Moderator: Andrew
brandonpfn wrote:I guarantee you this - only Steve Perry, the man himself, could put together a "rareities" collection that would live up to the expectation.
brandonpfn wrote:..but if that doesn't put the pro-verbial nail in the coffin...the bassist actually stands out on the demos I have, great playing, reminiscent of latter stage Valory playing...
I guarantee you this - only Steve Perry, the man himself, could put together a "rareities" collection that would live up to the expectation. If his voice is truly gone (highly doubtful.....just changed...), he has unfinished work on this planet.
-Brandonk
There's no reason for anyone to expect Steve's voice to sound the same as it did 30, 20, or even 10 yrs ago.
There's also no reason to think he's lost his vocal ability. Of course he sings in a lower range than he did in the 70's, but saying he "can't" sing because of that is like saying a baratone can't sing as well as a tenor.
Or an alto can't sing as well as a soprano.
As for the songs from those old demos, Steve did an updated recording of If You Need Me Call Me for one of the concert EPs that were sold at the FTLOSM tour. It's in his lower range and sounds great.
Even if the material as it was recorded then would be too dated to sell, some of the songs would probably hold up if the presentation was updated. In fact he said something to that effect in an interview(and no, I don't remember which one or where it can be found). He also said that some of the masters for the older material were really in bad shape.
There could be a miriad of reasons that he chooses not to record or perform that have nothing to do with ability.
He doesn't need a 'reason' to not want to do it. The guy is getting OLD. He doesn't want to do it, and doesn't HAVE to do it...So, why put ANY effort into something so unimportant to him?
There's no reason for anyone to expect Steve's voice to sound the same as it did 30, 20, or even 10 yrs ago. There's also no reason to think he's lost his vocal ability. Of course he sings in a lower range than he did in the 70's, but saying he "can't" sing because of that is like saying a baratone can't sing as well as a tenor. Or an alto can't sing as well as a soprano. Most of the best singers are baratones and altos unless they're singing opera.
jrnyman28 wrote:Honest question: How many CDs do you think Perry would sell of unreleased/remixed/re-recorded material?
My best guess would be around 100,000. It of course would depend on promotion, record label support. But I think that is a pretty fair number.
jrnyman28 wrote:
My best guess would be around 100,000. It of course would depend on promotion, record label support. But I think that is a pretty fair number.
Fernando Ramirez wrote:I for one would love to hear the songs he co-wrote with Nuno Bettencourt. That's my holy grail, as far as Perry is concerned.
yak wrote:Yeah me too, especially since Perry bragged about the time he and Nuno spent together, and the songs they wrote. How talented Nuno is, etc. You know the drill. It was all in a Journey Force newsletter feature about Perry. But I remember a while back hearing that Nuno doesn't talk to Perry any longer. Wonder why?
heardonthestreet wrote:I don't see it that way, John.
heardonthestreet wrote:As his voice matured, I noticed that he adapted a soulful quality that he could use to his advantage to express a greater emotion at will.
heardonthestreet wrote:The evil sound he put into his voice in the line.........."Think about it." from YBW was raspy for effect and the ragged "Owwwwwww." on the last note of STH expressed agony.
I've found that he used his mature voice to it's very best advantage.
heardonthestreet wrote:I've found that he used his mature voice to it's very best advantage.
yak wrote:heardonthestreet wrote:I've found that he used his mature voice to it's very best advantage.
So what's he using his "mature" (so that's what you call it) voice for NOW?![]()
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 39 guests