Rockindeano wrote:Easy argument to make. Contrary to what the brainwashed here at MR tend to believe, there are other and better managers out there than Herbie Herbert you know. Perry isn't stupid, his horrible grammar on BTM aside, he wasn't going to remain in the San Joaquin valley in 100 degree heat and dust constructing turkey coops. Someone would have found him. While Schon and perry had definite chemistry, Perry could have made it anyway, with another guitarist. It would have sounded different to be sure, but he would have made it, no doubt. Now on the other hand, Schon, Valory, Rolie and Herbert weren't making it when perry came along, were they? Playing the Wharf in front of lobster eating tourists on Sunday afternoons for 2 bucks wasn't going to rocket them to to the top of the charts.
That's just it, Deano, you can't make that sort of argument. It's speculative in nature. Neal Schon was a child prodigy who, apparently, impressed giants like Eric Clapton and Carlos Santana to no end as a mere teenager; connections Steve Perry simply did not have at the time he joined Journey. And yet you tell me without a glimmer of doubt that he would have no career without Steve Perry? And in contrast, you have a man who lacked those connections and that foundation -- someone who admitted that he was on the verge of "hanging up his rock and roll shoes" -- and you state, matter-of-fact, that he would have made it?
There's no basis for that. The fact of the matter is that as his options were fading, Herbie Herbert, Neal Schon, and Gregg Rolie gave Steve Perry his career. It happened to be mutually beneficial, as he was the catalyst to breathe new life into that band.
'Nothing was bigger for Journey than 1981’s “Escape” album. “I have to attribute that to Jonathan coming in and joining the writing team,” Steve Perry (Feb 2012).'