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JourneyHard wrote:I still wonder why Journey didn't release Still She Cries from Trial By Fire as a single. To me, it sounds kinda like No Doubt's Don't Speak. Well, it has the same vibe. I think it could have been a big hit back in 1996 or 1997. Perhaps Journey should consider playing this in concert next year.
The_Noble_Cause wrote:JourneyHard wrote:I still wonder why Journey didn't release Still She Cries from Trial By Fire as a single. To me, it sounds kinda like No Doubt's Don't Speak. Well, it has the same vibe. I think it could have been a big hit back in 1996 or 1997. Perhaps Journey should consider playing this in concert next year.
Beautiful song - like many on TBF. But something of a downer. Can't see it in a concert setting tbh.
JourneyHard wrote:I still wonder why Journey didn't release Still She Cries from Trial By Fire as a single. To me, it sounds kinda like No Doubt's Don't Speak. Well, it has the same vibe. I think it could have been a big hit back in 1996 or 1997. Perhaps Journey should consider playing this in concert next year.
The_Noble_Cause wrote:JourneyHard wrote:I still wonder why Journey didn't release Still She Cries from Trial By Fire as a single. To me, it sounds kinda like No Doubt's Don't Speak. Well, it has the same vibe. I think it could have been a big hit back in 1996 or 1997. Perhaps Journey should consider playing this in concert next year.
Beautiful song - like many on TBF. But something of a downer. Can't see it in a concert setting tbh.
Onestepper wrote:The_Noble_Cause wrote:JourneyHard wrote:I still wonder why Journey didn't release Still She Cries from Trial By Fire as a single. To me, it sounds kinda like No Doubt's Don't Speak. Well, it has the same vibe. I think it could have been a big hit back in 1996 or 1997. Perhaps Journey should consider playing this in concert next year.
Beautiful song - like many on TBF. But something of a downer. Can't see it in a concert setting tbh.
Agree. Not really a concert level song. Also got no radio play so the average fan is not going to recognize it at all.
Onestepper wrote:The_Noble_Cause wrote:JourneyHard wrote:I still wonder why Journey didn't release Still She Cries from Trial By Fire as a single. To me, it sounds kinda like No Doubt's Don't Speak. Well, it has the same vibe. I think it could have been a big hit back in 1996 or 1997. Perhaps Journey should consider playing this in concert next year.
Beautiful song - like many on TBF. But something of a downer. Can't see it in a concert setting tbh.
Agree. Not really a concert level song. Also got no radio play so the average fan is not going to recognize it at all.
Monker wrote:JourneyHard wrote:I still wonder why Journey didn't release Still She Cries from Trial By Fire as a single. To me, it sounds kinda like No Doubt's Don't Speak. Well, it has the same vibe. I think it could have been a big hit back in 1996 or 1997. Perhaps Journey should consider playing this in concert next year.
TBF died quickly after it was obvious that Steve Perry was not going to tour. It's not a coincidence that only WYLaW was the only real successful single. Sony may have released singles, but there was no real promotion by the band after Steve Perry dropped out. They had a Grammy nominated song, the hype of the reunion, and could not capitalize on it. NO single was going to be a hit after WYLaW and Message of Love...which were released prior to the album, along with remasters of the entire Journey/Perry catalog, and a big display to set up and sell all of the above at retail. It's obvious Sony made a huge investment in Journey, thinking they had something similar to the Eagles "Hell Freezes Over".
Journey dropped the ball with TBF, and Sony dropped the ball with Arrival. With the attitudes present, I don't think either album could have done any better.
JourneyHard wrote:Monker wrote:JourneyHard wrote:I still wonder why Journey didn't release Still She Cries from Trial By Fire as a single. To me, it sounds kinda like No Doubt's Don't Speak. Well, it has the same vibe. I think it could have been a big hit back in 1996 or 1997. Perhaps Journey should consider playing this in concert next year.
TBF died quickly after it was obvious that Steve Perry was not going to tour. It's not a coincidence that only WYLaW was the only real successful single. Sony may have released singles, but there was no real promotion by the band after Steve Perry dropped out. They had a Grammy nominated song, the hype of the reunion, and could not capitalize on it. NO single was going to be a hit after WYLaW and Message of Love...which were released prior to the album, along with remasters of the entire Journey/Perry catalog, and a big display to set up and sell all of the above at retail. It's obvious Sony made a huge investment in Journey, thinking they had something similar to the Eagles "Hell Freezes Over".
Journey dropped the ball with TBF, and Sony dropped the ball with Arrival. With the attitudes present, I don't think either album could have done any better.
Here in Detroit, they played Can't Tame The Lion on the radio back then. I don't know if that was before or after Perry's exit. The problem with TBF and Arrival is too many ballads. We need contrast. A beautiful ballad followed by a rocker followed by a beautiful ballad and then another rocker allows the ballads and rockers to both stand out. Putting an endless stream of ballads in a row makes them bleed together and they do NOT stand apart and they do NOT shine. Look at Escape and Frontiers albums for examples of this. They had contrast. I sure hope the new album has contrast.
Monker wrote:Sorry, but the only song that did anything noteworthy nationally is WYLaW. That is a simple fact. I think MoL charted on the rock or AOR chart, or something like that. But, WYLaW was #1 on AC and #12 on Billboard Hot 100. Nothing else from TBF performed like that.
Having "too many ballads" may hurt the album, but it's not going to hurt the singles. Funny how the one big single was a ballad. Perhaps they needed MORE ballads! The problem with TBF was Steve Perry refusing to tour and being fired. The "problem" with Arrival was Sony expecting low sales (which Kevin Shirley even said) and not shipping to retail when they were sold out, and doing virtually NOTHING to promote the album. The Vegas DVD went PLATINUM...there was potential with Arrival, but Sony didn't care...they cared about TBF and the big pay day from that...and they didn't get it.
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