NoMoreTails wrote:Yes, the ones I recall him mentioning were Plant, Glenn Hughes, I think Steve Marriot, and Rod Stewart. Rod is probably one who was also influenced by Sam Cooke, Augeri mentioned Sam as well, that being his common ground with Perry.
Thanks NMT. Hughes was a great singer wasn't he?
At one point I believe the label had them go write more with some outside writers, resulting in a couple more ballads w/Kim Tribble.
I haven't heard of Tribble. Any good?
Personally, I'd take an album consisting of the Red13 material and 2/3 of Generations, remixed/better production, that would have been my favorite Journey album of the entire catalog, had it happened.
I actually much prefer "Generations" to "Arrival"...but aside from "A Better Life" it's hard for me to understand why you'd feel it had the potential to rank higher than, say, "Escape" or "Frontiers".
As for ROR, it was a new direction that Perry wanted, not Journey. Cain to a degree, possibly maybe have been interested in writing pop songs
The implication you make here is that Journey hadn't been interested in writing pop songs before 1986. A brief glance at the track listing on the Greatest Hits shows this isn't true.
but Neal wasn't that involved in the writing came in did his parts, got out basically.
I've read that's Perry frequently absented himself too. It's amazing they got anything done.
Cain and Schon's motivation was just that they were able to keep "Journey" afloat for one more album.
I'm sure that was Perry's motivation too - despite his initial reluctance.
the sterile manufactured soul-less instrumentation of much of ROR.
Well, Neal's solos had soul...and Perry's vocals had soul...so I guess you must be referring to Jonathan Cain's contribution. Were his keyboards any more or less soulful than, say, the ultra-80s keyboard riff in "Separate Ways"? "Frontiers" also had a strong synthetic element.
As for the drum production...well, I guess it was a bit robotic and plodding. But ROR is by no means the only Journey album with questionable drum production. "Departure" being a prime example. No - it wasn't mechanical - but it does sound a bit leaden and 'clumpy'.