SF-Dano wrote:Author2 wrote:Arkansas wrote:Arkansas wrote:Who was bigger/better...Bad English or Velvet Revolver?
No need, really, to compare the two bands, per se.
Thing is, who made who?
Did Slash make VR?
Did Schon make BE? I think Schon did make Hard Line.
Interesting debate...
And who has Perry made?
later~
Perhaps I wasn't clear enough. Who has Perry made
since Journey?
later~
Who has Journey made since Perry and who has needed to basically steal Perry's identity?
"If A BAND STICKS AROUND long enough it turns into a tribute band for years Journey has logged around the oldies' circuit with a rotating cast of singers trying to impersonate Steve Perry." RollingStone 7/2008
The fact that you continue to quote Rolling Stone tells everyone here not to put much credibility in your comments. Why don't you go way back to the 80s and find a few of the many unfavorable things that trash mag had to say about your boy Steve Perry. Then post them here. Shouldn't be much trouble as Rolling Stone has continually dogged Perry and Journey for decades.
"The fact that you continue to" dismiss musical integrity tells "everyone" who appreciates such that there is not "much credibility in your comments."
"All of these problems have been resolved on Departure. The most conspicuous absence is that of Roy Thomas Baker, whose meddling isn't missed. Engineer Geoff Workman has been promoted to producer, which places the group's musical direction in its own hands.
Not surprisingly, a real leader has emerged for the first time in Journey's history: Steve Perry, a fine singer with a penchant for snappy melodic hooks, is currently calling the shots, writing or cowriting all but one of the songs and keying the sound around his vocal arrangements. "Any Way You Want It," "Where Were You," "I'm Cryin' " and "People and Places" demonstrate the band's new approach....In the past, the group's good moments came when Neal Schon and Dunbar took off on extended jams, but now Journey works best as a band. And they've never rocked harder. " RollingStone By John Swenson / June 12, 1980
"After singing in a college choir, he joined Journey at the age of 28, quickly revealing a penchant for quavering, reverb-soaked melodrama that appealed to millions of fans — but few rock critics. Yet his technical skills (those high notes!),
pure tone and passionate sincerity now seem undeniable. " RollingStone Top 100 singers / 2008.
S/times sincerity/convictions bring about a degree of respect.... Schon, the child prodigy, did not make his respective list..