Journey - Trial By Fire
year: 96 - review: With Jonathan Cain, Steve Perry, and Neal Schon leading Journey once again, and bassist Ross Valory and drummer Steve Smith behind them, it would seem that Trial by Fire would contain the same elements that gave them their stardom in the '80s. Disappointingly, though, there is nothing captivating or even the least bit attractive about this unimaginative release. Perry's singing hasn't lost too much of its power, but the faster tunes come off as contrived and messy. Sounding hard and scattered, the smoothness of their trademarked music is nowhere to be found, replaced with brash, beat-up, hollow rock riffs. The ballads fair no better, as the passion that once flourished within the band when it came to slowing things down has long since faded. Just the fact that Journey reunited may lure fans to this album, but it won't be long before the discontentment begins set in.
1 comments:
Given the catalogue of lousy alternative records you've recommended I guess it's no surprise you wrote such an imaginative and conventional review of this record.
The fact is...this was a triumphant return for America's greatest band and indeeed America's greatest singer. No, not up there with classics such as Escape but it was a beautifully produced and soulful enough to avoid any "discontentment".
Anyway, I'll let you get back to all that whiney music....
The link doesn't work by the way.
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