Moderator: Andrew
cudaclan wrote:The (vintage interview) footage was poorly executed. Lowe and Costello are of a different genre of music than Journey. Notice the retraction later to reference Jefferson Starship. Both groups restructured and reinvented themselves. Disco & Punk Rock cultures were head-to-toe at the time. Rock & Roll (AOR) was the stepchild of the music industry in some locations.
slucero wrote:If I'm not mistaken Rolling Stone was the one who coined the "corporate rock" moniker... and since they were the premier information source on anything rock~n~roll back then... it was over for Journey (as far as Rolling Stone credibility) after that.. hard to fight that label when Rolling Stone the only game in town..
DrFU wrote:There was also (still is) a sexist, swaggering, macho thing going on. Rock and roll that appealed to women was suspect and ridiculed by "real" rockers and male rock fans, who were the vast majority and opinion leaders. I could go see Sabbath with my high school boyfriend and that was fine, but if he went to see Chicago with me, his friends would never let him live it down.
Arianddu wrote:when did Journey make those beer commercials? Was it around this time, or a little later? Because I think that had a hell of a lot to do with the perception of having sold out and becoming commercial rock.
wednesday's child wrote:slucero wrote:If I'm not mistaken Rolling Stone was the one who coined the "corporate rock" moniker... and since they were the premier information source on anything rock~n~roll back then... it was over for Journey (as far as Rolling Stone credibility) after that.. hard to fight that label when Rolling Stone the only game in town..
Chronology check?
I think most are familiar with RS' bias against Journey, but I'm not sure it necessarily predates
the subject radio interview, at least sufficiently to have influenced Lowe's comment. Was Journey
playing large arenas in May of 1978 --to the point of earning the "arena/corporate rock" tag?DrFU wrote:There was also (still is) a sexist, swaggering, macho thing going on. Rock and roll that appealed to women was suspect and ridiculed by "real" rockers and male rock fans, who were the vast majority and opinion leaders. I could go see Sabbath with my high school boyfriend and that was fine, but if he went to see Chicago with me, his friends would never let him live it down.
I think I can imagine what you're talking about (I didn't grow up around bullshit like that).
With respect to my question though, that can't have been what was behind Nick Lowe's
comments: his kind of music seems like it would have been no less female-friendly than
what Journey was putting out.
StyxCollector wrote:Remember that at that time in the USA Journey and Elvis Costello were on the same label (CBS/Columbia), so it's not a stretch that he would have heard some of their music at some point even though they were not big in the UK. Elvis was starting to break in the states in that 78/79 timeframe as well, so he would have also heard them on the radio and such, too.
slucero wrote:wednesday's child wrote:slucero wrote:If I'm not mistaken Rolling Stone was the one who coined the "corporate rock" moniker... and since they were the premier information source on anything rock~n~roll back then... it was over for Journey (as far as Rolling Stone credibility) after that.. hard to fight that label when Rolling Stone the only game in town..
Chronology check?
I think most are familiar with RS' bias against Journey, but I'm not sure it necessarily predates
the subject radio interview, at least sufficiently to have influenced Lowe's comment. Was Journey
playing large arenas in May of 1978 --to the point of earning the "arena/corporate rock" tag?
I was in High School... 1976-1980.. and Journey was always constantly ridiculed as "corporate rock"... and I grew up in the SF Bay Area....
Rick wrote:I never "got" Elvis Costello. He sounded like he had balls in his mouth when he sang.
Rick wrote:I never "got" Elvis Costello. He sounded like he had balls in his mouth when he sang.
StyxCollector wrote:Rick wrote:I never "got" Elvis Costello. He sounded like he had balls in his mouth when he sang.
I love Elvis' stuff. Not uniformly as some of it's not very good (could really say that with any band), but he's definitely one of the best live performers I've ever seen either with a full band or basically in an unplugged setting (like the tour he did with Steve Nieve about 10 or so years ago). Elvis, Joe Jackson, and Graham Parker all got lumped in together but they're all very different. Graham Parker is the only one I've never warmed up to.
wednesday's child wrote:Rick wrote:I never "got" Elvis Costello. He sounded like he had balls in his mouth when he sang.
Dude, it frightens me that you even HAVE an idea what singing-with-balls-in-mouth would sound like.
@Steve Austin (a man barely alive, lol)...
Most old-skool Journey fans in the Philippines are too busy making a living to be fairly represented online
(I semi-retired early, on a couple of windfalls). Red Horse? Carlsberg?? San Miguel or GTFO.
wednesday's child wrote:Arianddu wrote:when did Journey make those beer commercials? Was it around this time, or a little later? Because I think that had a hell of a lot to do with the perception of having sold out and becoming commercial rock.
Holy crap... I didn't even know they'd DONE beer ads!!![]()
Thanks.
Did some quick digging around:
Are these 3 radio-jingles for Budweiser what you're referring to?
http://www.journey-tribute.com/journey/ ... urney.html
They're attributed as from 1979: "for the Evolution Tour", or
IOW, the year after the Lowe and Costello radio-interview.
The jingles are also available on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_xFeysAYmaM
Arianddu wrote:Yep, those are the ones. As I understand it, Herbie got the band to do it as one way to keep them out of debt to the record label. He did a lot of that sort of stuff early on to keep them out of debt while on the tours, so the label (Columbia?) wouldn't have financial strings to pull on them. The result was a fairly heavy focus on making money pretty much any way they could, including merchandise, from around 1977 on - which is what I attribute a lot of the 'corporate rock' labelling to, and not the music. Keeping them out of debt was pretty sensible, but I don't think the music press saw financial savvy as being part of the Rock'N'Roll Legend. Besides which, I don't think Herbie made any secret that he intended to make a lot of money out of Journey - he wanted them to be successful any way it took. He did a lot of smart marketing of the band, stuff that is commonplace now, but at the time, I think a lot of the music press just saw him as someone out to make money from the music.
That's where the macho attitude Dr Fu was talking about comes in - I read a stack of Creem and Rolling Stone magazines from the seventies a while ago. The reviews were totally ego-wank works, as much about the reviewer as the music/the bands, and even more so in some cases. I remember one that was 3/4 about the reviewer getting up in the morning and drinking to fix his hangover before he eventually got to putting the album on to listen to. As I recall, the review took nearly 2 columns, and the only actual words that were about the album he was suposed to be reviewing was 'the mellow opening tones lulled me into a false sense of security before the lead singer's voice made my ears bleed.'
The reviews were all about the ego of the reviewer, dictating what was cool and what wasn't. Very little was genuinely about the music. I suspect a fair few rock journalists decided Herbie's focus on making money just wasn't cool, and so screw what the band did, or what their music was, or what reasons Herbie had for what he was doing, they were corporate rock and that was that - and the dumb masses that read their rags followed the band wagon with what was deemed to be cool and what wasn't.
wednesday's child wrote:StyxCollector wrote:Remember that at that time in the USA Journey and Elvis Costello were on the same label (CBS/Columbia), so it's not a stretch that he would have heard some of their music at some point even though they were not big in the UK. Elvis was starting to break in the states in that 78/79 timeframe as well, so he would have also heard them on the radio and such, too.
Thanks for the label heads-up, US-wise.
If Costello was familiar with Journey, then Lowe likely would have been too.slucero wrote:wednesday's child wrote:slucero wrote:If I'm not mistaken Rolling Stone was the one who coined the "corporate rock" moniker... and since they were the premier information source on anything rock~n~roll back then... it was over for Journey (as far as Rolling Stone credibility) after that.. hard to fight that label when Rolling Stone the only game in town..
Chronology check?
I think most are familiar with RS' bias against Journey, but I'm not sure it necessarily predates
the subject radio interview, at least sufficiently to have influenced Lowe's comment. Was Journey
playing large arenas in May of 1978 --to the point of earning the "arena/corporate rock" tag?
I was in High School... 1976-1980.. and Journey was always constantly ridiculed as "corporate rock"... and I grew up in the SF Bay Area....
My HS years were 79-82, albeit an ocean removed from your context, which
may explain why I only started hearing about the "corporate" bullshit in
the mid-80's.
Rick wrote:A concert can definitely change my taste. I NEVER cared for Simon and Garfunkel until I saw them on the 25th Anniversary Rock n Roll Hall of Fame show. Now I listen to them. I know I'm fucked up.
Arkansas wrote:Rick wrote:A concert can definitely change my taste. I NEVER cared for Simon and Garfunkel until I saw them on the 25th Anniversary Rock n Roll Hall of Fame show. Now I listen to them. I know I'm fucked up.
Movies can do the same. I never really cared for Clooney or Torturro until I saw 'Oh Brother Where Art Thou'.
later~
Arkansas wrote:
Movies can do the same. I never really cared for Clooney or Torturro until I saw 'Oh Brother Where Art Thou'.
wednesday's child wrote:Arkansas wrote:
Movies can do the same. I never really cared for Clooney or Torturro until I saw 'Oh Brother Where Art Thou'.
The Odysseia can bring out the best in performers, lol.
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