seems honest. While this may not be the whole story, it's probably true. And about handling the 'termination' professionally, I believe it was. That's the way it goes in business - avoid confrontation. That is the professional way. Management does the dirty work, and you be quiet. It's not that you don't want to talk to people, you just don't. The politics and the legals virtually prohibit you from talking. I've been in these tough situations. You keep your mouth shut and re-focus on your work. Maybe down the road you can say something, but even then you purposely keep it vague and ambiguous.
No way Neal Schon is as dumb as some out here seem to think.
later~
Michigan Girl wrote:Tito wrote:WykkedSensation wrote:Saint John wrote:Onestepper wrote:Not sure what people are not seeing in those comments. They are not mean spirited or even 'harsh'. It appears to be a diplomatic way of saying what everyone was looking for as a reason to let JSS go. He didn't say 'he sucked' or anything close to that. Just that it didn't fit their sound. I think that is reasonable.
My belief is that most people would have a completely different feeling about those comments if they had handled the termination more professionally, and actually discussed the issue of why they wanted to go in a different direction to JSS one on one. I don't think how or what he said in the interview was that bad.
Agreed on all counts.
Ditto.
Count me in.
Did any one of you read the entire article? It's not just about JSS!!!![]()
Neal Schon wrote:"I think for a second we thought it was going to work," Schon admits. "He was a very good showman. But what
turned my head around was when we wrote a couple of new songs. We sent them to Jeff... he laid down some vocals...
and it didn't sound like Journey at all. Jeff didn't have to be a clone of Steve Perry, but his register was more like a
baritone. We needed an alto-tenor... that timbre of voice that everybody's used to. So that was the problem. It didn't
sound great. It didn't sound like Journey.. It was just very nondescript."
[/i]
"No comment. You'll have to talk to him (Augeri) about it. In all seriousness, this is such old news."
It didn't
sound great. It didn't sound like Journey.. It was just very nondescript."
The_Noble_Cause wrote:Neal Schon wrote:"I think for a second we thought it was going to work," Schon admits. "He was a very good showman. But what
turned my head around was when we wrote a couple of new songs. We sent them to Jeff... he laid down some vocals...
and it didn't sound like Journey at all. Jeff didn't have to be a clone of Steve Perry, but his register was more like a
baritone. We needed an alto-tenor... that timbre of voice that everybody's used to. So that was the problem. It didn't
sound great. It didn't sound like Journey.. It was just very nondescript."
[/i]
Total BS.
Anyone with a short-term memory will remember Neal gushing over JSS giving Perry an emotive run for his money on "Coming Home", as well as in concert.
The fact that he wasn't a total vocal doppelganger was a good thing. He captured the spirit of Journey without being an outright fraud.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests