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cittadeeno23 wrote:To me, most of Journey's harmonies sound like Steve Perry backing himself up.
I still think Styx SOUNDS better. Just my opinion. Steve Perry has an excellent voice. But I like Dennis' and Tommy's voice better.
Neil is a stud though. I love the solo at the end of "Stone in Love".
I just saw "Lights" open up for Dennis last week. They sounded an awful lot like Journey. In every way.
brywool wrote:The Beatles had 3 singers (4 actually). I don't think you can really use that.
2 of Styx's guitarists do not equal 1 Neal Schon. Neal's an amazingly brilliant guitarist. Shaw and Young are great too, but nowhere near as creative as Neal. JY's guitar break on "Renegade" is an awesome piece of work, but so many of Neal's solos just KILL.
Harmony-wise- Styx has great harmonies, but listen to "Anyway You Want It" (a song I hate by the way), "Anytime", "Girl Can't Help It"- Styx's harmonies don't compare to those.
Perry was a very gifted singer. He could sing anything and it'd sound good.
Tommy and Dennis were also great singers, but next to Perry they're nowhere near as good. Not many are.
Jon Cain's a great songwriter as was the Perry/Schon/Cain for collaboration. Styx's songs- many of them are very dated sounding. Could be the keyboards used. Dennis had great keyboard sounds, but they are definitely 70s oriented as opposed to piano and organ that Cain and Rollie used which are timeless rock instruments that will always be used. The Oberhiem stuff Dennis used is pretty much HIS thing and songs like Roboto were extremely corny and very dated. Journey never went for that kind of stuff. They were more appealing to a broader audience. If you play Kilroy, then turn around and play Frontiers (both 83 albums)- Frontiers has a more timeless vibe. Kilroy is very targeted for the 80s. That's just using that one example.
Toph wrote:cittadeeno23 wrote:To me, most of Journey's harmonies sound like Steve Perry backing himself up.
I still think Styx SOUNDS better. Just my opinion. Steve Perry has an excellent voice. But I like Dennis' and Tommy's voice better.
Neil is a stud though. I love the solo at the end of "Stone in Love".
I just saw "Lights" open up for Dennis last week. They sounded an awful lot like Journey. In every way.
Perry might be turned up slightly higher in the mix, but Cain/Rollie and Schon (and sometimes Ross) sings back up as well (Today Deen sings a lot of backup too). In fact I read somewhere (Herbie Herbert?) that the reason that Journey harmonies sound so deep and warm is that, say if it was a three part harmony, that each guy would sing all three notes. And it would be overdubbed together. Pretty cool, huh?
jestor92 wrote:DDY seemed to want to write more operatic ballad type songs, while Shaw and Young seemed to want to write more rock oriented songs. Instead of compromising they butted heads instead of putting the best songs on the album.
jestor92 wrote:One thing that Journey had going for them that Styx never really had going for them IMO is their songs sounded better from a production point of view IMO. The point I'm talking about is that in the case of Paradise Theater the songs on the album don't seem to be able to really breathe much. They don't sound like they were recorded well. A song like Rockin the Paradise or Snowblind are a very good example of this problem. Here you have a very rockin song that just on the album sounds kind of flat. On the other hand with Escape the entire album with the exception of Stone In Love really seems energetic. That really helps a song that has a lot of musical dynamics like Mother, Father shine. Had Mother, Father been recorded/released by Styx I question how well it would've sounded.
Toph wrote:Listen to the following songs and tell me Journey harmonies don't stack up with Styx
Feeling That Way/Anytime
Just The Same Way
Lovin' Touchin Squeezin
Anyway You Want It
Who's Cryin Now
After The Fall
Girl Can't Help It
Ehwmatt wrote:
Journey harmonies definitely stack up with Styx harmonies. You'd have to be a fool to argue otherwise.
StyxCollector wrote:I think you're missing a few key points.
1. By the time 1979/80 rolled around, Styx had success and the cracks were only growing bigger. Gregg Rolie left around that time, so Escape was his first album. They got new blood and a new lease on life for the 80s. Styx did not.
StyxCollector wrote:
2. Compare Journey's 1st three albums (which I like) to some of the early Styx ones. They made a very clear, do-or-die approach by taking on Fleischman for a brief time then Perry and focusing on more accessible songs. Sure, you had an instrumental here and there ("Majestic"), but overall, they abandoned who they were.
StyxCollector wrote:
3. Good music is not about having virtuosos. It's about doing the right thing to accompany good songs. Dropping a Steve Vai solo in the middle, of say, Boat on the River would be appropriate. Extreme case, but you get the idea.
Having said that, Schon played with Santana at like 15. So yea, he's a prodigy. And don't think he doesn't like to play extended guitar solos or embellish. If you saw the Soul Sirkus tour, you'd know what I mean. He reins it in quite a bit for Journey. One of his best solos is (IMO) that one he does on the outro to "Who's Crying Now?" - tasteful and yet so cool. He's not shredding at all. He builds it over time.
brywool wrote:StyxCollector wrote:I think you're missing a few key points.
1. By the time 1979/80 rolled around, Styx had success and the cracks were only growing bigger. Gregg Rolie left around that time, so Escape was his first album. They got new blood and a new lease on life for the 80s. Styx did not.
Journey already scored big with Departure. It as already a great selling album. Journey was already on the upswing- then Escape happened and it made them HUGE.
brywool wrote:StyxCollector wrote:
2. Compare Journey's 1st three albums (which I like) to some of the early Styx ones. They made a very clear, do-or-die approach by taking on Fleischman for a brief time then Perry and focusing on more accessible songs. Sure, you had an instrumental here and there ("Majestic"), but overall, they abandoned who they were.
You could say the same about Styx when they went to A&M.
[/quote]brywool wrote:StyxCollector wrote:
3. Good music is not about having virtuosos. It's about doing the right thing to accompany good songs. Dropping a Steve Vai solo in the middle, of say, Boat on the River would be appropriate. Extreme case, but you get the idea.
Having said that, Schon played with Santana at like 15. So yea, he's a prodigy. And don't think he doesn't like to play extended guitar solos or embellish. If you saw the Soul Sirkus tour, you'd know what I mean. He reins it in quite a bit for Journey. One of his best solos is (IMO) that one he does on the outro to "Who's Crying Now?" - tasteful and yet so cool. He's not shredding at all. He builds it over time.
But with Cain and Perry- they had huge pop sensibilities. So while Neal was a guitar god, he was with 2 guys that knew how to write hits. Same could be said for JY. He had Dennis and Tommy to reign him in. If JY (or Neal) had led Styx, it would've been a lot harder and less hit oriented than it was. Same could be said for Neal. I was just comparing Neal as a player to Shaw and Young
StyxCollector wrote:As a guitarist, I think Tommy Shaw is underrated. Listen to him when he's in more blues mode (such as Shooz).Neal, for as good as he is, he's become a bit boring because he loves to just shred these days. I liked it when he was a bit more sensitive than just being flashy. He's not Neal good, but I prefer Tommy these days to Neal.
Higgy wrote:Well the fact is that, with the exception of Dennis's more epic stuff, there is a lot more to Journey than Styx - lyrically, musically, artistically, etc. In Styx's best moments, they were able to fuse three extremely disparate styles into one powerful theme (to me, Paradise Theater is the best example of this). However, more often than not, you got a mish mash - great moments, but not the one great work of pop art that you got with Journey albums.
StyxCollector wrote:
Why do you think Soul Sirkus failed? It was a vanity project for him (IMO) but it lacked commercial appeal. Say what you want about Dennis, he understood the need to be more commercial and finesse songs than writing art or hard rock for forever and a day. Renegade would have been a dirge without Dennis. Dennis' push to change ultimately broke the band (see: Cornerstone), but it was the right direction for the long haul. Change or die.
Higgy wrote:As a guitarist, I think Tommy Shaw is underrated. Listen to him when he's in more blues mode (such as Shooz).Neal, for as
...and yes, anyone who compares JY's talent to Neal's talent is just being silly.
Archetype wrote:I really don't think that Styx could top what Journey is releasing soon.
Edge of the Moment is better than anything Styx has put out in the past two decades.
Archetype wrote:I really don't think that Styx could top what Journey is releasing soon.
Edge of the Moment is better than anything Styx has put out in the past two decades.
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