Monker wrote:It's not a matter of style. It's a matter of Perry, Cain, and Schon not including Ross and Smith in writing sessions so they could contribute their ideas in an organic way.
Come off it Monker. We're not talking about some paddy field in Communist China. This was a multi-million dollar organisation with a heirachy. I don't see Smith or Valary's names on the publishing credits for Journeys songs. Sure, they played a part in the arrangements but let's not forget who actually wrote the songs. Perry, Schon and Cain. No wonder that by 1986 they felt they had the right to call the shots....
Instead, they were replaced by machines which can not exactly make any artistic contributions to creative process. ROR is the ONLY Journey album created in such a way.
Of course it was because ROR was the only album recorded in the mid-1980s when drum machines, big simplistic snare drum patterns and heavy keyboards were not only what the radio stations and the market demanded - but also represented a whole new creative approach for traditional rock bands. Time and time again people talk about ROR completely out of the context of its era. Again - why was it that Smith didn't embrace the new approach when other drummers - such as Phil Collins - had no problem with it? Was this really just an issue of Perry not speaking to Smith with enough respect?
Are you telling me that Steve Smith should not be valued enough as a band member to be included in sessions and instead should be replaced by a machine and TOLD how to play, instead of contributing from the begining? He was absolutely in the right to be pissed about how he (and Ross) were treated. How humiliating to be a 'member' of the most popular band in the US but be replaced by a machine and your contribution to the 'band' be diminished in such a way.
Even Perry wasn't involved in the ROR sessions from the beginning. Journey had just had a three year hiatus. Everone had been doing their own thing and most of the band members had major personal problemsas well...illness, death, divorce, financial issues...you name it. Given this climate it's not surprising that the recording sessions weren't exactly like a prayer circle. All Smith had to in this environment do was keep it simple and get well-rewarded for doing so. The band was experimenting with a new approach and the drum machine was just a guide. But like Dunbar before him it seems he found Journey too restrictive for his talents...
That was the wrong approach. EVERYBODY admits it, including Perry.
Perry had admitted it was wrong to fire him. I've not heard him say he regrets the way they set out to record that album. He said he had a vision and went for it. Probably too ruthlessly but "it was the music that mattered". Correct me if I'm wrong though....
My other point is is that IS how Steve Smith approached TBF - as the 'outside guy', as Perry would say. He did NOT have any vested interest in the band - because he had no intention of making his presence a permanent thing.
Those were probably his intentions at the outset... but had Perry decided to commit to the band in 1998 Smith would have stayed on. Well, that's certainly the impression he gave on the BTM...but we've been down this road before haven't we?