fredinator wrote:portland wrote:fredinator wrote:portland wrote:It goes both ways on that quote......
No Perry = No Journey of Today = NO DD
Sorry but that is the truth....unless you are a fan of instrumentals

Well that is your reality since Journey to you = the DD. I'm a fan of Journey before there was a dirty dozen. I actually love the 70s hits more than the arena rock hits. Neal was there for both eras and cowrote most of the songs, therefore, Neal = Journey.
I love the 70's stuff as well.....but for me I love the Journey that is played on the radio (today) and yes Jana I believe it's all three of them that made it what it is...but the voice is what people tend to indentify with..hence the whole legacy sound that has been touted to no end.
I don't get this. The legacy sound started with the band Journey. That band began in 19
74 or 75. Neal founded the band and it is his sound that is stamped on it.
Think 1973. I think it's pretty safe to assume the legacy sound is more or less referring to Perry's voice, and don't think Neal was concentrating too much on what happened pre-Perry? Would you say this excerpt from 8/2005 interview tends to indicate that?:
"Schon formed Journey with Rolie in 1973 after they both parted ways with Carlos Santana, whose band Schon had joined at age 15.
Singer Steve Augeri sounds an awful lot like Steve Perry, and while Schon says he considered getting a singer who sounded nothing like Perry and striking out for completely new territory, they'd then have had "the conflict of our catalog.
We've got a tremendous catalog of lots of hit songs, which I wrote either a half or a third of" with Cain. "So we felt that those songs were ours as well as Steve's, and we had every right to do those songs.
"[And] everything wasn't written around the guitar, like in Van Halen." Switching singers from David Lee Roth to Sammy Hagar, Schon says, "was a much easier move for them, because everything was based around [guitarist Edward Van Halen]."
"In Journey, all the hit songs we had were based around Steve Perry's vocals. And so in order to play those songs, someone has to have resemblance."
Schon adds that drummer Deen Castronovo "sounds more like Steve Perry than Steve Augeri does," and is singing a few songs on these shows."
This was in an article: "Perry said in GQ article that sometimes he hates hearing his voice. Fortunately Neal has no problem with it for he is on his third sound-a-like."