Moderator: Andrew
FamilyMan wrote:The obsession with Chalfant around here must stop.
The_Noble_Cause wrote:Gregg has had Kevin come out to cover the Perry vocal parts during his solo sets. It's hard to say who Gregg had better chemistry with. The Rolie-Perry era produced ALOT of good tunes, but some of that may have been Schon's input. One thing is for certain, if Herbie is to be believed, Gregg left Journey, in part, because of Perry. So that doesn't speak well of them getting along. But two artists can hate each other and still make magic. I will just say that I think both Storm albums are pretty special and I always viewed Kev & Gregg as a team. Nobody was hogging the spotlight.
scarab wrote:Song writing chemistry? There were only two few Rolie/Perry written songs
Im Cryin' and Do you Recall
You could add Opened the door and Little Girl to that list but it was also written with Schon.
M: OK, so, lets move on to Gregg. He left because he was tired of the road. Would you say that’s correct?
H: I’d say the truth is that he left because he saw, in 1980, when they recorded the Captured record, he said, ‘Man, this guy, Steve Perry, he’s out of control. He’s gonna fix this whether it’s broke or not. And, I’ve been doing this forever. I’ve got more money than l’ll ever need, after the successes we’ve had.
(EDIT: I omitted a part here that was not relevant)
So, all that jumping from the Gregg Rolie thing. He wanted to bail, and he picked Jon Cain. I went through all the personal (things). I said 'Wow, this is big shoes to fill, will this guy be able to do it?' I had met with Jon Cain several times. He didn't want to bail on John Waite. Waite had just broken his leg, (and) had decided the Babys had been a long-term situation that hadn't panned out. I said, 'Jon, if you don't feel comfortable, then say no. But if you do, and you're gonna go forward and you're gonna tell John Waite that you want to leave him and join Journey, fine. You'll be very close to a full member - very very close. We'll just give a little override back to Gregg on Escape and Frontiers, and then you're a full member.' He was a full member in terms of live appearances and everything else from the get, and we really did want to exploit his songwriting.
He had finally agreed, and we go through all of the machinations. (I've) got the band at their rehearsal facility in east Oakland, and I'm picking up Jon at the Oakland airport. I had my 928 Porsche at the time, my 1980 928, and I popped the hatch in the back, and I put his keyboard in. The doors aren't even closed - I haven't closed my driver door, he hasn't closed the passenger door - he hands me a tape, and says 'this is a tape of my wife, Tané. Now, here's the deal - you manage her, you get her a label deal, you make her career happen, or take my keyboard out of the back, I'm out, I'm going right back to LA, no Journey.'
M: Oh man.
H: I go, 'Hey we had an agreement, and you had committed to me. And you're touching upon the single biggest problem I have with all people who pick up an instrument and decide that they're entertainers and performers and players. It's at the expense of any sense of commitment. And you were committed on other terms and conditions, and you want to change the deal right now. And that is jive.' And he said, 'Well, than call me jive. Do I get out of the car, or do I stay in?' And, so I said, 'Well, I will get her a label deal. I'm sure it won't be because she deserves it.' And he said, 'Let's listen to the tape.' and I said, 'No, let's not. Just shut the door.' And so, I gotta tell you, in no uncertain terms, I knew what Jon Cain was like day one. Day fucking one.
Anyway, Jon Cain's come-uppance came very quick. We go, we write that Escape record. We record the thing (and) it's magnificent. I sequence it, entitle it, and package it, as I always would. We're ready to hit a home run. We had this big party at Fantasy records in Berkeley, with all the press, media and radio there to hear this new masterpiece. Something goes wrong, and Perry's in there with Jon Cain, and somebody suggests 'Wow, this is so great, Jon Cain sure did bring a lot as a songwriter!' And he did! You said it yourself. You know, I agree. Whether I like these people as individuals doesn't have anything to do with my total respect for Perry's talent, for Jon's talent, for all of their talents. But, boy - Perry bristled so much at the notion that Jon Cain had contributed much of anything to that, that he just proceeded to dismiss and diminish Jon Cain's contributions and involvement to the point where Jon Cain had to leave the room and was out in the parking lot, I mean bawling like a fucking baby. Bawling like a baby. So I went out in the parking lot, and I said, 'Now you see what happens when you run into even a bigger asshole than yourself? This is what it feels like. Now if you think that you can go tit for tat with that prick, and be as much more a bigger prick than he is, I got news for you. You have met your fucking match. You know why? Cause everybody sees you coming, Jon Cain. You advertise what a prick you're going to be. Perry - he's got the bulk of the world fooled. And he had you fooled until tonight.'
That was it. That was the beginning of the realization for Jon Cain. I betcha right then and there he said 'I wonder a little bit less why Gregg Rolie walked away from such and incredible enterprise, at such an incredible point in their history.' It was just a no-brainer. Stadium act. How do you walk away? I'll tell you how you walk away. If you were drowning in the ocean, and Steve Perry came along in his luxury liner, he would offer you a life raft in such a manner that you would decline it. I'm not just talking about you; I'm talking about anybody. The terms and conditions would be such that you would pass.
Memorex wrote:Wonder how Gregg would have felt if he had to share his keyboard duties.
Memorex wrote:Wonder how Gregg would have felt if he had to share his keyboard duties.
Memorex wrote:Wonder how Gregg would have felt if he had to share his keyboard duties.
tater1977 wrote:Memorex wrote:Wonder how Gregg would have felt if he had to share his keyboard duties.
I don't know if you would call it sharing per say... but SP sometimes would do
"key" duty when GR went out front and played his harmonica.
Rick wrote:tater1977 wrote:Memorex wrote:Wonder how Gregg would have felt if he had to share his keyboard duties.
I don't know if you would call it sharing per say... but SP sometimes would do
"key" duty when GR went out front and played his harmonica.
He did that with Cain as well. It's in the Escape concert video.
Rick wrote:tater1977 wrote:Memorex wrote:Wonder how Gregg would have felt if he had to share his keyboard duties.
I don't know if you would call it sharing per say... but SP sometimes would do
"key" duty when GR went out front and played his harmonica.
He did that with Cain as well. It's in the Escape concert video.
GR wasn't on the Escapee tour...
Rick wrote:]Rick wrote:tater1977 wrote:
GR wasn't on the Escapee tour...
A most correct observation, Tater.![]()
![]()
But here he is, doing just that, when Cain was in the band.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=p ... 7Br4#t=153
He did that with Cain as well. It's in the Escape concert video.
slucero wrote:From the Castles Burning interview, read it all the way through... Herbie put's Rolie's reasoning in some context:
(EDIT: I omitted a part here that was not relevant)
So, all that jumping from the Gregg Rolie thing. He wanted to bail, and he picked Jon Cain. I went through all the personal (things). I said 'Wow, this is big shoes to fill, will this guy be able to do it?' I had met with Jon Cain several times. He didn't want to bail on John Waite. Waite had just broken his leg, (and) had decided the Babys had been a long-term situation that hadn't panned out. I said, 'Jon, if you don't feel comfortable, then say no. But if you do, and you're gonna go forward and you're gonna tell John Waite that you want to leave him and join Journey, fine. You'll be very close to a full member - very very close. We'll just give a little override back to Gregg on Escape and Frontiers, and then you're a full member.' He was a full member in terms of live appearances and everything else from the get, and we really did want to exploit his songwriting.
Anyway, Jon Cain's come-uppance came very quick. We go, we write that Escape record. We record the thing (and) it's magnificent. I sequence it, entitle it, and package it, as I always would. We're ready to hit a home run. We had this big party at Fantasy records in Berkeley, with all the press, media and radio there to hear this new masterpiece. Something goes wrong, and Perry's in there with Jon Cain, and somebody suggests 'Wow, this is so great, Jon Cain sure did bring a lot as a songwriter!' And he did! You said it yourself. You know, I agree. Whether I like these people as individuals doesn't have anything to do with my total respect for Perry's talent, for Jon's talent, for all of their talents. But, boy - Perry bristled so much at the notion that Jon Cain had contributed much of anything to that, that he just proceeded to dismiss and diminish Jon Cain's contributions and involvement to the point where Jon Cain had to leave the room and was out in the parking lot, I mean bawling like a fucking baby. Bawling like a baby. So I went out in the parking lot, and I said, 'Now you see what happens when you run into even a bigger asshole than yourself? This is what it feels like. Now if you think that you can go tit for tat with that prick, and be as much more a bigger prick than he is, I got news for you. You have met your fucking match. You know why? Cause everybody sees you coming, Jon Cain. You advertise what a prick you're going to be. Perry - he's got the bulk of the world fooled. And he had you fooled until tonight.'
That was it. That was the beginning of the realization for Jon Cain. I betcha right then and there he said 'I wonder a little bit less why Gregg Rolie walked away from such and incredible enterprise, at such an incredible point in their history.' It was just a no-brainer. Stadium act. How do you walk away? I'll tell you how you walk away. If you were drowning in the ocean, and Steve Perry came along in his luxury liner, he would offer you a life raft in such a manner that you would decline it. I'm not just talking about you; I'm talking about anybody. The terms and conditions would be such that you would pass.
The_Noble_Cause wrote:Thanks, Sluc. You saved me a cut and paste.
Rick wrote:tater1977 wrote:Memorex wrote:Wonder how Gregg would have felt if he had to share his keyboard duties.
I don't know if you would call it sharing per say... but SP sometimes would do
"key" duty when GR went out front and played his harmonica.
He did that with Cain as well. It's in the Escape concert video.
yulog wrote:Rick wrote:tater1977 wrote:
I don't know if you would call it sharing per say... but SP sometimes would do
"key" duty when GR went out front and played his harmonica.
He did that with Cain as well. It's in the Escape concert video.
Playing the same note 50 times(they could have gotten a 5 yr old in the audience to do that)
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