Gunbot wrote:This whole thing with Perry holding the group over a barrel so they could continue on as Journey doesn't wash. Was not Dennis DeYoung a founding member of Styx. Didn't The Judge tell him to pound sand when he wanted to stop the group from using the name after his departure. From what I see he doesn't get anything from Styx close to what Perry has been rumored to have gotten. Perry wasn't even a founding member yet you are trying to tell me he has more sway than Dennis would have? If Neal signed an agreement to give Perry this and that over the years then it's his own fault for not standing up for himself or his group. The case with Styx Shows which way the court would have taken it.
You seem to operate under this assumption that the court system is infallible and completely just; the fact that the courts decided
one way in one court case doesn't mean that they'd do the same thing in another, even if the circumstances are similar.
This is not the case.
Perry is getting whatever Neal and company decided was his right to get.
Given that Herbie Herbert and Neal Schon
both have went on record that they are pissed at what Perry was getting from the post-Perry lineup's touring, I'm going to have to call bullshit.
Sounds more like Perry is getting whatever "Perry and company [his lawyer] decided was his right to get." A six-way split, according to Herbie.
Whether you like it or not, it was their decision.
Since you clearly have an intimate knowledge of the case, why don't you tell us what the alternative was.
I think co-founder Roger Waters from Pink Floyd tried the same shit and he didn't get awarded a sweetheart deal out of it either.
It doesn't matter. You're comparing two different cases and concluding that since one turned out this way, the subsequent case should yield the same decision. That's not how it works.
The bottom line is that Steve Perry was mooching off of five men working their asses off. It's clever, yeah, but inexcusably unethical; hardly something that anyone should be trying to defend or argue.
Did Jon and Neal get paid for Perry's tour in '94? I'm thinking not.
'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).'