


http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/delawareonline/access/1853182561.html?dids=1853182561:1853182561&FMT=FT&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&fmac=e378eacfd9c9dffa753f078a7e480658&date=Sep+3%2C+2009&author=PETER+BOTHUM&desc=Night+Ranger+should+be+motorin%27+ahead+of+Journey
Night Ranger should be motorin' ahead of Journey
Bands serve up a classic rock doubleheader Wednesday in Charm City
By PETER BOTHUM • The News Journal • September 3, 2009
All things being equal, Night Ranger should be opening up for Journey.
Fans who have been there since the beginning will insist that Journey’s first three albums, which guitarist Neal Schon and company put together BSP (Before Steve Perry), were excellent, non-commercial forays into jazz-rock.
And with Perry at the helm, Journey cranked out hits in rapid fire fashion, and you could pretty much take it to the bank that albums would go multi-platinum and shows would sell out.
They were freakin’ massive. If you’ve seen the live video for “Don’t Stop Believin',” shot during a concert in Japan, raise your hand. You know what I’m talking about.
But things are not equal, and Journey now has gone through three replacement singers who have mimed Perry’s high-register vocals on the band’s hits.
Night Ranger, meanwhile, boasts three of its original members in singer/bassist Jack Blades, singer/drummer Kelly Keagy and guitarist Brad Gillis.
This brings up Rule 545, subsection 23.4, of the Rock Rule Book: Any established band cannot continue on under the same name with a new singer. The only bands to find a loophole in this rule are Van Halen and AC/DC. That’s it.
What this means is that the current version of Journey is fraudulent. I know this column has gone here before, but I’m going there again: Despite the praise readers have heaped upon singers Steve Augeri, Jeff Scott Soto and now Arnel Pineda (whom they discovered on YouTube – wow!), Schon, his band and anyone supporting Journey are in violation.
Yes, we know, you can close your eyes and listen to any one of these three guys and it sounds just like classic Journey. But I don’t want to close my eyes at a concert I paid $50 to see.
Night Ranger, with its two lead singers intact, is to be lauded for its longevity. How awesome would it be to hear Keagy belt out “Sister Christian” and do that drum-roll gallop into the chorus that everyone has banged out on their car’s dashboard? And to hear Blades sing “Don’t Tell Me You Love Me” or “When You Close Your Eyes” would be a double-shot of ’80s gold.
This two-headed bill comes to the 1st Mariner Arena in Baltimore at 8 p.m. Wednesday. I’m throwing a second penalty flag on Journey because of Night Ranger’s billing as “special guests,” as if Blades, Keagy and Gillis should be honored for the chance to open up for Schon and his boys.
Tickets are $37.50-$93 at http://www.ticketmaster.com.