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JOURNEY
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www.journeytheband.com
JOURNEY
GENERATIONS
NEAL
SCHON - JONATHAN CAIN - ROSS VALORY - STEVE AUGERI - DEEN CASTRONOVO
Journey have shaped the way that generations view rock music. Now,
with the release of Generations, Journey have refocused
the way they view rock music.
“We did a show
right after 9/11, and we were scared to death to go out there,”
says keyboardist Jonathan Cain, who along with guitarist Neal Schon,
forms Journey’s creative core. “The manager of the fair
in York, PA said that there were 5,000 Journey fans out there that
wanted to see a show. We told him that it didn’t seem right,
and he said, ‘The firemen are out there doing their jobs,
you do your’s—go out there and play, heal their souls.’”
Cain pauses, but what
he says next defines Journey’s past, present and future. “We
played, and in our quiet little way, we did heal their souls, if
only just for the moment. There were American flags flying in the
crowd, and we took one onstage and took our bow with it, and I thought,
‘Yeah, this is alright…’ What else can we do?
That moment changed me.”
While that moment may
not have translated into the same crystallized vision for every
member of the band—Cain and Schon, bassist Ross Valory, frontman
Steve Augeri and drummer Deen Castronovo now form the longest-lasting
version of Journey, having been touring and recording for the past
eight years—it has made its mark in the form of Generations,
an album that capsulizes more than 30 years of history and sales
in excess of 75 million albums, into 70-minutes of unadulterated
faith in the rejuvenating powers of rock ‘n’ roll. Hope
lingers amidst Cain’s keyboards, passion fuels the fire of
Schon’s guitars, and an optimistic faith resonates in the
voice of Augeri. Valory and Castronovo provide the backbone, two
pillars of strength and power that lay the foundation for the band’s
13-song, epic slice of America. There’s a familiarity that
even the most casual Journey fan will embrace, and a musical and
spiritual awakening that longtime fans will abandon themselves to.
“Jon and I got
together and looked at our past on this record,” says Schon.
“The strongest records we’ve done are Escape
and Frontiers, and we took a look at the music on those
records and said, ‘Let’s just go back to what we had
going on there, the mix of rock and Motown—less pop, more
rock and soul.’”
Coupled with that heightened
musical focus is a lyrical tone that swirls Journey’s optimistic
swagger with what are, at times, profound snapshots of life in America
in 2005. “Not to say that there’s less fluff, but as
the band matured, there are more songs that mature men feel more
comfortable writing about and relating to,” says Augeri. “You
can sing about negativity all you want, because that’s what
we go through every day, but we’re all optimists, and if there’s
a ray of hope, it’s nice to bring attention to it. You can’t
have the light, without the dark—When you expose some light
on the dark, and put a positive spin on it, you’ve got a Journey
song.”
Generations
is Journey firing with all five cylinders—quite literally,
as each member of the band sings lead vocals on the album.
“We’re holding true to our roots, but we still get to
experiment, and I really don’t know that we’ve had this
chance before,” says Castronovo. The drummer made his lead-singing
debut for Journey on the live circuit, where he’s handled
vocals on “Mother Father” and “Keep On Runnin’”
for years, but he makes his recording debut at the vocal helm with
two tracks on Generations, “A Better Life”
and “Never Too Late.” “Neal, Jon and Jack Blades
[Night Ranger] wrote ‘Never Too Late,’ and when I got
out of rehab—just before the release of the DVD in 2001—they
were all standing there and played the song for me. It was heavy,
I got really teary, and it was real emotional—So when Steve
said, ‘You know what, buddy? You can have that song, too,’
it was just incredible. I did background vocals on Arrival,
but this is the first time I’ve ever really sang on a record,
and it’s just amazing. I love that we’ve got the freedom
to explore these new directions.”
Valory shares Castronovo’s
excitement.
“It’s a
tradition that carried over from the last year of performing, when
everyone was singing at least one song on tour,” says the
bassist. “We didn’t plan on it, but it ended up carrying
into the creation of this album, which is unique for Journey.”
Just as unique, is Valory’s
contribution. “Generations has quite a variety of
music, some of which someone might not even recognize as Journey—Especially
when I sing, which is more like Billy Gibbons [ZZ Top] and Dr. John.
In the past, Jon and Neal have tended to hone their influences to
things that are more Journey-like, but in the case of this album,
they didn’t do that. With that, and the flavors that Augeri’s
writing brought, we decided to open things up a bit. There are new
voices, new tones, new ideas, and whole new flavors.”
Case in point, “Gone
Crazy,” which sounds just as suited to Bourbon Street, as
it does alongside some of Journey’s more adventurous excursions,
boasting a musical fusion topped by Valory’s blues-hued, gravel-throated
vocals. “The song was written for Neal to sing, but he told
me to try it with my low end, and put some grit on it…I don’t
know how it happened, but all of a sudden I’m the band’s
suburban soul man!”
Not as surprising, are
the contributions of frontman Steve Augeri, whose airtight vocals
are joined by his songwriting savvy on Generations. From
the soft, supple metamorphous that carries the piano-driven “Butterfly
(She Flies Alone),” to the empowering, melodic rush of “Believe,”
and through the closing heights of “Beyond The Clouds,”
a song inspired by the therapeutic sanctity of a post-9/11, cross-country
flight from his New York home, to Journey’s San Francisco
headquarters, Augeri’s vocals are as effervescent and spirited
as any in Journey’s catalog. “These guys push me,”
the frontman says of his bandmates. “I was always content
to sit back, but they pick me up and bring me to a level that I
never dreamed of reaching.”
As has long been the
case with Journey, the bands creative core revolves around Schon
and Cain, the guitar-slinging virtuoso, and the band’s primary
lyricist and spiritual springboard.
“‘A Place
In Your Heart’ and ‘Faith In The Heartland’ were
written around the same period that I wrote the stuff for Sammy
Hagar that would become [side project] Soul Sirkus,” says
Schon. “I started working on ‘A Place In Your Heart’
a couple of years ago, but I never forced it to come out. There
were a lot of changes, and it took a while to flourish and come
out in a natural way. Even at the last moment, before we went into
the studio, I changed the guitar solo and simplified it even more
so, so the guitar could just fly a little more.”
And fly Generations
does, from the frenetic pacing and pro-troops stance of the Iraq-inspired
“Out Of Harms Way,” to the racing guitars that Schon
sings over as “In Self-Defense” erupts from a volcanic
musical epicenter, to the comforting warmth that casts an energizing
glow over “A Better Life,” and through the acoustic
strains of Cain’s “The Private Family.”
While the tracks are
as musically diverse as night and day, they all share one thing
in common—the bond of being written and performed by Journey,
a band that has become synonymous with the landscape of popular
music in America.
“A lot of the
lyrics from Generations came from being on the road and
getting different points of view from around the country, taking
the temperature of those different towns and places,” says
Cain, pointing out album opener “Faith In The Heartland,”
in particular. “We see stores closing, and cities that are
just hanging on by a thread, but there’s still a sense of
optimism that hangs on. There’s an interesting division in
this country, a yin and a yang, but I’m definitely more interested
in the faith, and the almost naïve optimism that many Americans
have. Now, in the midst of all the insanity, there still seems to
be sanity, and I’m most interested in that, the fabric that
has kept holding everything together since 9/11.
“Songs have to
be at a crossroads, watching and witnessing the times that are important
in our lives,” he continues. “As songwriters, we have
to be the watchers of delicate moments, that’s our job. When
I sing ‘Faith In The Heartland,’ the crowds stand up
and are with us—even though they might not know the song yet,
they know the message. Just like, ‘Only the young can
say…’ I’m picking up where I left off, because
that, to me, is the promise of what Journey could do as an American
band, and what fresh statement we can make… I feel like we
have a mission now—we need to take people’s temperature,
and we need to observe, watch, listen and feel. We need to be the
soul-keepers, and if we can earn the right to do that, that’s
where I see us going in the future with this band.”
—Paul Gargano,
08.05
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