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FamilyMan wrote:Hopefully, the net result will be a forthcoming Journey album that finally has a decent mix.
Arkansas wrote:Yeah, I'll have to go pick thru all the details of that other thread some time. Thanks.
later~
Arkansas wrote:Btw, I think JC is in the Sound City doc. There's a still shot of someone resembling him in what looks like a Journey tshirt. Don't remember exactly where in the doc, and it's less than half a second. Did Journey ever do any work there?
later~
The_Noble_Cause wrote:FamilyMan wrote:Hopefully, the net result will be a forthcoming Journey album that finally has a decent mix.
"Arrival" was muddy. I think Rev and Eclipse turned out pretty good.
Hollywood wrote:The_Noble_Cause wrote:As documented here on MR.com, Neal gave Eclipse to someone else (besides Shirley) to do the final mixing. Sounds good to me.
Never quite understood why Shirley was picked for TBF, but he's done mostly well by the band.
Neal did not give Eclipse to anyone. Shirley and him weren't seeing eye to eye on the whole project and Neal decided after recording that he did not want Kevin to mix it. More to diffuse the situation. Both have remained friends. It was given to a very close friend of Jonathan's to complete. ironically, the same friend, David Kalmusky, that this studio is co-owned with Jonathan.
I think people underestimate Jon. They have his whole career.
Outside of the Red 13 I think all of the records and DVDs have sounded great.
slucero wrote:Jon's studio isn't for Journey... its for Jon's songwriting career in Nashville.. he's already state a desire to get into the Nashville Songwriters HOF... so having a studio in Nashville is a great "calling card"... and a great way to get existing and new artists (like his daughter) in Nashville in working and writing sessions..
His ballad-writing chops are a natural fit for Nashville's modern country artists.
steveo777 wrote:slucero wrote:Jon's studio isn't for Journey... its for Jon's songwriting career in Nashville.. he's already state a desire to get into the Nashville Songwriters HOF... so having a studio in Nashville is a great "calling card"... and a great way to get existing and new artists (like his daughter) in Nashville in working and writing sessions..
His ballad-writing chops are a natural fit for Nashville's modern country artists.
Exactly ; he ain't stupid. I think he sees what to do next, after Journey. I believe he'll be successful.
FamilyMan wrote:The_Noble_Cause wrote:FamilyMan wrote:Hopefully, the net result will be a forthcoming Journey album that finally has a decent mix.
"Arrival" was muddy. I think Rev and Eclipse turned out pretty good.
All three sound muddy. As do the live DVD's.
Hollywood wrote:Neal did not give Eclipse to anyone. Shirley and him weren't seeing eye to eye on the whole project and Neal decided after recording that he did not want Kevin to mix it.
The_Noble_Cause wrote:Hollywood wrote:Neal did not give Eclipse to anyone. Shirley and him weren't seeing eye to eye on the whole project and Neal decided after recording that he did not want Kevin to mix it.
You make it sound more diplomatic than it actually was. Shirley was supposed to finish the project, and Neal didn't want to wait for him. After the recording fiasco of Eclipse (in which Arnel offered to quit, Neal vetoed Jon's ballads, and Shirley and Schon kept butting creative heads) Shirley vowed NEVER to work with the band again and said of Neal, "What an asshole." You may think it was a civil disagreement. Not my understanding. Of course, time heals all.
PianoMan1986 wrote:...but I don't remember Arnel offering to quit. I remember him having to go back and work on his diction to record the new songs. I don't remember Shirley vowing to never work with them again either. I'm not saying that it's not credible, just trying to think back when/where this stuff was said.
slucero wrote:As Producer... Shirley wanted the band to shorten the songs, leads.. go in a more traditional Journey direction.. that's his job.
Schon vetoed all of that..
The_Noble_Cause wrote:PianoMan1986 wrote:...but I don't remember Arnel offering to quit. I remember him having to go back and work on his diction to record the new songs. I don't remember Shirley vowing to never work with them again either. I'm not saying that it's not credible, just trying to think back when/where this stuff was said.
You didn't hear of it, because it wasn't publicly reported and it wasn't told to you. Just like the lipping shenanigans. Isn't that obvious. Oy.
The_Noble_Cause wrote:slucero wrote:As Producer... Shirley wanted the band to shorten the songs, leads.. go in a more traditional Journey direction.. that's his job.
Schon vetoed all of that..
That is NOT a producer's job. On Revelation, they wanted to recapture the "legacy sound", but that doesn't mean Shirley is supposed to duplicate that on every album. If that was the case, the band never would have evolved from the Infinity-era to Escape/Frontiers. Huge sonic leap forward. Maybe Eclipse pushed the envelope too far.
slucero wrote:Shirley advising Journey to shorten songs and leads, because he feels it would make them more marketable has nothing to do with the sonically duplicating an album from another era... because that would be kinda impossible...
It's about the song arrangement. and Shirley doing this is completely in line with what a producers "job" is, and has always been.
The_Noble_Cause wrote:slucero wrote:Shirley advising Journey to shorten songs and leads, because he feels it would make them more marketable has nothing to do with the sonically duplicating an album from another era... because that would be kinda impossible...
It's about the song arrangement. and Shirley doing this is completely in line with what a producers "job" is, and has always been.
To me "go in a more traditional Journey direction" (your quote) sounds alot like Revelation part 2 all over again. Even with shorter leads, something like "Edge of the Moment" would not be your cookie cutter Journey tune.
slucero wrote:The_Noble_Cause wrote:slucero wrote:Shirley advising Journey to shorten songs and leads, because he feels it would make them more marketable has nothing to do with the sonically duplicating an album from another era... because that would be kinda impossible...
It's about the song arrangement. and Shirley doing this is completely in line with what a producers "job" is, and has always been.
To me "go in a more traditional Journey direction" (your quote) sounds alot like Revelation part 2 all over again. Even with shorter leads, something like "Edge of the Moment" would not be your cookie cutter Journey tune.
Like I posted.. when I said Shirley was talking about "a more traditional Journey direction" (my quote).. it's in reference to the song arrangements... not duplicating the sonic quality of a previous album.. mainly because its pretty much impossible to do, and more importantly because it would be plain fucking stupid... the whole point of a new album is a "clean slate"... you try different things sonically... different guitar setups, mic placements... the list is literally endless.. BUT.. you run real risk when you deviate too far from what people "know" arrangement-wise... and most artists make that fatal mistake in their songwriting..
While Eclipse is sonically a very well recorded album (I even said that when I reviewed it here).. the arrangements deviated too far from what one would call "traditional Journey"... and that was Shirley's job as producer to point out.
Journey (Schon) made the choice to not listen.
Hard core fans may overlook that to some degree, likely because they have a better understanding of the bands musical history.. i.e.... so they may be more open to and understand the reasons for it. The lay journey fan was always, only interested in the more accessible, traditional sounding arrangements. Eclipse arrangements failed in this regard and that IMHO is the core reason it would have never had a chance in hell of appealing to the lay Journey fan.
Shirley knew this, and subsequent comments by Schon and Cain validate it.
The_Noble_Cause wrote:Well said. I guess I misunderstood what you meant by "traditional" , especially coming on the heels of Cain's "legacy sound" comments. I would just say that traditional song arrangements did no favors for Arrival or Generations in the sales department, so at this point, they have nothing to lose.
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