MATTHEW wrote:Michelle - it would be easier to agree with you had Journey's strategy worked out. Yes, Augeri might have been able to bring back some memories to the relatively few old Journey fans who went to the shows. But he didn't connect with the majority of Journey fans and in terms of the bands recording career the last nine years have been pretty disastrous.
Relatively few??? Journey is on it's EIGHTH tour of the US since 1998, and they're not playing to empty venues or the same 200 people night after night. Sure, Journey has lost some of their die-hard fan base, but the typical casual fan and concert goer is showing up to pretend it's 1983 all over again.
Sure, Arrival & Generations haven't been chart busters, but after it's inital debut, neither was TBF. Personally, I heard tracks from Arrival on the radio more than I did tracks from TBF.
Also - can you imagine the controversy had Schon and Cain replaced Perry in 1987? God...it's been bad enough twenty years on but to do that during the band's peak? They might just have got away with it had they hired a singer of equal stature - which Van Halen did - but a complete unknown?
As Dave pointed out, they probably would have done better to replace Perry in '87 -- the machine behind the band would have pushed it forward. Sure the fans would have rioted, but there would have been a clear and defining change. And if they'd made the change in '87, they could have brought in any one they wanted. An unknown or an established name or someone in between. It's all speculation. IMO, they probably WOULDN'T have brought in someone like Augeri. They probably would have gone the VH route and found someone with their own fan base and taken the band in a different direction. Or they could have just tortured us with Michael Bolton.
As for reinventing the classics...well, I saw Robert Plant last month and he reinterpreted many Led Zep songs in such an interesting and inspiring way. He wasn't just grinding out the old catalogue, he wasn't trying to replicate the sound of Led Zep's heyday. He took some risks.
Unfortunately, this wasn't true of Journey when I saw them in May. One Perry era hit after another...all played in exactly the same way they were twenty years ago but nowhere near as good.
There are lots of performers who reinvent their catalog, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. I'd love for Journey to play obscure tunes and newer stuff but at virtually
every show I've been to in the last 8 years (a considerable number I assure you) every time they stray too far from "the dirty dozen" and other more familiar tracks they lose the audience. Audience energy wanes, band energy wanes -- it's a symbiotic relationship. The band is going to play what the majority of the paying audience wants to hear. Not what the 10-20 people in the crowd who know the lyrics ot La Raza del Sol want to hear.
This is why the arrival of JSS has restored my faith in the band - or at least some hope. Maybe Journey can finally surprise a few people and become more than just another nostalgia act?
At this point in time... I doubt it. There are very few acts around from the 70s and 80s when Journey was at their peak that can escape the "nostalgia" tag. The ones that have managed that trick are the ones that have kept their careers going and in the public's eye and managed to evolve with or rise above the changing trends in popular music.
If you take a look at the most successful touring acts of the last decade, nearly ALL of them had their peak recording and musical success prior to 1990. It's all nostaligia now.