Journey/Survivor wrote:Andrew wrote:I always felt that Survivor's catalogue stacked up against Journey's very well - if not even better!

If I were to say that I'd be tared and feathered on here.
Here's how I'd compare the 2 bands...
I'm only comparing Journey's Escape line-up with Survivor's Eye Of The Tiger & Vital Signs line-up's
Lead vocals: Jimi Jamison vs Steve Perry...slight edge to Jamison.
Perry vs Bickler...edge to Perry...although Bickler was/is better than a lot of people seem to realize.
Guitar: Neal Schon vs Frankie Sullivan...edge goes to Schon for soloing...riffs and rhythm-playing go to Sullivan.
Keyboards: Jonathan Cain vs Jim Peterik...edge to Cain.
Drums: Steve Smith vs Marc Droubay...in terms of technical ability, Smith easily wins, but there are some aspects of Droubay's drumming that
I like better.
Bass: Ross Valory vs Stephan Ellis...slight edge to Valory.
Songwriting: Jim Peterik and Frankie Sullivan vs Jonathan Cain and Steve Perry....slight edge to Peterik and Sullivan.
Overall: In my opinion they rank pretty much even. Neither one is far better than the other.
my humble opinion on the situation... For this, I'm going to limit both bands' output through the end of the 80s not counting any reunion (or variation) material made in the 90s or 2000s.
Honestly, Survivor vs Foreigner is the better comparison as opposed to Survivor vs Journey. Both were heavier-edged bands, with some mid-tempo and ballads....as opposed to Journey which was mid-tempo with some hard rock and ballads. Journey was also a much more layered sound, as opposed to Survivor/Foreigner, which were more straight-ahead rock. But for the basis of this debate...
Journey ranks better on virtually all of the musical parts. As far as caliber of musicians, Journey wins this one easily.
As far as songwriting goes...
Journey -- I personally feel that a lot of the songwriting on the Rolie era is patchy. Some really good stuff, but some filler. Once Cain comes aboard, songwriting goes up (if less rock).
Survivor -- once you get past the first album (which is all over the place with little relation to the later Survivor sound), Survivor was very consistent from Premonition to Too Hot To Sleep. Wide varying ranges in style from hard rock to pop, but quality is about even across the board. Survivor's real strength was in the deep album cuts that never got played on the radio.
If all I had to compare was Survivor's Greatest Hits vs Journey's Greatest Hits--this would NOT be a discussion.
in a little more depth...
Hard Rock....edge: Survivor. Journey has some good hard rock moments (Edge of the Blade, Separate Ways), but Survivor was in general a heavier band as long as Vital Signs (which may have been their lightest album) doesn't dominate the playlist.
Mid-Tempo....edge: Journey. Survivor has some really good stuff in this area (Desperate Dreams, Runway Lights, etc) but the mid-tempo song was where Perry got to shine.
Ballads....edge: Survivor. Never cared for Open Arms, but Journey has some good ballads (Faithfully, Why Can't This Night..., Happy to Give, etc). Some of the best of Survivor (Ever Since the World Began, Man Against the World, Across the Miles) is better. Perry was the better ballad singer, but for songwriting, Survivor wins this one.
Total Catalogue....this is probably the big difference. Some of Journey's best songs may be a little better than some of Survivor's best songs. That said, I think Survivor's album cuts are stronger than the majority of Journey's album cuts. I'll call this one a draw.
Promotion....Journey, no contest. This is one area where Survivor was failed miserably by management. Unless you have gone out to find Survivor's albums, all you have heard is 2 songs specifically written for Rocky (Eye of the Tiger and Burning Heart), possibly Is This Love (from When Seconds Count), and a bunch of cuts from Vital Signs (I Cant Hold Back, High On You, The Search Is Over, maybe Broken Promises). Basically, that means if all you hear is radio, then you have heard 1 album out of 8, and maybe a track or two. They never sounded the same from album to album, so there is a HUGE gap in style that most people never heard.
Journey's management was much better, and the Greatest Hits does a good job at covering Infinity to Raised on Radio.
Safe to say there was a huge difference from Lights/Wheel in the Sky to Don't Stop Believin'/Separate Ways to Girl Can't Help It/Be Good to Yourself. Same on the Survivor end. There is a big difference between Feels Like Love/Chevy Nights to I Can't Hold Back/High on You to Desperate Dreams/Didn't Know It Was Love/Burning Bridges.
Survivor vs. Foreigner is a much more apt comparison...but for Survivor vs Journey, I'll call it a draw. Both have their strong points, and both have their weaker points. It's just hard to compare, since if you take the overall discography for both bands, there was only a brief period where they sounded alike.