The_Noble_Cause wrote:Monker wrote:And, earlier in the same video, Steve Smith talks about the fact that he was doing studio work and that his band, "Vital Information" was now touring....so there was a downside to the reunion, too. All of that had to be put on hold. He also talked about the frustrations of waiting for Perry to make a decision on his hip.
That doesn't change anything I said.
I didn't say it did. It puts into context of the totality of what Steve Smith was saying in that interview...which is repeating everything I have already said in this conversation.
When the brotherhood reunited against all odds, he bailed.
LOL. There hasn't been a true "brotherhood" in Journey since Gregg Rollie left. It has been nothing but a power struggle; between Herbie and Perry, and Perry and Journey...and now between Schon and Cain.
The very fact that you say "reunited" means that Steve Smith didn't bail on Journey, but Journey bailed on Steve Smith. He was flat out NOT INTERESTED in pop rock bands. That is where he was at that point in time. After being fired, he left Journey and rock behind and built a new career in Jazz. IMO, I doubt VERY MUCH he would have stayed in Journey past a TBF tour...he was not into pop/rock music as his career path. As he said, he set aside a certain amount of time to do the Journey reunion. When that time was up, he went back to Jazz. The Arrival version of Journey wasn't going to change that.
Monker wrote:What you are not accepting is that Steve Smith did not move on from Journey in 1998. He moved on from Journey in 1986 and built a successful career in Jazz. Again, earlier in the same video Steve Smith says that he looks back and sees that that entire time in Journey he was really still learning...alluding to his following career in Jazz. His loyalties were to Jazz, not to Journey. He didn't need Journey, as Ross did, for example....he was doing fine without Journey. He wouldn't even tour or become a member of The Storm...of course he's not going to do it in the aftermath of TBF....and delay his Jazz career even longer.
I don't care.
Then you are in denial of reality.
Once Schon and Cain has successfully rebuilt Journey, he came back on-board.
Wow, that is just not true again.
Journey's post-Perry peak was a long time ago. By the time Steve Smith toured with them, they were a touring band and a Vegas residency act. They never record. Eclipse was a hard belly-flop. They are wrought with scandal; between Schon's future ex-wife, Jonathan and his future ex-wife and their religious beliefs, and Dean's drug addiction scandal. By the time Steve Smith joined, they were falling down the mountain and trying to not injure their hips. Lately, Neal has been so frustrated with the rest of the band that he had to start his own version of Journey to keep himself satisfied.
When they were touring theaters and Augeri was receiving death threats, he was nowhere to be found.
Sure he was. From his webite:
From 1998-2005 Smith produced and played on 16 electric jazz albums for the Tone Center label with a revolving cast of talented players including Dave Liebman, Frank Gambale, Stu Hamm, Tom Coster, Larry Coryell, Jerry Goodman, Howard Levy, Steve Marcus, Scott Henderson and Victor Wooten. In 2009 Tone Center release a compilation album called: The Best of Steve Smith-The Tone Center Collection. In 2004 Steve toured with Soulbop, and all-star funk-jazz group featuring Bill Evans, Randy Brecker, David Kikoski, Victor Bailey and Hiram Bullock. In 2005 the group released an album entitled Soulbop Band Live.