Moderator: Andrew
madsplash wrote:Really listened to it again closely today for the first time in a while and I think the disc is really strong. It's obviously a labor of love for SP songwriting wise and where he was mentally at the time, but what a vocally textured masterpiece!
Somewhere There's Hope is a vocally acrobatic, positve song that it makes you wanna cry and smack anyone with negativity.
Missing You is so spectacular that it makes anyone that thinks that The Voice can't write without Neal and Jon, seem silly. Again vocally, it's just as sophisticated as you can get. And don't give me the studio magic theory, I heard him do it live.
All in all, a heartfelt release by a man who has the greatest voice anyone's ever heard at a time when music really needed a return of melodic rock's
all time king.
I love everything SP has ever done solo and with Journey. Don't get me started about Street Talk! Go Away is one of the most complete pop songs ever written. SP/Neal/Jon are the greatest writing trio ever in my opinion. But on there solo releases, we see who was the master craftsman of that group.
THE MAN, THE MYTH, THE LEGEND, THE COMPOSER, ......................THE VOICE!
Jana wrote:madsplash wrote:Really listened to it again closely today for the first time in a while and I think the disc is really strong. It's obviously a labor of love for SP songwriting wise and where he was mentally at the time, but what a vocally textured masterpiece!
Somewhere There's Hope is a vocally acrobatic, positve song that it makes you wanna cry and smack anyone with negativity.
Missing You is so spectacular that it makes anyone that thinks that The Voice can't write without Neal and Jon, seem silly. Again vocally, it's just as sophisticated as you can get. And don't give me the studio magic theory, I heard him do it live.
All in all, a heartfelt release by a man who has the greatest voice anyone's ever heard at a time when music really needed a return of melodic rock's
all time king.
I love everything SP has ever done solo and with Journey. Don't get me started about Street Talk! Go Away is one of the most complete pop songs ever written. SP/Neal/Jon are the greatest writing trio ever in my opinion. But on there solo releases, we see who was the master craftsman of that group.
THE MAN, THE MYTH, THE LEGEND, THE COMPOSER, ......................THE VOICE!
Are you Steve Perry?
Saint John wrote:It was a vocally solid, but boring, album. The music is what makes the album shit. The magic of Journey simply wasn't there and record sales and radio play showed that.
madsplash wrote:Saint John wrote:It was a vocally solid, but boring, album. The music is what makes the album shit. The magic of Journey simply wasn't there and record sales and radio play showed that.
As opposed to what, the record sales and radio play of Arrival?
It's all relative.
Saint John wrote:It was a vocally solid, but boring, album. The music is what makes the album shit. The magic of Journey simply wasn't there and record sales and radio play showed that.
madsplash wrote:It's all relative.
wednesday's child wrote:madsplash wrote:It's all relative.
I think Dan wasn't talking about quality relative to sort-of concurrent releases by others,
but rather, relative to what Journey (with Perry) once put out --see past work for reference.
For me FTLOSM was very bland material, albeit sung by a great voice.
wech
madsplash wrote:I'm just a male, non-gay
Jeremey wrote:I thought it was a brilliant fuckin album. I waited and waited by the radio in my studio apartment as they were supposed to be debuting "You Better Wait," and I had read on AOL that some ham and egger had heard the song and it had an a capella beginning and was 100% Perry all the way. So when those first vocal harmonies came in I was floored. I waited and bought the CD and played it every second of every day. I looked at Perry as an elder who seemed weary by his worldly experience, and I felt if I just absorbed those melodies and messages I could somehow learn from osmosis what he meant in the whole cosmos of things.
Understand I had NEVER heard a new Journey or Perry CD when this record came out. I had LIVED on Journey's releases since Time 3, and it seemed as though finally the world was right. When I heard "Anyway," I was convinced that a new legacy was about to be reborn, and I remember listening to those SPIN messages from Jon Cain's studio as they wrote the new record, and how excited I was. When the single "When You Love A Woman" came out, I bought it at Walmart while on my way to a sales call and listened in the parking lot, and I actually had tears in my eyes during the song because I felt that things had actually fallen into place.
How young, naive, and misinformed I must have been at the time. Regardless. FTLOSM is a classic record that grooves too darkly and too deeply to be written off as a musical one-off, and I know that Perry tried in his way to make things right with Sony and the band, but he really just found himself jumping on that roller coaster one more time.....The Eagles made it look so clean and easy. When the real world settled down on his shoulders it was really a totally different story.
Deb wrote:Jeremey wrote:I thought it was a brilliant fuckin album. I waited and waited by the radio in my studio apartment as they were supposed to be debuting "You Better Wait," and I had read on AOL that some ham and egger had heard the song and it had an a capella beginning and was 100% Perry all the way. So when those first vocal harmonies came in I was floored. I waited and bought the CD and played it every second of every day. I looked at Perry as an elder who seemed weary by his worldly experience, and I felt if I just absorbed those melodies and messages I could somehow learn from osmosis what he meant in the whole cosmos of things.
Understand I had NEVER heard a new Journey or Perry CD when this record came out. I had LIVED on Journey's releases since Time 3, and it seemed as though finally the world was right. When I heard "Anyway," I was convinced that a new legacy was about to be reborn, and I remember listening to those SPIN messages from Jon Cain's studio as they wrote the new record, and how excited I was. When the single "When You Love A Woman" came out, I bought it at Walmart while on my way to a sales call and listened in the parking lot, and I actually had tears in my eyes during the song because I felt that things had actually fallen into place.
How young, naive, and misinformed I must have been at the time. Regardless. FTLOSM is a classic record that grooves too darkly and too deeply to be written off as a musical one-off, and I know that Perry tried in his way to make things right with Sony and the band, but he really just found himself jumping on that roller coaster one more time.....The Eagles made it look so clean and easy. When the real world settled down on his shoulders it was really a totally different story.
One of my faves too, have you ever performed that one?
Jeremey wrote:Deb wrote:Jeremey wrote:I thought it was a brilliant fuckin album. I waited and waited by the radio in my studio apartment as they were supposed to be debuting "You Better Wait," and I had read on AOL that some ham and egger had heard the song and it had an a capella beginning and was 100% Perry all the way. So when those first vocal harmonies came in I was floored. I waited and bought the CD and played it every second of every day. I looked at Perry as an elder who seemed weary by his worldly experience, and I felt if I just absorbed those melodies and messages I could somehow learn from osmosis what he meant in the whole cosmos of things.
Understand I had NEVER heard a new Journey or Perry CD when this record came out. I had LIVED on Journey's releases since Time 3, and it seemed as though finally the world was right. When I heard "Anyway," I was convinced that a new legacy was about to be reborn, and I remember listening to those SPIN messages from Jon Cain's studio as they wrote the new record, and how excited I was. When the single "When You Love A Woman" came out, I bought it at Walmart while on my way to a sales call and listened in the parking lot, and I actually had tears in my eyes during the song because I felt that things had actually fallen into place.
How young, naive, and misinformed I must have been at the time. Regardless. FTLOSM is a classic record that grooves too darkly and too deeply to be written off as a musical one-off, and I know that Perry tried in his way to make things right with Sony and the band, but he really just found himself jumping on that roller coaster one more time.....The Eagles made it look so clean and easy. When the real world settled down on his shoulders it was really a totally different story.
One of my faves too, have you ever performed that one?
Only at my house, with LarryNext Door laying down the geetar tracks. No such recording exists anymore.
Perry songs attemtpted by Frontiers:
Foolish Heart
Oh Sherrie
Strung Out
Then there was a song with an odd bridge from FTLSOM....Young Hearts Forever, covered while I was in the band Altura.
Jeremey wrote:Deb wrote:Jeremey wrote:I thought it was a brilliant fuckin album. I waited and waited by the radio in my studio apartment as they were supposed to be debuting "You Better Wait," and I had read on AOL that some ham and egger had heard the song and it had an a capella beginning and was 100% Perry all the way. So when those first vocal harmonies came in I was floored. I waited and bought the CD and played it every second of every day. I looked at Perry as an elder who seemed weary by his worldly experience, and I felt if I just absorbed those melodies and messages I could somehow learn from osmosis what he meant in the whole cosmos of things.
Understand I had NEVER heard a new Journey or Perry CD when this record came out. I had LIVED on Journey's releases since Time 3, and it seemed as though finally the world was right. When I heard "Anyway," I was convinced that a new legacy was about to be reborn, and I remember listening to those SPIN messages from Jon Cain's studio as they wrote the new record, and how excited I was. When the single "When You Love A Woman" came out, I bought it at Walmart while on my way to a sales call and listened in the parking lot, and I actually had tears in my eyes during the song because I felt that things had actually fallen into place.
How young, naive, and misinformed I must have been at the time. Regardless. FTLOSM is a classic record that grooves too darkly and too deeply to be written off as a musical one-off, and I know that Perry tried in his way to make things right with Sony and the band, but he really just found himself jumping on that roller coaster one more time.....The Eagles made it look so clean and easy. When the real world settled down on his shoulders it was really a totally different story.
One of my faves too, have you ever performed that one?
Only at my house, with LarryNext Door laying down the geetar tracks. No such recording exists anymore.
Perry songs attemtpted by Frontiers:
Foolish Heart
Oh Sherrie
Strung Out
Then there was a song with an odd bridge from FTLSOM....Young Hearts Forever, covered while I was in the band Altura.
Jeremey wrote:Deb wrote:Jeremey wrote:I thought it was a brilliant fuckin album. I waited and waited by the radio in my studio apartment as they were supposed to be debuting "You Better Wait," and I had read on AOL that some ham and egger had heard the song and it had an a capella beginning and was 100% Perry all the way. So when those first vocal harmonies came in I was floored. I waited and bought the CD and played it every second of every day. I looked at Perry as an elder who seemed weary by his worldly experience, and I felt if I just absorbed those melodies and messages I could somehow learn from osmosis what he meant in the whole cosmos of things.
Understand I had NEVER heard a new Journey or Perry CD when this record came out. I had LIVED on Journey's releases since Time 3, and it seemed as though finally the world was right. When I heard "Anyway," I was convinced that a new legacy was about to be reborn, and I remember listening to those SPIN messages from Jon Cain's studio as they wrote the new record, and how excited I was. When the single "When You Love A Woman" came out, I bought it at Walmart while on my way to a sales call and listened in the parking lot, and I actually had tears in my eyes during the song because I felt that things had actually fallen into place.
How young, naive, and misinformed I must have been at the time. Regardless. FTLOSM is a classic record that grooves too darkly and too deeply to be written off as a musical one-off, and I know that Perry tried in his way to make things right with Sony and the band, but he really just found himself jumping on that roller coaster one more time.....The Eagles made it look so clean and easy. When the real world settled down on his shoulders it was really a totally different story.
One of my faves too, have you ever performed that one?
Only at my house, with LarryNext Door laying down the geetar tracks. No such recording exists anymore.
Perry songs attemtpted by Frontiers:
Foolish Heart
Oh Sherrie
Strung Out
Then there was a song with an odd bridge from FTLSOM....Young Hearts Forever, covered while I was in the band Altura.
Gunbot wrote:Jeremey wrote:Deb wrote:Jeremey wrote:I thought it was a brilliant fuckin album. I waited and waited by the radio in my studio apartment as they were supposed to be debuting "You Better Wait," and I had read on AOL that some ham and egger had heard the song and it had an a capella beginning and was 100% Perry all the way. So when those first vocal harmonies came in I was floored. I waited and bought the CD and played it every second of every day. I looked at Perry as an elder who seemed weary by his worldly experience, and I felt if I just absorbed those melodies and messages I could somehow learn from osmosis what he meant in the whole cosmos of things.
Understand I had NEVER heard a new Journey or Perry CD when this record came out. I had LIVED on Journey's releases since Time 3, and it seemed as though finally the world was right. When I heard "Anyway," I was convinced that a new legacy was about to be reborn, and I remember listening to those SPIN messages from Jon Cain's studio as they wrote the new record, and how excited I was. When the single "When You Love A Woman" came out, I bought it at Walmart while on my way to a sales call and listened in the parking lot, and I actually had tears in my eyes during the song because I felt that things had actually fallen into place.
How young, naive, and misinformed I must have been at the time. Regardless. FTLOSM is a classic record that grooves too darkly and too deeply to be written off as a musical one-off, and I know that Perry tried in his way to make things right with Sony and the band, but he really just found himself jumping on that roller coaster one more time.....The Eagles made it look so clean and easy. When the real world settled down on his shoulders it was really a totally different story.
One of my faves too, have you ever performed that one?
Only at my house, with LarryNext Door laying down the geetar tracks. No such recording exists anymore.
Perry songs attemtpted by Frontiers:
Foolish Heart
Oh Sherrie
Strung Out
Then there was a song with an odd bridge from FTLSOM....Young Hearts Forever, covered while I was in the band Altura.
No “Don't fight it”? To be honest, that and “Foolish heart” are really the only Perry songs I like outside of Journey. I wish I could have seen Perry sing it on the Japanese shows from the Frontiers tour.
Jeremey wrote:Jeremey wrote:Deb wrote:Jeremey wrote:I thought it was a brilliant fuckin album. I waited and waited by the radio in my studio apartment as they were supposed to be debuting "You Better Wait," and I had read on AOL that some ham and egger had heard the song and it had an a capella beginning and was 100% Perry all the way. So when those first vocal harmonies came in I was floored. I waited and bought the CD and played it every second of every day. I looked at Perry as an elder who seemed weary by his worldly experience, and I felt if I just absorbed those melodies and messages I could somehow learn from osmosis what he meant in the whole cosmos of things.
Understand I had NEVER heard a new Journey or Perry CD when this record came out. I had LIVED on Journey's releases since Time 3, and it seemed as though finally the world was right. When I heard "Anyway," I was convinced that a new legacy was about to be reborn, and I remember listening to those SPIN messages from Jon Cain's studio as they wrote the new record, and how excited I was. When the single "When You Love A Woman" came out, I bought it at Walmart while on my way to a sales call and listened in the parking lot, and I actually had tears in my eyes during the song because I felt that things had actually fallen into place.
How young, naive, and misinformed I must have been at the time. Regardless. FTLOSM is a classic record that grooves too darkly and too deeply to be written off as a musical one-off, and I know that Perry tried in his way to make things right with Sony and the band, but he really just found himself jumping on that roller coaster one more time.....The Eagles made it look so clean and easy. When the real world settled down on his shoulders it was really a totally different story.
One of my faves too, have you ever performed that one?
Only at my house, with LarryNext Door laying down the geetar tracks. No such recording exists anymore.
Perry songs attemtpted by Frontiers:
Foolish Heart
Oh Sherrie
Strung Out
Then there was a song with an odd bridge from FTLSOM....Young Hearts Forever, covered while I was in the band Altura.
Oh and I did Missing You by myself, and I want Frontiers to cover "One More Time" from YBW+5 that I lost and have no copy of to learn from.
finalfight wrote:Jeremey wrote:Jeremey wrote:Deb wrote:Jeremey wrote:I thought it was a brilliant fuckin album. I waited and waited by the radio in my studio apartment as they were supposed to be debuting "You Better Wait," and I had read on AOL that some ham and egger had heard the song and it had an a capella beginning and was 100% Perry all the way. So when those first vocal harmonies came in I was floored. I waited and bought the CD and played it every second of every day. I looked at Perry as an elder who seemed weary by his worldly experience, and I felt if I just absorbed those melodies and messages I could somehow learn from osmosis what he meant in the whole cosmos of things.
Understand I had NEVER heard a new Journey or Perry CD when this record came out. I had LIVED on Journey's releases since Time 3, and it seemed as though finally the world was right. When I heard "Anyway," I was convinced that a new legacy was about to be reborn, and I remember listening to those SPIN messages from Jon Cain's studio as they wrote the new record, and how excited I was. When the single "When You Love A Woman" came out, I bought it at Walmart while on my way to a sales call and listened in the parking lot, and I actually had tears in my eyes during the song because I felt that things had actually fallen into place.
How young, naive, and misinformed I must have been at the time. Regardless. FTLOSM is a classic record that grooves too darkly and too deeply to be written off as a musical one-off, and I know that Perry tried in his way to make things right with Sony and the band, but he really just found himself jumping on that roller coaster one more time.....The Eagles made it look so clean and easy. When the real world settled down on his shoulders it was really a totally different story.
One of my faves too, have you ever performed that one?
Only at my house, with LarryNext Door laying down the geetar tracks. No such recording exists anymore.
Perry songs attemtpted by Frontiers:
Foolish Heart
Oh Sherrie
Strung Out
Then there was a song with an odd bridge from FTLSOM....Young Hearts Forever, covered while I was in the band Altura.
Oh and I did Missing You by myself, and I want Frontiers to cover "One More Time" from YBW+5 that I lost and have no copy of to learn from.
You also recorded some amazing vocals for a version of 'You Better Wait'...
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