Moderator: Andrew
GollyWally wrote:Cain sounds extremely jealous that despite 9 years of trying the band has never been able to crawl out of the giant footprint that Perry left.
GollyWally wrote:Has Jonothan Cain always been considered extremely arrogant? When he first joined the band in 81 through ROR he always seemed kind of dorky and even humble to be surrouned by talented players like Neal, Perry and Smith. He even spoke so affectionatley how the connection with fans during live shows, etc.
Did he change over the years, as he started to feel his oats, or was it all a facade and the real Jonathon Cain finally just bubbbled to the surface?
I'm curious what you folks think.
Liz22562 wrote:Sorry to against the grain here, but I had the pleasure of meeting Jon Cain when they performed at Ruth Eckerd Hall in Clearwater, FL.
I was fortunate enough to get backstage and was able to speak with him for a few minutes. Our conversation was, of course, regarding music. My daughter plays several instruments, one of which is the piano. He was more than kind enough to answer a few questions I had. At no point in time was he stand-offish, rude or made me feel as though I was of no importance.
Though our discussion was brief, he was very kind.
GollyWally wrote:You make a good point, Matthew. Cain and Perry wrote some incredible stuff together. In fact, their synergy as songwriters is what has been missing in the newer music to me.
It's intereseting that Cain is apparently the one who called Perry and told him to piss or get off the pot regarding the TBF tour. I always wondered why Cain made that phone call and not Neal or someone else. Maybe since the two were so close he thought if ANYBODY could get Perry to move it was him. When Perry didn't, he was left in the unenviable position of "firing" the greatest lead singer in rock history (IMO).
jrnysc wrote:You are correct. It has been brought up by both Perry and Cain in interviews over the years about their close relationship. That is why he is the one who made the call.
jrnysc wrote:I was excited as hell. I finally get to meet Jonathan Cain. Well, about 5 minutes later he got off the elevator with a jogging suit on and a bag over his shoulder. The manager told him to hurry up and board the bus because they had an all night bus ride. Jon gave him a sort of nasty look and kept walking. Out of respect, I waited till he got near me, and took about two steps towards him, when he looked at me and said "what do you want?"
conversationpc wrote:jrnysc wrote:You are correct. It has been brought up by both Perry and Cain in interviews over the years about their close relationship. That is why he is the one who made the call.
Well, at least one of them actually called Perry, unlike what they did with Jeff.
Matthew wrote:jrnysc wrote:I was excited as hell. I finally get to meet Jonathan Cain. Well, about 5 minutes later he got off the elevator with a jogging suit on and a bag over his shoulder. The manager told him to hurry up and board the bus because they had an all night bus ride. Jon gave him a sort of nasty look and kept walking. Out of respect, I waited till he got near me, and took about two steps towards him, when he looked at me and said "what do you want?"
That sounds rough, Jrnysc. What a nightmare. I had the same experience with a soccer hero of mine. Best to keep a distance from people who you look up to but don't actually know, isn't it?
Matthew wrote:conversationpc wrote:jrnysc wrote:You are correct. It has been brought up by both Perry and Cain in interviews over the years about their close relationship. That is why he is the one who made the call.
Well, at least one of them actually called Perry, unlike what they did with Jeff.
Wasn't Cain the one who broke the news to Smith and Valory too? Or have I got that wrong?
Vocalsmanvocals wrote:I have to go against the grain as well. In Jon Cain's 2004 DVD, Shine on Chicago, right before the Journey medley, he talks about missing Steve Perry as an old friend and writing partner. He said it so sincerce as well. If Cain was acting, he should receive the Oscar, but you could tell the guy was genuine.
About that elevator story, these guys are just human. I have had the chance to hang out with celebrities. Not all of them can be Mary Poppins nice nice 24/7.
JrnySuxBalls wrote:Didn't you guys see him cry on Behind The Music?He's quite sensitive you know.
brywool wrote:JrnySuxBalls wrote:Didn't you guys see him cry on Behind The Music?He's quite sensitive you know.
Ya know, that didn't bug me so much. I could totally see that.
However, I remember in Frontiers and Beyond, he kind of did that while talking on the phone to a journalist and I thought "geez, dude, grow some". The kid thing, I have no problem with. That'd be one hell of a sobering band memory. Yikes. It was plain that it really affected him and Perry a lot.
Aw, shucks kids, I'm an old softy!
Saint John wrote:I'll give you guys the condensed story about what an asshole he is. I get Meet and Greet passes. My buddy is getting TBF signed by Friga. He turns and yells "Hey Neal." He points to Perry on the back of the CD and starts ragging "Look at me, I'm standing by myself. I always have to be alone. Look, I'm looking the other way." There was more, too. That's not it verbatum, but you get the general idea. I was stunned. He turned our Meet and Greet into a nightmare. Schon stood there laughing. I haven't really liked either one of them since. If Journey's management reads this site, put him/them on here and let's here him deny it. They won't, because he/they CAN'T. For once, they slipped and weren't able to keep their backstabbing name-calling behind the scenes.
jrnysc wrote:Vocalsmanvocals wrote:I have to go against the grain as well. In Jon Cain's 2004 DVD, Shine on Chicago, right before the Journey medley, he talks about missing Steve Perry as an old friend and writing partner. He said it so sincerce as well. If Cain was acting, he should receive the Oscar, but you could tell the guy was genuine.
About that elevator story, these guys are just human. I have had the chance to hang out with celebrities. Not all of them can be Mary Poppins nice nice 24/7.
I understand your point. The other side of that, however, is that if it were not for people like us, he would not be living the kind of life he is today. I am a paying customer, just like any other business. He doesn't have to be Mary Poppins, but he shouldn't be that rude either. Just good business sense.
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