Some have stopped believing in Journey
By Alan Sculley
Virginian-Pilot correspondent
© September 27, 2012
http://hamptonroads.com/2012/09/some-ha ... ng-journey
Ever since Journey reformed in 1998 without singer Steve Perry, the band has had to deal with the fact that someone else is singing its signature classic rock hits like “Don’t Stop Believin’,” “Open Arms,” “Separate Ways (Worlds Apart)” and “Anyway You Want It.”
As the band tours its way toward Tuesday night’s gig at the Ted Constant Convocation Center in Norfolk, with Pat Benatar and Loverboy, Perry’s shadow perhaps looms larger than ever. Credit that to Journey’s renewed popularity after having its Perry-led music featured in popular TV shows like “The Sopranos” and “Glee.”
The exposure has provided the veteran band with new fans, some who don’t even know about the Perry divide or that the band is on its third singer since then in Arnel Pineda. And there are a significant number of fans who want Perry back and haven’t fully accepted Journey in its current form.
“You still have haters out there – sure you do,” said Deen Castronovo, the band’s drummer, noting that he understands their feelings. “I’ve said it in a million interviews. Steve Perry is a god to me. … I mean, to me he’s one of the greatest singers of my generation, and the fans feel the same way, some of them.”
And some of them don’t feel the same way about Pineda.
“Yeah, they can be kind of nasty. They can be rough, and you see the reviews,” Castronovo said. “We have a lot of racial things sometimes (aimed at Pineda, who is from the Philippines), and that’s kind of tough. We have a lot of ‘Journey without Steve Perry is a karaoke band.’ OK, if that’s what you feel, but you know what, we still go out there and we deliver.”
Just to clarify, the band is fully behind the 44-year-old Pineda, who was discovered by Journey through YouTube.
“Let’s put it this way, if Arnel decides to leave this band, the band is done,” Castronovo said. “We’re not going to go find another singer. It’s just silly to do that.”
Besides, the recent history isn’t too good for Journey and vocalists. And when “The Sopranos” HBO series ended in 2007 by playing Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin,’ ” the band didn’t even have a singer to capitalize on the renewed interest. So, after a search, they hired Pineda. It’s been a good union.
“He goes out there and he gives it his all, he really does. And we respect him and love him like a brother, and I think he knows that. He feels that with us. … The chemistry is right. And with other singers, the chemistry wasn’t as good. When he came in and auditioned, dude, we knew.”
Journey without Perry, though, didn’t return to arena-filling popularity right away.
“I remember Jonathan (Cain, keyboardist) saying, ‘You know what, we have to re-educate the people. This is not going to be easy,’ ” Castronovo said. “We were playing to 1,500 people a night, and they were all arms-crossed, going, ‘There’s no way that this band is going to sound good without Steve Perry.’ And it took us a good five years of constant touring and constant work and constant re-education for people to realize, you know what, no matter who’s in that band, it’s the songs that are timeless. It’s the songs that people connect with. It doesn’t matter who’s playing them or singing them.”
Alan Sculley, alanlastword@gmail.com