by UncleKG » Fri Mar 28, 2008 1:08 am
Great interview, Andrew. Coincidentally, I just reread "Castles Burning" two days ago and was trying to find fresh info/interviews from Herbie. You really delivered!
I think the guy's a friggin' innovative genius (Herbie). He really revolutionized the concert industry, and if you look up Nocturne Productions, they handle the biggest tours going now. Bon Jovi, Paul McCartney, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Madonna, Tim McGraw and Faith Hill (which I got free tickets to and assumed I would hate. The production, videos on the stage flooring, video production on see-through scrims, etc., was AMAZING!). I would get on hands and knees and beg the guy to be my manager, because you know he knows the industry inside and out and will go balls to the wall to make you as successful as humanly possible.
Here are my thoughts:
1. I think Herbie (understandably) resented Perry trying to wrestle control away from Herbie. If I'm Herbie, my attitude is, "Look, MF'er, I handpicked this band, I hired YOU, now don't try to hold me hostage by stamping your foot and saying, 'I want this or I want that.'" I do think Perry did demand some changes just to assert his will (demanding "Freedom" be changed to "Raised on Radio," changing up the artwork, etc.). Given that Herbie's model had worked EXTREMELY well to that point, why not stick to the plan? I think, at some point, Herbie dismissed Perry (not his abilities, but his attitude) as a difficult prima donna, which is probably not far from the truth (everyone's heard of "Lead Singer's Disease"), and that is reflected in a lot of his comments about Perry.
I do think he's being honest about Perry not being able to sing like he used to. He might not like the guy, but he's always given him props for his talent, and like he said, if you can find a tape of the Bill Graham tribute concert, the proof of the lower key is on there. That's an assertion that can be checked out (not easily, necessarily, but it can be verified). I'm a huge Steve Perry fan, but I can certainly understand if he can't hit the notes he could 22 years ago. Not many people can. Don't ask Robert Plant to sing "Black Dog" like he did back in the day. It ain't gonna' happen.
2. I LOVED Jeff Scott Soto in Journey. I saw them at the House of Blues in Orlando last January and thought he was amazing. But, I understand where Herbie's coming from, and if he saw Jeff on an off night, I can see where he would say that it was a bad decision. To his point, right now Journey's best bet is to keep doing the songs in the original keys to please the live audiences, and JSS' voice is NOT as high as Perry's (or Pineda's). It was a different sound....a great sound, to my ears....but different.
3. Someone posted that they didn't understand why he was down on Perry for pushing the guys to liquidate assets (like Nocturne), and then he said Nocturne isn't making them rich. I think he's referring more to the fact that Nocturne has likely generated millions in income for both Herbie and Neal in the last 24 years (he said the other guys sold their shares in 1984), not to mention the real estate holdings Herbie referenced in the "Castles Burning" interview (one building in San Fran that he bought for $6 mil is now worth $75). It was "penny-wise, pound-foolish" thinking, in his opinion, and I can't say I disagree.
4. I also don't agree with someone's post that "Perry was probably more about quality and Herbie wanted quantity." I don't think Herbie would have allowed anything substandard to be released, but I do think he felt like Journey could have gone even higher (which is where the "they snatched defeat from the jaws of victory" line probably came from), and he wanted to see that happen, both for himself and the other band guys. Remember, Herbie was a full band member, not a traditional manager, so it was split six ways, not the 15-18% (if not more) that Irving Azoff gets. I think he's saying, "Look, take a break, but don't take a 10-year break!" They should have finished the "Raised on Radio" tour (it was cut short, was it not?), take a year off and come back strong. Perry stopped the locomotive in the middle of the track in the middle of the trip and left it to rust. I do think Herbie hated to see something he busted his ass for for 13-14 years suddenly come to a screeching halt because of one guy.
That's where his "they should have replaced him in 1984" comment comes in. Journey, in his opinion, is bigger than one guy (even as big a part of it as Perry was), so let's make the change and keep going. I think it might have taken some time, but there's a very good likelihood the Van Halen model would have worked. Van Halen got bigger, commercially, with Hagar (and I'm a hard-core early VH fan), but I made the switch, too, and bought the Van Hagar CD's.
I don't think Journey would have ever gotten anywhere near the level of success they had without Herbie, so I have to say I agree with about 90% of what he's said.