Moderator: Andrew
STORY_TELLER wrote:That spontaneous melody twist at 1:44 gave me the Perry chills. So cool.
FamilyMan wrote:Teleprompter guy must have had the night off.
tater1977 wrote:Faithfully JOURNEY 3-1-1983 Tokyo
http://youtu.be/806Kwiqes7Y
Working on a new arrangement for the taping?
slucero wrote:AP = Ain't Perry
The Sushi Hunter wrote:slucero wrote:AP = Ain't Perry
Yeah but take a closer listen to any other venues you've ever heard SP sing this same song, both live and recorded. He's never sounded like this except for in this very audio clip on youtube, which by coincidence was uploaded in '09. Is there any other youtube vids of this exact recording that were uploaded pre-AP era Journey? If so, I'll say I'm completely incorrect without any reservation.
AP has more treble in his voice while SP has more bass than AP. In this audio it is obvious the singer has a lot more treble than bass and has no power in the lower notes. SP was not like that. I'm no SP analyist but I do know AP when I hear him, especially audio of him from 20 plus years ago singing this song.
The Sushi Hunter wrote:Glad you like it. Seriously though, that was in 1988 and at that time Arnel was still getting better. I've got audio/video footage of him doing these songs both in 86'/87' up until throughout the entire year of '90 in Cal-Jams and he was continuously getting better and better at them and many others as well when comparing these years to each other. The footage clearly shows his progress throughout those years.
annie89509 wrote:Don’t really get where Sushi’s coming from. Okay, to the casual ears, may not hear much difference…to the hardcore fans?…certainly, we know that’s SP singing in the yt audio…however bad it may be.
AP’s tone is close to the Frontiers’ voiced SP, I’d agree; but, like Slucy noted: AP is no SP. And it’s not about comparing range or power or who is now the better singer. It is SP having the distinctive style and voice that is one of a kind (to the hardcore ears).
annie89509 wrote:It is SP having the distinctive style and voice that is one of a kind (to the hardcore ears).
Gideon wrote:annie89509 wrote:It is SP having the distinctive style and voice that is one of a kind (to the hardcore ears).
This isn't really insightful. Anyone who's familiar with any singer to "hardcore" levels would be able to distinguish that person from imitators.
kgdjpubs wrote:Gideon wrote:annie89509 wrote:It is SP having the distinctive style and voice that is one of a kind (to the hardcore ears).
This isn't really insightful. Anyone who's familiar with any singer to "hardcore" levels would be able to distinguish that person from imitators.
actually, I'm not so sure about that. There have been several debates on this board as to who was singing what. I can think of one fairly recent one with a Cain demo that garnered all sorts of suggestions. Being a hardcore fan has nothing to do with being able to pick a voice out of a crowd--especially if you have several voices that are similar. It has more to do with being able to pick out a tone when you hear it on unfamiliar material. The vocal tone is the one thing that can't be copied.
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