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RockInDetroit wrote:Could someone fill me in? Not sure I understand why many say Steve Smith would only return if Steve Perry returned. I thought Steve Smith was fired by Perry from Journey before Radio On the Radio.
amaron wrote:RockInDetroit wrote:Could someone fill me in? Not sure I understand why many say Steve Smith would only return if Steve Perry returned. I thought Steve Smith was fired by Perry from Journey before Radio On the Radio.
If I'm not mistaken, Cain was the one who made the call to Valory and Smith.
I'm sure there was a LARGE monetary sum given to Smith and Valory for the reunion. Money seems to make things hurt less.
amaron wrote:RockInDetroit wrote:Could someone fill me in? Not sure I understand why many say Steve Smith would only return if Steve Perry returned. I thought Steve Smith was fired by Perry from Journey before Radio On the Radio.
If I'm not mistaken, Cain was the one who made the call to Valory and Smith.
I'm sure there was a LARGE monetary sum given to Smith and Valory for the reunion. Money seems to make things hurt less.
brandonpfn wrote:amaron wrote:RockInDetroit wrote:Could someone fill me in? Not sure I understand why many say Steve Smith would only return if Steve Perry returned. I thought Steve Smith was fired by Perry from Journey before Radio On the Radio.
If I'm not mistaken, Cain was the one who made the call to Valory and Smith.
I'm sure there was a LARGE monetary sum given to Smith and Valory for the reunion. Money seems to make things hurt less.
Money....and....Time
RockInDetroit wrote:amaron wrote:RockInDetroit wrote:Could someone fill me in? Not sure I understand why many say Steve Smith would only return if Steve Perry returned. I thought Steve Smith was fired by Perry from Journey before Radio On the Radio.
If I'm not mistaken, Cain was the one who made the call to Valory and Smith.
I'm sure there was a LARGE monetary sum given to Smith and Valory for the reunion. Money seems to make things hurt less.
Are you kidding? You think Cain had that kinda clout back then? He was only on two albums at the time. It was Perry.
On VH1s Behind the Music they all said it was Perry not Cain. When I say 'all' I believe even Perry admitted it. Perry was viewed as a perfectionist who felt Smith and Valary were not holding their own.
Everyone wants to blame Cain.
RockInDetroit wrote:amaron wrote:RockInDetroit wrote:Could someone fill me in? Not sure I understand why many say Steve Smith would only return if Steve Perry returned. I thought Steve Smith was fired by Perry from Journey before Radio On the Radio.
If I'm not mistaken, Cain was the one who made the call to Valory and Smith.
I'm sure there was a LARGE monetary sum given to Smith and Valory for the reunion. Money seems to make things hurt less.
Are you kidding? You think Cain had that kinda clout back then? He was only on two albums at the time. It was Perry.
On VH1s Behind the Music they all said it was Perry not Cain. When I say 'all' I believe even Perry admitted it. Perry was viewed as a perfectionist who felt Smith and Valary were not holding their own.
Everyone wants to blame Cain.
RockInDetroit wrote: So I don't see why Smith would only come back if Perry were there.
Matthew wrote:So the success of grunge/alternative did indirectly kill off AOR as a real mainstream commnercial force. And the popularity of hip-hop amongst white suburban kids was another reason why melodic rock bands became marginalised.
The Eagles reunion was quite different. They were a country-rock band from the 1970s - and had no associations with the 1980s at all. As for Styx, Journey, Foreigner...yes, they did get a bit of attention but nothing like the popularity they enjoyed in the 1980s. And not even Herbie Herbert could have bucked the downward trend in the 1990s....as any member of Mr Big can tell you.
As for Bad English..they "made waves" in 1989. Their next - and last - album was released in 1991 which was the same year "Nevermind" came out. And what happened? It sank with barely a trace. So I don't know why you are bringing Bad English into the equation here.
Matthew wrote:Monker wrote:He was hired for the same reasons Perry was - and that included bring a more vocal sounds to a mostly instrumental band.
That is hilarious Monker...."more vocal sounds"...like it was an mere embellishment rather than one of the MAIN REASONS for Journey's eventual success.
In fact, I would take "Wheel In the Sky" over something like "Patiently" any day.
Oh I'm sure you would. In fact, it wouldn't surprise me if you said it was the greatest song you ever heard.
Well, it's certainly true that Mr Big had a Number One hit single in 1992 with "To Be With You" but other than that this moment of glory the band were nowhere near as big as Journey were in the early 1980s. Nowhere near. And by 1994 Mr Big weren't charting at all. Whereas Journey were....
Absolutely. He took over Herbie's job. He was even deciding album covers and album names. He took on changing their sound and the band itself. Yes, it is Perry's fault - he took on the role and he should take the responsibility.
I've already said - twice - that Perry has taken the responsibility for ROR and has never distanced himself from that project. As for the power shift...well, of course that happened. But this was a serious flaw in Herbert's management. He got out-witted by the talent. Hardly the act of an awesome Zvengali who can do no wrong.![]()
IMO - 1985-87 was under PERRY's watch - not Herbie's.
Monker - if ROR hadn't sucked in your world it would still absolutely kill you to give Perry any credit.
A couple of pages back I tried to demonstrate to NMT that I wasn't some flaming Perry fanatic and I listed a few criticisms of the guy to show that I was capable of being vaguely reasonable and balanced on the subject. One day I'd love to hear you come up with - say - five reasons why Perry was good for this band or what makes him an extraordinary talent or ANYTHING which isn't whiney or bitchy about the guy.
Monker wrote:The fact that fail to recognize is that by 1988 bands like Journey, Styx, Foreigner, Kansas, etc, were ALREADY breaking up or struggling...MR was no longer as popular as it was in 1981. The truth is, IMO, another generation wanted 'their music'...and it wasn't going to be MR, and wasn't going to be the excessiveness of glam...which, if we are honest about it, the 80's generation latched onto.
"Backlash" sank simply because the band broke up before the album was even released. Why would anybody want to promote, or play, a band that didn't even exist any longer. Shortly after it was released, Neal was in Hardline and promoting it as the next band that was to make it big. The truth is, it did not sink because of grunge, and are also the only Journey related band to have a #1 single.
Arkansas wrote:RockInDetroit wrote: So I don't see why Smith would only come back if Perry were there.
Oh I think that Smith was being prophetic. I believe what he meant was that he didn't see Journey ever being BIG again without Perry. Therefore, he wasn't interested in being in anything less. It had nothing to do with personal animosity, and every thing to do with making a sound business decision. He'd rather play jazz than do the corndog circuit.
later~
Monker wrote:You are missing the point. Even before Infinity, on the "Next" album, Journey was trying to move a way from being a mostly instrumental band and more of a vocal band. That is why they hired Fleischman, to be a front-man and be dedicated to singing...not a singer/guitarist or a singer/keyboardist.
Oh, I don't know if I'd say that. I'd say the same thing about other Journey songs too. I like "Mother Father" more then Patiently too. What, you a bit pissed that I dissed a Perry song?
The truth is that Fleischman DID contribute to Journey without even recording an album with him. Even his solo album from way back then had a bunch of songs sharing writing credits with Gregg and Neal...and they sound VERY much like Journey songs.
He had other bands he managed as well. His career did not slip at all...he simply broadened his base since he did not have to spend any time concentrating on Journey.
Then quit asking "Is that Perry's fault too?" when you already know the answer...Do you just need me to make a post so you are reminded that Steve Perry already said these things?
Also, he did not get "out-witted". He got out-voted. Neal and Cain where the dim-wits who sided with Perry during both ROR and TBF.
A 'masterpiece'? I would not even consider Frontiers a 'masterpiece'. Escape, and maybe Infinity are Journey's "masterpieces". THOSE are the times where all of the band's creative talent came TOGETHER to create the best art they could deliver. ROR was FAR from a masterpiece.
You're wrong. When I picked ROR back then, I was EXPECTING to hear this 'masterpiece', in your words. Instead I heard pop crap. If I had heard the excellence that I knew could deliver, which followed all of the Perry interviews, which followed the success of Street Talk, I would be giving Perry a HUGE amount of credit since he took so much control over the album.
Five reasons Perry was good for the band:
All of his vocals on album from Infinity thru ROR.
His outstanding vocals when they were at their peak on the Departure tour.
LTS
Recording "Open Arms" when others did not want to.
loosening up the reigns the past few years and allowing 'classic' Journey music to have other outlet on film and TV.
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