Journey: Band Members and History

Olaf Herschbach / Getty Images

  • Top Artists
  • Holiday Music
  • Alternative Music
  • Classical Music
  • Country Music
  • Rap & Hip Hop
  • Rhythm & Blues
  • World Music
  • Heavy Metal
  • Latin Music

For over 40 years, Journey has been one of the greatest classic rock bands of all time. The band has released 23 albums and 43 singles since 1975 and has reached worldwide album sales totaling more than 75 million. 

But how exactly did Journey come to be? The San Francisco band got its start in 1973. Santana's former road manager, Herbie Herbert, recruited two of that band's members (Gregg Rolie and Neal Schon) and former Steve Miller Band bassist Ross Valory to form the Golden Gate Rhythm Section—the band that later became Journey.

The original Journey band members included Gregg Rolie on vocals and the keyboard, Neal Schon on guitar and vocals, George Tickner on guitar, Ross Valory on bass and vocals, and Prairie Prince on drums. 

Their first album was released in 1975 and established the band's jazz-influenced progressive rock sound. After several personnel changes, Steve Perry signed on as lead vocalist, launching the band's greatest period of commercial success from the late 1970s through the mid-1980s. Many people remember Steve as the face of the band.

The Best Album

The group's seventh album, Escape,  produced three hit singles and sold over 9 million copies. In addition to its commercial success, the album also received critical acclaim that has eluded them through most of their existence. Arguably, the most popular song put out by Journey is "Don't Stop Believin'." Originally released in 1981, the song became a Top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100, debuting at No. 9. The song has been used in near countless films in American TV and cinema including  Monster, Glee , the season finale of  The Sopranos , and  Rock of Ages. 

Journey Band Members Over the Years

In 2005, the band (along with original members Schon and Valory) marked its 30th anniversary with the release of its 23rd album,  Generations  and an anniversary tour, at times featuring some of the many former members of the group. In December 2006, Jeff Scott Soto replaced Steve Augeri as lead vocalist. Soto had been filling in for several months after Augeri was sidelined with a chronic throat infection. Soto was replaced a few months later by Arnel Pineda , vocalist for a Filipino cover band who was hired as a result of a video he posted on YouTube.

The band has been on a journey as it has evolved from past members including Steve Perry to its current members. 

Past Journey band members include the following:

  • Steve Perry (1977-1998)
  • Aynsley Dunbar (1974-1978)
  • Robert Fleischman (1977)
  • Steve Smith (1978-1985, 1995-1998)
  • Randy Jackson (1985-1987)
  • Steve Augeri (1998-2006)

Current Journey band members:

  • Neal Schon - guitar (1973-present)
  • Jonathan Cain - keyboards (1980-present)
  • Ross Valory - bass (1973-1985, 1995-present)
  • Arnel Pineda - vocals (2007-present)
  • Deen Castronovo - drums (1998-present)

Fun Facts About Journey

  • Journey music has been part of the animated TV shows South Park and Family Guy, and movies Caddyshack and BASEketball.
  • The group received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2005 and was inducted into the San Francisco Music Hall of Fame in 2003.
  • Bands of San Francisco
  • Top 30 Boy Bands of All Time
  • The Top 40 Pop Artists of All Time
  • Ten Greatest R&B Bands of All-Time
  • Where Are the Woodstock Performers Now?
  • Top 10 LGBT Singers of All Time
  • 100 of the Best Pop Songs of All Time
  • Pink Floyd Timeline and Milestones
  • The Top 100 Christmas Songs
  • A History of The Rolling Stones
  • The Top 100 Love Songs of All Time
  • Top '80s Songs of American Arena Rock Band Journey
  • The Top 100 Best Party Songs of All Time
  • Top 50 Sexy Pop Songs
  • Pop Musicians Who Died in the 2000s
  • 30 Greatest Male R&B Artists of All-Time

journey the band biography

New JOURNEY Band Biography 'Worlds Apart' Now Available

Time Passages has announced "Journey: Worlds Apart" , the definitive accounting of the "Don't Stop Believin'" hitmakers by award-winning journalist Nick DeRiso . A multiple columnist of the year award-winner with the USA Today network, DeRiso conducted dozens of interviews to compile a book that's not just a biography of JOURNEY — it's a backstage pass.

JOURNEY started as a dream for former SANTANA road manager Herbie Herbert , who thought he could build a blockbuster band out of the remnants of post- Woodstock SANTANA with Gregg Rolie and Neal Schon . Turns out, he could — but it would take a few albums, and the arrival of frontman Steve Perry . By the time Rolie exited at the turn of the '80s, JOURNEY was already a multi-platinum band — and they would only get bigger with the addition of Jonathan Cain from JOURNEY 's former opening act THE BABYS .

Solo projects and long periods apart slowed their momentum until Perry finally left for good in the late '90s. Then JOURNEY was faced with one of its biggest challenges: Whether and how to move forward without the singer who had redefined their sound forever on songs like "Open Arms" , "Only The Young" and "When You Love A Woman" .

The story is guided from their earliest roots by conversations with co-founding members Schon , Rolie and Prairie Prince , along with longtime Herbert confidant Pat Morrow . DeRiso then follows JOURNEY toward pop-culture superstardom through additional talks with later-era collaborators Cain , Steve Smith , Deen Castronovo , Steve Augeri and scores of producers, sidemen, label representatives and acknowledged experts like former Rolling Stone contributing editor David Wild , original MTV VJ Martha Quinn , and longtime San Francisco Chronicle music writer Joel Selvin , the latter of whom covered JOURNEY almost from the beginning.

Along the way, "Journey: Worlds Apart" emerges as the definitive look back at Journey, with deep explorations of every era, every album and every song. Pathway collaborations and key side projects complete this detailed analysis, as DeRiso speaks with John Waite , Jan Hammer , Marco Mendoza , Ron Wikso and others.

Nick DeRiso is assistant managing editor with Townsquare Media . Time Passages most recently published "Eagles: Up Ahead In The Distance" , the second in a three-book series.

Time Passages, LLC is an independent publishing based near Annapolis, Maryland.

For more information, visit www.timepassages.net .

Coming soon! Posted by Journey: Worlds Apart on  Thursday, December 7, 2023

Comments Disclaimer And Information

BLABBERMOUTH.NET uses the Facebook Comments plugin to let people comment on content on the site using their Facebook account. The comments reside on Facebook servers and are not stored on BLABBERMOUTH.NET. To comment on a BLABBERMOUTH.NET story or review, you must be logged in to an active personal account on Facebook. Once you're logged in, you will be able to comment. User comments or postings do not reflect the viewpoint of BLABBERMOUTH.NET and BLABBERMOUTH.NET does not endorse, or guarantee the accuracy of, any user comment. To report spam or any abusive, obscene, defamatory, racist, homophobic or threatening comments, or anything that may violate any applicable laws, use the "Report to Facebook" and "Mark as spam" links that appear next to the comments themselves. To do so, click the downward arrow on the top-right corner of the Facebook comment (the arrow is invisible until you roll over it) and select the appropriate action. You can also send an e-mail to blabbermouthinbox(@)gmail.com with pertinent details. BLABBERMOUTH.NET reserves the right to "hide" comments that may be considered offensive, illegal or inappropriate and to "ban" users that violate the site's Terms Of Service. Hidden comments will still appear to the user and to the user's Facebook friends. If a new comment is published from a "banned" user or contains a blacklisted word, this comment will automatically have limited visibility (the "banned" user's comments will only be visible to the user and the user's Facebook friends).

Journey

Anthemic arena rock outfit who achieved huge success in the 1970s and '80s thanks to musical prodigy Neal Schon and smooth tenor Steve Perry.

Read Full Biography

STREAM OR BUY:

Group Members

Album highlights.

Escape

Related Artists

Discography, moods and themes, related articles.

scorecard pixel

Rock Era Insider

Bios, band histories for the greatest in rock.

journey the band biography

Journey Band History

  • Latest Posts

' src=

  • 10 Best 80s Rock Trios –  When Rock Became ‘Modern’ - March 26, 2024
  • 10 Best 90s Rock Trios – The Last Great Rock Trios - January 25, 2024
  • Best Blues Power Trios of All Time - January 12, 2024

Journey Quick Facts Up Front

Gregg rolie, steve perry, jonathan cain, steve smith, ross valory, journey (1975); look into the future(1976); next (1977), infinity (1970), evolution (1979); departure (1980), dream, after dream (1980), escape (1981), raised in radio (1986), trail by fire (1996), arrivals (2000), revelation (2008), freedom (2022).

  • Early Days Journey in their Fusion Days: Journey - Full Concert - 03/30/74 - Winterland (OFFICIAL) 
  • Arguably the Best Group Lineup Performing During the Escape Tour: Journey - Don’t Stop Believin’ (from Live in Houston 1981: The Escape Tour) 
  • A Recent Performance with Schon at the Helm. Pineda’s Vocal Performance is Stunning: Journey Live @ Lollapalooza Chicago 2021 

The Journey Lawsuit & Replacements

Did journey sell out.

The glorious days of arena rock would not be as memorable without Journey. There could not be a better name for a band that went through many changes, successes, and failures and almost single-handedly rose the power ballad to the charts.

Journey’s band history is the epitome of 80s rock and the clashes between some of the most extraordinary rock musicians of the time.

Like all Journey fans, the first songs I heard were Steve Perry’s lead emotional ballads. He was the perfect singer for the ideal backing band. Yet, listening years later as a musician, I understood that it was not Steve Perry’s or Neal Schon’s Journey; the group’s creative chemistry made it all happen. Apart from the most commercially relevant period, Journey was and still stands strong. This bio might introduce you to some aspects and periods of the band that are now almost forgotten.

Journey Members You Should Know

The lineup changes are crucial to Journey’s band history. Nowadays, with only Neil Schon left as a founding member, we need to go back to the early days to understand who wrote and played the songs that made them famous.

All lineups were made up of the top rock musicians of each era. Not all, though, contribute as much as others. 

Neal Schon Journey Band

Neil George Joseph Schon (born February 27, 1954, in Oklahoma) is the band’s guitar player, founding member, and occasional songwriter.

Born in a musical family, Schon soon became a child prodigy after starting playing guitar at ten and being recruited by Santana at age 17. By the time he started Journey, he had experience playing in one of the best bands in the world and was fluent in jazz, rock, and Latin music.  

Neal Schon is one of the most melodic guitar players of all time. He essentially shifted my perspective of a rock solo to a musical piece that tells a story rather than a power shred, which he occasionally tastefully adds. 

Schon was always the leader behind the scenes, taking a significant say in all the band’s important decisions and even personally firing and replacing members. As a solo artist, he released nine albums and founded the bands “Hardline” and “Bad English.”

Gregg Rolie Journey Band

Gregg Alan Rolie (born June 17, !947, in Washington) is a founding member and journey original keyboard player and vocalist. As a Santana band member, Rolie was already a senior musician by the time Schon joined. He arguably shared with Santana the same success as with Journey, singing and playing in some of their biggest hits.

He formed Journey in 1973 and co-wrote the band’s first six albums before being replaced by the pressure of Steve Perry’s musical choices.

Rolie was as essential as Schon in creating the “Journey Sound” with signature Hammond, piano sound, and a bed of synths that backed the band’s rock groove. 

Rolie is one of the most prolific musicians ever, with a successful solo career after his time with the band. He founded with Journey’s ex-member “The Storm.” He was part of Ringo Star’s “All Starr Band.”

steve perry journey

Steve Ray Perry (born January 22, 1949, in Hanford, California) was Journey’s lead singer, frontman, and main songwriter in their most successful years.

Perry’s exceptional vocal range and affinity for writing ballads and pop songs gave Journey what they needed to become the biggest arena rock band in the world. His musical beginning, though, was unsuccessful, with many failed attempts, sometimes even from misfortunes.

Manager Herbert picked up one of Perry’s demos while he had returned to working on his family’s farm and called him to perform with the band while Rober Fleischman was already hired as a singer. One song performed during soundcheck with the band sealed his place as frontman.

Perry undoubtedly came at the right time in the right band to change it all for Journey. The mental cost of fame and several misfortunes, the last a degenerative bone disease, forced him out of the band. 

Jonathan Cain

Jonathan Leonard Friga (born February 2, 1950, in Chicago, Illinois) was Journey’s most prolific keyboard player, coming in to replace Rolie and helping write the band’s most successful material.

Cain is a multi-instrumentalist who made a name for himself with the band “The Babys.” which opened for Journey. His ability to write with Perry was what convinced the singer to replace the already prolific Rolie.

Cain turned the already well-tuned Journey rhythm section into a hit-power ballad maker. Unlike Rolie, Cain’s signature is more straightforward melodic piano intros that laid the bed for tunes such as “In My Arms” or “Don’t Stop Believing.”

He was part of “Bad English” and recently started publishing Christian Rock records while serving as a Worship leader with his wife. 

Steve Smith Journey Band

Steve Bruce Smith (born August 21, 1954, in Whitman, Massachusetts) was Journey’s drummer through their most prolific years and is widely considered one of the best musicians to ever sit behind a kit.

Smith is one of the most recorded drummers in history, having played sessions for virtually every top charting artist. He was voted five times in a row No.1 All-around Drummer from Modern Drummer magazine and inducted into the Modern Drummer Hall of Fame.

The session legend was part of three different Journey Lineups, part of Journey member’s spin-off group “The Storm,” and led his jazz-fusion groups.

Ross Valory Journey Band

Ross Lamont Valory (born February 2, 1949, in San Francisco) is a founding member of Journey and the bass player in two different lineups.

Like the other founding members, Valory played with a legendary group before forming Journey. He was part of Frumious Bandersnatch and later Steve Miller Band. He holds a special place in Journey’s history, playing in all but one studio record. Even when he was not part of the band, he was hired to write and record bass tracks.

Valory is a master bass player who uses his variation of a “Nashville Tuning,” Where the 4-string bass is tuned to B-E-A-D. He continued his career in the 90s with “The Storm,” like most original Journey members.

Journey started as the most accidental Supergroup ever in a time when the notion was still new. Ex-member of Santana and Steve Miller members got together to form their prog rock, jazz fusion band called “The Golden Gate Rhythm Section.”

The mastermind behind much of Journey’s career was their manager Herbier Herbert who previously managed Santana. 

The band would perform as a backing band for Bay Area artists, with Schon and George Tickner on guitar, Rolie on Keyboards and vocals, Valory on bass, and Prairie Prince on drums. The latter would be replaced by Aynsley Dunbar around the same time Tickner quit.

The early “Journey” never achieved commercial success, mostly due to their previous musically complex influences and the lack of a strong frontman. Roli was an excellent keyboard player and vocalist, but his old-style appeal was not what the band needed to relate to young audiences.

As a band, Journey has evolved and changed more than most. It sounds like a different band from the 1st to their 14th studio album. I’ll detail most of their stunning discography according to their impact on the band and rock music.

Journey Band

The first 3 Journey albums are a musical treat for every sophisticated rock lover. The complex compositions, delicate songwriting, and individual chops of members are three key elements that made them. There are no weak songs in any of them, yet there are not many memorable ones.

The Debut album is the ex-Santana and Steve Miller Band members having fun. The prog style might be their favorite thing to do, but as prog rock was slowly going off the charts, rock audiences needed something else.

From the first to the third album, the experimentation leaves off more place for catchy tracks. With Roli at the creative front and Herbert at the back, the band seemed to tone down their fusion influences to achieve success finally.

Commercially none of the albums did exceptionally well, and most of the band’s time was spent touring and trying to promote them.

As a guitar player and prog rock freak, I love early Journey sometimes more than the Steve Perry one. I find Neal Schon’s best guitar performances when some glimpses of jazz fusion are put in the mix.

Not to say that his later solos were less iconic, but later I found he would mainly “serve the songs” while the guitars made the song on the early Records. The same can be said about every lead instrument.

Depending on your background and taste, you could either love this version of Journey or, like many new fans, skip the three albums entirely. If you belong to the second group, I will encourage you to listen to the first song from the Debut Album, “Of a lifetime, “and you might change your mind.

The Much Needed Lead Singer 

The musical chemistry, management, and inspiration were there for Journey, but their image and performances lacked the strong crowd-pleasing frontman. Behind the Keyboards, singing lead vocals, Roli did his part musically, but not stylistically.

The band’s first singer, hired with Herber’s suggestion, was glam rocker Robert Fleischman. With a high register and great stage presence, Fleischman toured successfully with Journey in 1977 until Steve Perry replaced him after he sang one in soundcheck with the band on the same tour.

Perry not only performed flawlessly exciting songs but managed to bond immediately with Neil Schon in writing their first songs together. The band changed direction and with that also their drummer. Session ace Smith replaced Dunbar, who was unhappy with the new pop direction of the band.

Infinity album journey

The first album with Perry as lead vocalist launched the band to commercial success reaching No. 21 on Billboard. “Infinity” marks the band’s change in musical direction, with Queen’s producer Roy Thomas Baker directing the shift.

The album is strong in every aspect. The songwriting, production, intent, and musicianship are top-notch. It combines the band’s collected materials and Perry’s melancholic songwriting over the years. His voice added character to the virtuoso band that needed it. My favorite song from the album is “Wheel in the Sky,” written by Fleischman and the band before Perry joined in. Perry’s voice, though, I think, does it more justice.

It starts with Neil Schon’s classically influenced guitar part and develops to a hard rock tone with a country riff. The mixture of different genres is, I think, what makes all individuals of the band shine.

The two songs that better defined the band’s musical direction were the power ballads “Lights” and “Patiently.” Slow-tempo emotional tracks with a solid vocal melody that builds up to guitar solos and live encores. Both tracks are now legendary and staples of the band’s live shows.

The following two Journey studio albums saw the band’s rise to fame, each doing better than the previous. They were headlining tours and festivals and having crowds resonate massively with their songs for the first time.

Both albums continued where “Infinity” left off, merging Perry’s now-proven hit songwriting skills with the band’s musicianship. The new frontman was now contributing to all the songs and indirectly dictating the band’s sound. Not all songs are great, though; most lack memorable hooks and fade compared to the hits.

My favorite of the two albums is “Departure.” There’s a spice more of prog rock in that album which I think brings out the best of the band. After all, the band was not originally an Arena rock act. 

“Any way you want” and “Loving’, Touchin’, Squeezin;” are widely known tracks. My favorites are the less popular “Do You Recall” and “I’m Cryin,” which Perry and Rolie co-wrote.

The next record was a musical spin-off as a soundtrack album. Beyond all expectations, the band produced the most musically intricate prog rock album of their career. 

It’s arguably the most polarising album of Journey’s catalog, yet one the band truly enjoyed making. The all-star band of virtuoso musicians couldn’t wait to stretch the musical muscles once again as in the old days. The result is fantastic prog rock, yet not one you would most likely hear on the radio.

I adore the compositions and musicianship on all the songs, especially the 8-minute opening track “Destiny.” In true prog fashion, extended instrumentation and solos weren’t missing.

It’s not an album for everyone, but those who like it, love it.

Escape (1981) journey

Rolie leaving the band in favor of Jonathan Cain might have consisted of one of the best musicians on earth, but it gave them the best-selling album of their career . The album almost single-handedly created the 80s sound. 

The album starts with the band’s epic rock anthem, “Don’t Stop Believin’.” The song was started by Perry and Schon and later finished by Cain, who added the piano hook and hook. As Cain relieves in an interview, those were the three words his dad told him when he wanted to quit music.

The song is today the best-selling catalog track of the digital era. It’s now beyond a rock anthem to a pop culture hit. Journey’s “Free Bird” in a sense.

Cain brought in the catchy hooks and memorable piano parts and perfectly completed Perry’s ideas. The ballad “Open Arms” they wrote together differed from previous ones. It was more delicate, straightforward, catchy, and singable. After some struggles in getting it through Schoun skeptical reception of the song, it became a fan favorite.

Journey – Open Arms (Official Video – 1982)  

The song that moves me the most is “Mother, Father.” Perry recorded the vocals in one mesmerizing take. What’s more impressive is that it is probably the hardest Journey song to sing. 

“Espace” paved the way for the next charting album in 1983, “Frontiers.” It produced hit songs and anthems and delivered on the success of the previous albums.

Success and Downfall

Journey waited three years to release an album for the first time in their career. The continuous touring and fame were starting to kick back. Schon and Perry had also released their solo records capitalizing on Journey’s Success.

Perry, at this time, dominated the band’s musical direction completely. According to him, only Schon and Cain were suited for the band as he fired Roos Valory and, slightly later, Steve Smith. As he declared in an interview, he thought it was the best decision at the time, but he regrets doing it.

His mental health was also deteriorating as the rise to fame alienated him from the rest of the world. 

Replacing both members with session musicians gave the trio more control over the songs. Perry himself took up the role of producer for the album. “Raised In Radio” is a successful attempt to top the charts through their hit song formula, but the lack of team effort is felt. 

I think the album is too poppy and sacrifices the musical input of Valory and Smith for attempted hooks. There are undoubtedly hit songs such as “Girl, I Can’t Help It” and “Be Good To Yourself,” yet it’s not an album I can enjoy listening to back to back like the rest. 

Commercially it did well, as expected. The band knew how to write hit songs and what the audience wanted by this time. Listening to it now, It feels like Perry’s rushed attempt to stay on top of the game and even outdo himself. 

Disbandment and Attempted Comeback

Journey Disbandment and Attempted Comeback

The problems with Perry’s control over the band and continuous isolated life lead to him wanting to stop everything. After his last show with the band in February 1987, he left the band and stopped Journey for almost ten years.

Perry never released an official statement, and some still wonder if the animosity between members was the main cause of his leaving. The fact that he released music after leaving the band makes me think he still wanted to make music on his own, in less frantic terms.

One thing is for sure; Journey couldn’t keep up their successful streak without Perry, so each went separate ways. 

In 1995 the band reunited again at Perry’s request to fire current manager Herbert for the well-known Irving Azoff, which staged the Eagles’ comeback some years prior. 

Journey was back, and a long-awaited successful album came shortly after. All members had amassed material during the years, so a musically rich album was bound to come.

“Trial by Fire” is my favorite Journey album after “Escape,” as it delivers the quality you’d expect from a great comeback. The hit song “When You Love a Woman” was surely meant to be a hit, but it’s not formulaic in any way.  

Valory and Smith back on the band brought back the original backbone of the group. Putting this album back to back with its predecessor, you will notice the difference the rhythm section had in Journey after a few tracks. It gives character to songs having individual doing their thing and not hired guns.

I wish it had some more elements of hard rock, but that might be just the nostalgia from the days of “Don’t Stop Believin’.”

This album is the last Perry contribution as he was diagnosed unexpectedly with a bone condition and was unwilling to undergo surgery to continue touring.

Modern Journey

Modern Journey

Journey is still touring and releasing albums today, with only Schon remaining an original band member. He calls the shots about the music direction and often replaces members.

After Perry distanced himself from music, the band moved on and recruited Steve Augeri as frontman, with drummer Deen Castronovo as occasional lead vocalist. Augeri was the perfect vocalist for Journey, who needed the same high-pitched power Steve Perry had.

Of the two albums Journey released with Perry, the first one is the only one that somehow matched the previous albums’ quality. It’s not the band’s most creative work, yet it’s an album with the pure Journey sound almost intact.

The album is instrumentally great but lacks strong songwriting. Augeri contributed to some  songs, yet his role as the newcomer was to sing, according to Schon and Cain’s writing.

The song “World Gone Wild” is my favorite of the whole album, showing off Augeri skills at best and some great guitar work by Schon.

Commercially it did well, considering that arena rock was not the most popular genre of the early 2000s. I think that part of the merit goes to the fans’ curiosity and joy of having another Journey album.

The next album with Augeri, “Generations,” was the band’s least successful record after having him fired.

Ariel Pineda replaced Augeri in a dream story of Schon recruiting him after watching his Journey Covers on YouTube. The album was the band’s last big commercial success, even though the era of rock bands topping the charts was gone.

In true Journey style, Cain delivers a hit power ballad. “After All These Years” is just as good as any of the band’s legendary ballads and is only penalized by the rise of pop and dance music. I love how the band switched to a hard rock style for this record, flexing some fast-paced tempo grooves after a while.

Pineda seemed to be a bigger creative force than Augeri and an equally experienced live frontman. The live shows with the classic hits were and still are the band’s main focus, accumulating ridiculous amounts from the tour.

Having survived a pandemic, lawsuit, and personnel changes, Journey released their new record in more than a decade. Years of accumulated creativity resulted in an arena rock juggernaut. 

Cain and Schon were in charge of the production, while drummer Narada, a prolific songwriter and singer, helped write and co-produce much of the material. It starts with the power ballad “Together We Run” and the expected melodic Cain piano intro.

Listening to album after ten other Journey pop-rock records can be too much if you’re not a die-hard fan. I would have preferred a more Prog rock Journey record as that always brings new sounds.  

Notable Performances

Early days journey in their fusion days:   journey – full concert – 03/30/74 – winterland (official)  .

Arguably the Best Group Lineup Performing During the Escape Tour: Journey – Don’t Stop Believin’ (from Live in Houston 1981: The Escape Tour)  

A Recent Performance with Schon at the Helm. Pineda’s Vocal Performance is Stunning: Journey Live @ Lollapalooza Chicago 2021  

Changes in band members always come with legal issues when rights to songs are on the table. In the 80s, they maintained a good balance between members. Primarily due to solid management from Herbert, things were kept quiet.

Valory and Smith were fired from the band in 2019 after attempting to own one of the band’s corporate entities. According to the two, Perry gave them the right to hold that part of the business. Schon and Cain considered this an attempt to squeeze more money even when they were not playing. 

Journey did write beautiful songs, yet the term’ corporate rock’ started to haunt them as each charting album chased the next big thing. The bad reputation arena rock gets from rock fans sometimes comes from the many attempts to write hits and please the crowd.

My stand as a rock fan with a taste from Beatles to modern metal is that Journey didn’t sell out in the sense of chasing money. Their style evolved, sometimes in search of a bigger fanbase, but still, they delivered nongeneric hits.

They developed a successful style that pushed them to recreate the success repeatedly. The members’ egos, management pressures, and fans’ high expectations had their parts.

Answer : One roadie, John Villanueva, suggested the name after failed attempts, including a radio contest involving the fans to find a proper name. 

Answer : Journey had six lead singers in the band from the 70s to today. 

Answer : Arena rock is considered any rock genre that can fill a stadium on a one-night event. In the mid-70s and 80s, it took a slightly different meaning, becoming a synonym for successful commercial rock bands who were best known for Power Ballads. Arena rock bands deliver great spectacles with massive crowds and often have predictable, straightforward music to resonate with as many people as possible.

  • Journey (band) – Wikipedia
  • Journey Documentary (Behind The Music)
  • Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey HD
  • Journey – Raised On Radio (1986 Tour Documentary)
  • Journey Music
  • Journey (band)  
  • Journey’s Neal Schon says he and Steve Perry are ‘in a good place’ before band’s 50th anniversary
  • Journey Biography, Songs, & Albums | AllMusic
  • Journey – The Brilliant Band Members, Stories & Struggles | Eagle 106.5
  • Journey: Band Members and History      

Looking for more interesting readings? Check out:

  • The Police Band History
  • AC/DC Band History
  • R.E.M. Band History

Related Posts

The Beatles Band History

The Beatles Band History

led zeppelin band history

Led Zeppelin Band History

Leave a comment.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

an image, when javascript is unavailable

  • Manage Account

Chart History

Billboard hot 100™, when you love a woman, i'll be alright without you, who's crying now, lovin', touchin', squeezin', latest videos.

Best Songs to Sing At Karaoke: Taylor Swift, Carly Rae Jepsen & More | Billboard News

Steve perry discusses his return to music & new album ‘traces’ | billboard, latest news, ‘the voice’: gene taylor scores four-chair turn with ‘unbelievable’ journey audition.

  • By Lars Brandle
  • Feb 28, 2024 3:04 am

Hipgnosis Songs Fund Lowers Its Valuation by 9.2%

  • By Glenn Peoples
  • Dec 21, 2023 6:17 pm

Def Leppard & Journey Are Teaming Up: How to Get Tickets to the Stadium Tour

  • By Rylee Johnston
  • Dec 12, 2023 12:29 pm

Here’s Who Readers Chose as Their Favorite Rock Singer of All Time

  • By Starr Bowenbank
  • Aug 28, 2023 6:16 pm

Watch 11-Year-Old D’Corey Johnson Wow ‘America’s Got Talent’ Judges With a Journey Classic

  • May 31, 2023 4:19 pm

Kelly Clarkson Sticks ‘Faithfully’ to a Journey Classic for Kellyoke

  • By Glenn Rowley
  • Apr 19, 2023 2:54 pm

Journey’s 10 Best Songs

  • By Gary Graff
  • Mar 2, 2023 12:19 pm

Journey’s Neal Schon v. Everyone: Will Band Members Go ‘Separate Ways’?

  • By Steve Knopper
  • Mar 2, 2023 10:25 am

Journey Takes a Break From Feuding, Returns for Harmonious Concert at Oklahoma Casino

  • Jan 28, 2023 12:22 pm

The Legal Beat: Megan Thee Stallion’s Deposition Dispute – Plus Journey, Flo Rida & More

  • By Bill Donahue
  • Jan 24, 2023 2:40 pm

Billboard is a part of Penske Media Corporation. © 2024 Billboard Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

optional screen reader

Charts expand charts menu.

  • Billboard Hot 100™
  • Billboard 200™
  • Hits Of The World™
  • TikTok Billboard Top 50
  • Song Breaker
  • Year-End Charts
  • Decade-End Charts

Music Expand music menu

  • R&B/Hip-Hop

Culture Expand culture menu

Media expand media menu, business expand business menu.

  • Business News
  • Record Labels
  • View All Pro

Pro Tools Expand pro-tools menu

  • Songwriters & Producers
  • Artist Index
  • Royalty Calculator
  • Market Watch
  • Industry Events Calendar

Billboard Español Expand billboard-espanol menu

  • Cultura y Entretenimiento

Honda Music Expand honda-music menu

Quantcast

Arnel Pineda

NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 19:  (L-R) Producer John Paterson, Arnel Pineda of the band Journey, producer David Paterson and Yu Session attend the after party for the premiere of 'Don't Stop Believin': Every-man's Journey' during the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival at Gansevoort Hotel on April 19, 2012 in New York City.  (Photo by Michael Stewart/WireImage)

Who Is Arnel Pineda?

After a series of unfortunate events in his childhood, Arnel Pineda found success in Asia as the front man for the group The Zoo. In 2007, he was discovered by Journey guitarist Neal Schon, after a series of YouTube videos were posted of him covering American songs, including the famous hit, "Dont Stop Believin'." In December 2007, Pineda became the new lead singer of Journey. His is noted for having a strikingly similar sound to former Journey front man Steve Perry.

Troubled Childhood

Arnel Pineda was born on September 5, 1967, in Sampaloc, Manila, in the Philippines. Throughout his childhood, Pineda endured grave misfortune. When he was just 13 years old, his mother, who was 35 at the time, passed away after a long battle with heart disease. Her medical costs left the family in serious debt, and Pineda's father could no longer provide for Pineda and his three younger brothers, Russmon, Roderick and Joselito.

While relatives were able to take in his brothers, Pineda was left on his own. He spent the next few years homeless, often sleeping outside in public parks and scraping for any food or water that he could afford. When possible, he would stay at a friend's house, who offered him a cot outside. Eventually, Pineda was forced to quit school and take up odd jobs collecting scrap metal and bottles at the pier and selling newspapers to support his family.

Early Career

Pineda's love of music started at a young age. He began singing at just five years old, and had entered many singing contests as a child. In 1982, when he was 15, Pineda was introduced to a local band called Ijos, and was encouraged by his friends to try out as their new lead singer. He sang the Beatles' "Help" and Air Supply's "Making Love Out Of Nothing At All." Although they were concerned with his lack of training, Ijos members were wowed by Pineda's powerful voice, and took him on as the new front man of the band. One of the band member's friends even offered to pay Pineda's salary, 35 pesos a night, out of his own pocket, and Pineda was offered a tiny room to sleep under the guitarist's front stairs.

In 1986, some members of Ijos joined together to form the new pop-rock band Amo. The group found success covering songs by hit groups Heart, Queen and Journey. In 1988, they turned heads when they won the Philippines' leg of the Yamaha World Band Explosion Contest. Although they were disqualified in the finals due to a technicality, the event was broadcast on TV in Asia, widening their fanbase. The band continued performing at popular clubs and arenas around the Philippines.

In 1990, the members re-grouped yet again, under the new name Intensity Five, and re-entered the contest. The band came in as runner up and Pineda won the Best Vocalist Award. After a series of unfortunate health problems in the early '90s, including the brief loss of his voice, Pineda re-emerged in 1999 with a new solo album with Warner Brothers. The self-titled album had several hits in Asia.

After brief stints with a few different bands, Pineda found success again in 2006 with The Zoo, a band that he formed with Monet Cajipe, a guitarist/songwriter who had been in all his bands during over the previous 20 years. The Zoo performed at several popular clubs in the area and, in 2007, released an album by MCA Universal titled Zoology . Soon the band began covering songs by groups such as Journey, Survivor, Aerosmith, Led Zeppelin, The Eagles and more, with more than 200 performances uploaded to YouTube.

On June 28, 2007, Neal Schon, guitarist and member of the band Journey, saw a video of Pineda on YouTube and immediately contacted him. The band had been looking for a new lead singer, and Pineda's voice sounded strikingly similar to Steve Perry, Journey's legendary former front man. After speaking with Schon on the phone, Pineda made arrangements to fly to the United States and audition with the band in San Francisco. On December 5, 2007, Pineda was welcomed as the band's new lead singer.

Right away, Pineda went on tour with the band, performing two shows in Chile and two in Las Vegas. Both were a huge success. After a series of guest show appearances and magazine features, Pineda gained popularity within the American public. On June 3, 2008, the newly organized Journey released their first album, Revelation , which came in at No. 5 on the U.S. charts. The album was their highest charting album since Trial by Fire (with Steve Perry), and reached platinum status by October 2008.

Soon after the album's release, the band continued touring around the world with Pineda. The documentary, Don't Stop Believin': Everyman's Journey , slated to be released in 2012, will chronicle the band's "Revelation Tour," and Pineda's first years with the band.

Personal Life

When he is not on tour, Pineda resides in the Philippines with his wife, Cherry, their children, Cherub and Thea. He has two other sons—Matthew, 19, and Angelo, 13—from past relationships.

QUICK FACTS

  • Name: Arnel Pineda
  • Birth Year: 1967
  • Birth date: September 5, 1967
  • Birth City: Sampaloc, Manila
  • Birth Country: Philippines
  • Gender: Male
  • Best Known For: Arnel Pineda is best known as the new lead singer for the rock group Journey.
  • Astrological Sign: Virgo
  • Nacionalities

CITATION INFORMATION

  • Article Title: Arnel Pineda Biography
  • Author: Biography.com Editors
  • Website Name: The Biography.com website
  • Url: https://www.biography.com/musicians/arnel-pineda
  • Access Date:
  • Publisher: A&E; Television Networks
  • Last Updated: July 20, 2020
  • Original Published Date: April 2, 2014

Rock Musicians

bad bunny looks at the camera while sitting down next to people, he wears a white t shirt and jeans with jewelry and a backward baseball cap

Elvis and Priscilla’s Turbulent Relationship

miley cyrus giving a speech at the grammys as mariah carey smiles after giving her an award

2024 Grammys: The Major Winners and Takeaways

tracy chapman smiles at the camera while standing inside an event space with a chandelier, she wears a black jacket and black collared shirt, her dreads are slightly gray at the roots and reach past her shoulders

Tracy Chapman

sinead o'connor smiles at the camera, she wears a turtleneck sweater and glasses on her head

Sinéad O’Connor

austin butler wearing a black shirt, holding a finger in the air, and standing in front of a logo with the word elvis on it

How Austin Butler Landed the Part of Elvis

lou reed

11 Rare Vintage Photos of Lou Reed

elvis presley lisa marie presley riley keough

Elvis Presley’s Family Tree

elvis presley

Elvis Presley

rolling stones

How The Rolling Stones Were First Formed

bruce springsteen smiles and stands while holding an electric guitar, he wears a navy t shirt

Bruce Springsteen

phil collins sitting to the right of his ex wife andrea bertorelli and their daughter

The Meaning Behind “In the Air Tonight”

journey the band biography

How the band Journey formed from collected talent

What are they famous for.

Journey is famous for being an American rock band that has spawned a number of successful singles. The band has achieved diamond, platinum and gold status with a number of their albums and had eighteen top 40 singles over the course of their career, including two number one hits. The band was originally made up of a number of ex-members of the bands Santana and Frumious Bandersnatch when it was originally formed. The band music has evolved a number of times since 1973 and their sound has changed over the years. The band has sold more than 48 million albums and is one of the best-selling bands in history. The band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2017.

The band is referenced regularly in pop culture and their music has been featured on many occasions on films, television series, video games and Broadway. The song ‘Don Stop Believin’ in particular was featured in the last episode of The Sopranos and was also featured in Glee and Family Guy. The song was also used as the anthem for the Chicago White Sox in 2005 and for the San Francisco Giants World Series in 2010. The song was also performed during the musical ‘Rock of Ages’.

The band first began as a progressive rock band and later evolved their sound to include more pop sounds mixed in with their original rock sound.

The band has been highly commercially successful but has also regularly faced criticism, often around being overly commercial.

Career Beginnings

The band originally formed under the direction of Santana manger Herbie Herbert. The band was originally formed with the intention of being a back-up band for Bay Area musicians but the band quickly moved on from being a ‘backup’ band. The original members of the band included Neal Schon, Gregg Rolie, Ross Valory, George Tickner and Prairie Prince. The name ‘Journey’ was suggested by roadie John Villaneuva. The band performed for the first time at the Winterland Ballroom in 1973. Prairie Prince left the band and was replaced by Aynsley Dunbar, the new band line-up performed at the Great American Music Hall. The band released their debut album in 1975 and their second album in 1976, neither album was commercially successful.

The band hired Robert Fleischman and began to change musical direction at the request of their label. They wrote the song ‘Wheel in the Sky’ with the help of Fleischman but he remained with the band for less than a year. In 1977 the band hired the lead singer Steve Perry and the band released the album ‘Infinity’ which went platinum. The album proceeded to go on a tour in 1980 and recorded the live album ‘Captured’.

Career Breakthrough

The band recorded their album ‘Escape’ which was released in 1981 and quickly became successful. The album went to number one and was certified nine times platinum. The album included the hits ‘Who’s Cryin’ Now’, ‘Don’t Stop Believin’ and ‘Open Arms’. The bands next album ‘Frontiers’ was also commercially successful and reach number two on the charts. It generated a number of Top 40 hits include ‘Separate Ways (Worlds Apart)’,’ Faithfully’, ‘Send her My Love’ and ‘After the Fall’. The band went on a stadium tour and recorded a documentary film whilst on the road. After the stadium tour the band decided to go on hiatus whilst members of the band pursued other projects.

During this time the band released the songs ‘Two of a Kind’ ad ‘Only the Young’ the latter of which reached number nine on the Billboard charts . The band recorded the album ‘Raised on Radio’ in 1986, the album went multi-platinum and included a number of top 20 singles including ‘Be Good to Yourself’, ‘I’ll Be Alright Without You’ and ‘Girl Can’t Help It’. The band began touring but Perry was unwilling to participate and the remainder of the tour was cancelled and they went on indefinite hiatus. During their hiatus Schon and Cain began collaborating with other artists such as Jimmy Barnes, Michael Bolton, John Waite and Ricky Phillips as part of the group called Bad English. Steve Smith joined the jazz band Vital Information and Steps Ahead, he also joined up with Ross Valory and Gregg Rolie to create the band ‘The Storm’ alongside the singer Kevin Chalfant and guitarist Josh Ramos. The band played a number of songs together in 1991 during a tribute concert.

Schon and Castronovo met up to form the glam metal band Hardline in 1991 after Bad English broke up.

Continuing Career

Journey continuing career

The band released three compilation albums between 1987 and 1995 which included a Greatest Hits album (the best-selling record for the band to this day – selling between 500,000 to 1,000,000 copies each year). The greatest hits album spent 300 weeks on the Billboard 200 charts.

The band reformed in 1995 with band manager Irvin Azoff who had previously managed the Eagles now on board. They released their album ‘Trial By Fire’ in 1996 which included the single ‘When You Love A Woman’ which became a hit and peaked at number twelve on the US charts. The song was nominated for a Grammy Award , the album also included the hit songs ‘Message of Love’, ‘Can’t  Tame the Lion’ and ‘If He Should Break Your Heart’.

Any plans for a tour where ended after Perry discovered he had a degenerative bone condition and that he required a hip replacement surgery. He later announced that he would be leaving the band for good and the band began their search for a new lead singer.

In 1998 the band began auditioning for the lead singer candidates for the lead singer position and eventually chose Steve Augeri. In 2002 they released the CD ‘Red 13’ with cover art designed by fans. The band embarked on a 30 th anniversary tour in 2005 and came out with a new album ‘Generations’ which featured each member of the band performing lead vocals on one song each. The band released the album ‘Arrival’ in 2000 in Japan and 2001 in the US. The band was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2005.

Steve Augeri was fired from the band in 2006 because he was suffering from vocal attrition. Jeff Soto stepped in to fill in for a number of months but in 2007 he left the band.

The band once again started a search for a lead singer in 2007 and hired Arnel Pineda. Their album ‘Revelation’ debuted at the number five spot on the charts and remained in the top 20 for six weeks. The bands 2008 tour was one of the top grossing tours for the year. The bands next album ‘Eclipse’ was released in 2011 and debuted at number thirteen; they also released a greatest hits album in the same year.

The band lost their drummer Deen Castronovo after he was arrested for assault by police after injuring a woman. He was subsequently fired from the band and he was replaced by Omar Hakim for the bands tour in 2015. In 2016 the band welcomed Steve Smith who has been with the band during their Escape, Frontier and Trial By Fire albums.

Learn about other artists like Fleetwood Mac. 

Best Classic Bands

RECENT POSTS

New book celebrates trouser press music mag’s 50th anniversary, herb alpert interview: still trying to reach the promised land, 10 unusual and surprising cover songs, deep purple releases ‘machine head’ super deluxe edition.

  • The Lifesaving Eric Clapton ‘Rainbow Concert’
  • Def Leppard All-Star Jam Ends 2019 Rock Hall Event
  • The Number One Singles of 1975: Each Has a Story
  • On the Menu: ‘Breakfast in America’ From Supertramp
  • Stevie Nicks’ Memorable 2019 Rock Hall Induction
  • How Dr. Hook Got on the ‘Cover of the Rolling Stone’
  • The Zombies 2019 Rock Hall Induction Was a ‘Dream’
  • 50 Years Ago: 1974 in Music
  • ‘1971’ Book Makes a Strong Case for Best Rock Year
  • Led Zeppelin’s ‘Houses of the Holy’ Reigns On
  • Joni Mitchell ‘Traveling’ Book Explores Her Life and Career
  • 11 Classic Rock Songs for Spring
  • Mark Knopfler Shares 3rd Track From Solo Studio LP, ‘One Deep River’
  • Ian Hunter ‘You’re Never Alone w/a Schizophrenic’: Dynamic Duo
  • Grateful Dead ‘From the Mars Hotel’ Gets 50th Anniv. Deluxe Edition
  • Pete Townshend Performs With the Broadway Cast of The Who’s ‘Tommy’ Musical

LATEST REVIEWS

  • Supertramp’s ‘Breakfast in America’
  • Bob Seger – Final Tour
  • Janis Joplin Biography Review
  • CSNY’s ‘Deja Vu’
  • Rolling Stones – 2019 Concert Review
  • Eric Clapton Celebrates at MSG
  • Roger Waters ‘Us + Them’ Tour
  • Warren Zevon’s ‘Excitable Boy’
  • Tom Petty 40th Anniversary Concert
  • 1971: Year That Rock Exploded – Book
  • Steppenwolf’s Debut: Heavy Metal Thunder
  • ‘Who’s Next’ – Album Rewind
  • Privacy Policy

New Journey Book Takes Definitive Look At the Band’s History

journey the band biography

From the publisher’s announcement: Journey started as a dream for former Santana road manager Herbie Herbert, who thought he could build a blockbuster band out of the remnants of post-Woodstock Santana with Gregg Rolie and Neal Schon. Turns out, he could – but it would take a few albums, and the arrival of frontman Steve Perry. By the time Rolie exited at the turn of the ‘80s, Journey was already a multi-platinum band – and they would only get bigger with the addition of Jonathan Cain from Journey’s former opening act, The Babys.

Solo projects and long periods apart slowed their momentum until Perry finally left for good in the late ‘90s. Then Journey was faced with one of its biggest challenges: Whether and how to move forward without the singer who had redefined their sound forever on songs like “Open Arms,” “Only the Young” and “When You Love a Woman.”

The story is guided from their earliest roots by conversations with co-founding members Schon and Rolie, and Prairie Prince, along with long-time Herbert confidant Pat Morrow. DeRiso then follows Journey toward music superstardom through additional talks with later-era collaborators Cain, Steve Smith, Deen Castronovo, Steve Augeri and scores of producers, sidemen, label representatives and various industry veterans like former Rolling Stone contributing editor David Wild, original MTV VJ Martha Quinn, and longtime San Francisco Chronicle music writer Joel Selvin, the latter of whom covered Journey almost from the beginning. The title takes a similar approach as a definitive series on Eagles  from the same publishing company.

journey the band biography

A sample two-page spread from the Journey: Worlds Apart book (Used with permission of the publisher)

Journey: Worlds Apart emerges as the definitive look back at Journey, with deep explorations of every era, every album and every song. Pathway collaborations and key side projects complete this detailed analysis, as DeRiso speaks with John Waite, Jan Hammer, Marco Mendoza, Ron Wikso and others.

Spanning 417 pages, this extensive Journey history contains dozens of rare photos from across the years. Also, it includes an exclusive appendix of never-before-seen concept art, designs, sketches, and illustrations of Journey projects — some accepted and some that never made it to production — from the masterful hand of famed rock illustrator Stanley Mouse.

Author DeRiso is currently assistant managing editor with Townsquare Media.

  • Latest Posts

Best Classic Bands Staff

  • Deep Purple Releases ‘Machine Head’ Super Deluxe Edition - 03/30/2024
  • Def Leppard All-Star Jam Ends 2019 Rock Hall Event - 03/29/2024
  • Stevie Nicks’ Memorable 2019 Rock Hall Induction - 03/29/2024

Stories We Want You to Read

New Book Celebrates Trouser Press Music Mag’s 50th Anniversary

No Comments so far

No comments yet, click here to cancel reply..

Your data will be safe! Your e-mail address will not be published. Also other data will not be shared with third person.

Comment * -->

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed .

Loading, Please Wait!

Journey (band)

Journey is an American rock band formed in San Francisco in 1973 by former members of Santana , the Steve Miller Band , and Frumious Bandersnatch . The band as of 2024 [ update ] consists of guitarist/vocalist Neal Schon (the last remaining original member), keyboardist/guitarist/vocalist Jonathan Cain and keyboardist/vocalist Jason Derlatka, drummer/vocalist Deen Castronovo , bassist Todd Jensen , and lead vocalist Arnel Pineda .

  • 1973–1977: Formation, Journey, Look into the Future and Next
  • 1977–1980: New musical direction, Infinity, Evolution, and Departure

1981–1983: Height of popularity, Escape and Frontiers

1984–1987: raised on radio and more personnel changes, 1987–1995: hiatus, 1995–1997: reunion and trial by fire, 1998–2007: lead singer and drummer replaced, arrival and generations, 2007–2019: lead singer replaced with arnel pineda, revelation and eclipse, 2020–present: contested lineup changes, lawsuits, and freedom, in popular culture, discography, studio albums, external links.

Journey had their biggest commercial success between 1978 and 1987, when Steve Perry was lead vocalist; they released a series of hit songs, including " Don't Stop Believin' " (1981), which in 2009 became the top-selling track in iTunes history among songs not released in the 21st century. [7] [8] Escape , Journey's seventh and most successful album, reached number one on the Billboard 200 and yielded another of their most popular singles, " Open Arms ". The 1983 follow-up album, Frontiers , was almost as successful in the United States, reaching number two and spawning several successful singles; it broadened the band's appeal in the United Kingdom, where it reached number six on the UK Albums Chart . Journey enjoyed a successful reunion in the mid-1990s and have since regrouped twice; first with Steve Augeri from 1998 to 2006, [9] then with Arnel Pineda from 2007 onward. [10]

Sales have resulted in 25 gold and platinum albums , in addition to the 18-time platinum RIAA Diamond Certified, 1988's Greatest Hits album. [11] They have had 19 top-40 singles in the US (the second-most without a Billboard Hot 100 number-one single behind Electric Light Orchestra with 20), six of which reached the top 10 of the US chart and two of which reached number one on other Billboard charts , and a number-six hit on the UK Singles Chart in "Don't Stop Believin ' " . In 2005, "Don't Stop Believin ' " reached number three on iTunes downloads. Originally a progressive rock band, Journey was described by AllMusic as having cemented a reputation as "one of America 's most beloved (and sometimes hated) commercial rock/pop bands" by 1978, when they redefined their sound by embracing pop arrangements on their fourth album, Infinity . [12]

According to the Recording Industry Association of America , Journey has sold 52 million albums in the US, making them the 11th-best selling band. Their worldwide sales have reached over 100 million records globally, making them one of the world's best-selling bands of all time . [13] A 2005 USA Today opinion poll named Journey the fifth-best US rock band in history. [14] [15] Their songs have become arena rock staples and are still played on rock radio stations around the world. Journey ranks number 96 on VH1 's 100 Greatest Artists of All Time. Journey was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with the class of 2017 . Inductees included Steve Perry, Neal Schon, keyboardists Jonathan Cain and Gregg Rolie , bassist Ross Valory , and drummers Aynsley Dunbar and Steve Smith . [16]

1973–1977: Formation, Journey , Look into the Future and Next

Neal Schon, the remaining original member of Journey in 2008. Neal Schon.jpg

The original members of Journey came together in San Francisco in 1973 under the auspices of former Santana manager Herbie Herbert . Originally called the Golden Gate Rhythm Section and intended to serve as a backup group for established Bay Area artists, the band included Santana alumni Neal Schon on lead guitar and Gregg Rolie on keyboards and lead vocals. Bassist Ross Valory and rhythm guitarist George Tickner , both of Frumious Bandersnatch , rounded out the group. Prairie Prince of The Tubes served as drummer. After one performance in Hawaii, the band quickly abandoned the "backup group" concept and developed a distinctive jazz fusion style. After an unsuccessful radio contest to name the group, roadie John Villanueva [17] suggested the name "Journey". [18] [19]

The band's first public appearance came at the Winterland Ballroom on New Year's Eve 1973 to an audience of 10,000. On the following day, the band flew to Hawaii to perform at the Diamond Head Crater to an audience over 100,000 strong. Prairie Prince rejoined The Tubes shortly thereafter; on February 1, 1974, after auditioning up to 28 drummers, the band hired British drummer Aynsley Dunbar , who had recently worked with David Bowie and had been a member of the second iteration of Frank Zappa 's Mothers of Invention . The new line-up made its debut on February 5, 1974, at the Great American Music Hall in front of Columbia Records executives, and secured a recording contract with the label. The band went on to perform at venues around the Bay Area. [20]

Journey went into CBS Studios in November 1974 with producer Roy Halee to record its debut album, Journey . The album was released in April 1975, entering the Billboard charts at number 138. Rhythm guitarist Tickner left the band (and the music business to study medicine) due to the amount of heavy touring the band was doing in promoting the album, allowing Schon to take on full guitar duties. The band entered the studio again in late 1975 to record Look into the Future , which was released in January 1976 and entered the Billboard Top 200 charts at number 100. The band promoted the album with a two-hour performance at the Paramount Theatre in Seattle, which later aired on the radio as touring continued to promote the album. [21]

From May to October 1976, the band went to His Master's Wheels Studios to record its third studio album, Next , which—like its predecessor—was produced by the band. This album had a much more commercial sound, while keeping the band's jazz fusion and progressive rock roots intact. [22] The album was released in February and charted on the Billboard Top 200 at number 85. [23] However, sales did not improve, and Columbia Records was on the verge of dropping the band. [24]

1977–1980: New musical direction, Infinity , Evolution , and Departure

Steve Perry, the former lead vocalist of Journey in 2019 Steve Perry, cropped from Steve Perry & Efrim Manuel Manuck 03.jpg

I still think some of the stuff we did then was great. Some of it was self-indulgent, just jamming for ourselves, but I also think a lot of other things hurt us in the early days. It took a while for the politics to sort of shape up. — Neal Schon [23]

As Journey's album sales did not improve, Columbia Records requested that they change their musical style and add a frontman who would share lead vocals with Rolie. [24] The band hired Robert Fleischman and made the transition to a more popular style, akin to that of Foreigner and Boston . Journey went on tour with Fleischman in 1977, opening for bands such as Black Sabbath , Target, Judas Priest , and Emerson, Lake & Palmer . Fleischman and the rest of the band began writing and rehearsing new songs, including the soon-to-be-popular track " Wheel in the Sky ". [24] [25] During a performance before about 100,000 at Soldier Field in Chicago, the band was introduced to Steve Perry. Differences between Fleischman and manager Herbie Herbert resulted in Fleischman's departure from the band in September of that year. [26] [27] [28]

Journey hired Steve Perry as their new lead singer on October 10, 1977. [29] Perry made his live debut with the band at the Old Waldorf on October 28, 1977, [30] stepping into His Master's Studios and Cherokee Studios from October to December. Herbie Herbert, the band's manager, hired Roy Thomas Baker as producer to add a layered sound approach similar to that of Baker's previously produced band, Queen . [31] With their new lead singer and new producer, the band's fourth studio album, Infinity , released in January 1978, peaked at number 21 on the US Billboard 200 . [32] The band embarked on a tour in support of the album, when they performed as headliners of a full tour for the first time, beginning with their topping a bill that included Van Halen and Ronnie Montrose . [33]

According to the band's manager Herbie Herbert, tensions arose between Aynsley Dunbar and the band due to the change in music direction from the jazz fusion sound. Neal Schon reflected on the tensions: "We would talk about it, and he'd say he'd be willing to simplify things, but we'd get out there, and after five shows, he wasn't doing that at all." Dunbar started playing erratically and talking derogatorily about the other members, which later resulted in Herbert firing Dunbar after the Infinity tour. Dunbar was replaced by Berklee -trained drummer and Montrose member Steve Smith . [34] [35]

Perry, Schon, Rolie, Smith, and Valory entered Cherokee Studios in late 1978 to record their fifth studio album, Evolution , which was released in March 1979, peaking at number 20 on the Billboard 200. The album, which was a milestone for the band, gave the band their first Billboard Hot 100 Top-20 single, " Lovin', Touchin', Squeezin' ", peaking at number 16, which gave the band significant airplay. [36] Following the tour in support of Evolution , the band expanded its operation to include a lighting and trucking operation for their future performances, as the tour had grossed more than $5 million, making the band as popular as it had ever been in five years. [37] The band later entered Automatt Studios to record their sixth studio album, Departure , which was released in March 1980, peaking at number eight on the Billboard 200. The first single from the album, " Any Way You Want It ", peaked at number 23 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1980. [38]

Keyboardist Gregg Rolie left the band following the Departure tour to start a family and undertake various solo projects. It was the second time in his career he had departed from a successful act. [39] Keyboardist Stevie "Keys" Roseman was brought in to record the lone studio track, "The Party's Over (Hopelessly in Love)", on the band's live album Captured . [40] Rolie suggested pianist Jonathan Cain of The Babys as his permanent replacement. With Cain's synthesizers replacing Rolie's organ , Cain had become the new member of the band. [41]

Steve Perry performing in 1983 StevePerry.jpg

With Cain joining as the new keyboard player, the band entered Fantasy Studios in Berkeley, California, in late 1980, releasing their seventh studio album, Escape , in July 1981. Escape became their most successful album, charting at number one in the United States. The album had a clutch of hit singles, which included: " Who's Crying Now ", "Still They Ride", " Open Arms ", and the iconic " Don't Stop Believin' ". [42]

The band began another lengthy yet successful tour on June 12, 1981, supported by opening acts Billy Squier , Greg Kihn Band , Point Blank , and Loverboy , and Journey opened for the Rolling Stones on September 25 in Philadelphia at JFK Stadium . MTV videotaped one of their two sold-out shows at The Summit in Houston on November 6, 1981, in front of over 20,000 fans, later released on DVD. [43] [44]

Following the success of the 1981 tour, the band's full establishment as a corporation, and the formation of a fan club called "Journey Force", the band released "Only Solutions" and "1990s Theme" for the 1982 Disney film, Tron . Schon had also made time to work with Jan Hammer on a few albums. [45] Journey continued touring in 1982 with shows in North America and Japan. [46]

With millions of records, hit singles, and tickets sold, the band entered Fantasy Studios again in the middle of their 1982 tour to record their eighth studio album, Frontiers . Released in February 1983, the band's second-best selling album sold over six million copies, peaking at number two on the Billboard charts, and spawning the hit singles " Separate Ways (Worlds Apart) ", " Faithfully ", " Send Her My Love ", and " After the Fall ". [47]

Journey began the Frontiers tour in Japan, and continued in North America with Bryan Adams as opening act. [48] During the tour, NFL Films recorded a video documentary of their life on the road, Frontiers and Beyond , shooting scenes at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia , Pennsylvania, with more than 80,000 fans in attendance. [17]

After the Frontiers tour, the band took some time off. Lead singer Steve Perry and guitarist Neal Schon both pursued solo projects. In 1984, Perry, with the help of Herbie Herbert, recorded and released his first solo album, Street Talk . Neal Schon toured briefly in 1984 with his supergroup HSAS , in support of their sole album, Through the Fire released that year on Geffen. [49]

When asked if Journey was over because of the selling of their properties at the end of 1984, Neal Schon commented, "No way Journey's ending. We're all too committed to this band to ever let that happen. In fact, one of the reasons we decided to go off in separate directions for a while was to keep the band as strong as ever." [49]

Following a phone call between Cain and Perry, Journey returned to Fantasy Studios in late 1985 to record their ninth studio album, Raised on Radio , but with Perry taking the role as the album's producer. Tensions within the band were shown when Herbert and Perry fired both bass player Ross Valory and drummer Steve Smith for musical and professional differences a few months into the recording sessions for the album, though Valory later admitted he left the band on his own accord. [35] [50] Bassist and future American Idol judge Randy Jackson , bassist Bob Glaub, and established drummer Larrie Londin were brought in to continue the album's recordings. [51] Raised on Radio was released in May 1986, peaking at number four on Billboard's album chart, but underperforming compared to the band's previous two efforts. [52] It featured five singles: The top-10 hit " Be Good to Yourself " along with " Suzanne ", " Girl Can't Help It ", " I'll Be Alright Without You ", and "Why Can't This Night Go On Forever?". [53]

The Raised on Radio tour began at Angels Camp in August 1986 and the band performed sold-out shows throughout the United States before concluding with two shows in Anchorage in early 1987, [54] with selected dates supported by Honeymoon Suite , The Outfield , and Glass Tiger . The tour featured both Randy Jackson on bass and Mike Baird on drums, and was videotaped by MTV for a documentary that included interviews with the band members, which was called Raised on Radio , the same as the album title. [55]

With tensions between Perry, the band, and the band's manager Herbie Herbert at an all-time high following the tour's conclusion, Perry was unable or unwilling to remain actively involved, and was tired of touring, as it was affecting his health and his vocals. [56] [57] [58] Herbert had booked fifteen more shows for the tour, but Perry had declined, and told Schon and Cain that he was done with Journey. [59]

I called Jon and Neal together. We met in San Rafael, we sat on the edge of the marina, and I just told them, 'I can't do this anymore. I've got to get out for a while.' And they said: 'Well, what do you mean?' And I said: 'That's exactly what I mean, is what I'm saying. I just don't want to be in the band any more. I want to get out, I want to stop.' And I think Jon said: 'Well, just take some time off, and we'll think,' and I said: 'OK, fine.' And I just sort of fell back into my life. I looked around and realized that my whole life had become everything I'd worked so hard to be, and when I came back to have a regular life, I had to go find one. — Steve Perry [58]

The band went into a hiatus in 1987 following the conclusion of their Raised on Radio tour. Columbia Records released the Greatest Hits compilation in November 1988, which became one of the best-selling greatest-hits albums, selling over 15 million copies and continuing to sell half a million to a million copies per year. The compilation spent 750 weeks on the Billboard album charts until 2008. [60] [61]

While Perry had retreated from the public eye, Schon and Cain spent the rest of 1987 collaborating with artists such as Jimmy Barnes and Michael Bolton before teaming up with Cain's ex-Babys bandmates John Waite and Ricky Phillips to form the supergroup Bad English [62] with drummer Deen Castronovo in 1988, releasing two albums in 1989 and 1991. Steve Smith devoted his time to his jazz bands, Vital Information and Steps Ahead , and teamed up with Ross Valory and original Journey keyboardist Gregg Rolie to create The Storm with singer Kevin Chalfant and guitarist Josh Ramos, along with Herbie Herbert as the band's manager, as he did with Journey with Scott Boorey. [60]

On November 3, 1991, Schon, Cain, and Perry reunited to perform "Faithfully" and "Lights" at the Bill Graham tribute concert Laughter, Love & Music at Golden Gate Park, following the concert promoter's death in a helicopter accident. [63] In October 1993, Schon, Rolie, Valory, Dunbar, Smith, and Cain reunited and performed at a private dinner for their manager Herbie Herbert at Bimbo's in San Francisco, with Kevin Chalfant on lead vocals. [64] [65]

After the breakup of Bad English in 1991, Schon and Castronovo formed the glam metal band Hardline with brothers Johnny and Joey Gioeli , releasing only one studio album before his departure. Neal later joined Paul Rodgers in 1993 for live performances, alongside Deen Castronovo. [66] In 1994, Steve Perry had released his second solo album For the Love of Strange Medicine , and toured North America in support of the album, though his voice had changed since the last time he had performed. [67]

Perry made the decision to reunite with Journey under the condition that Herbie Herbert would no longer be the band's manager. The band hired Irving Azoff, longtime Eagles manager, as the new manager for the band in October 1995. Steve Smith and Ross Valory reunited with Journey and the band started writing material for their next album, with rehearsals beginning that same month. [68]

The band began recording their 10th studio album, Trial by Fire , in early 1996 at The Site and Wildhorse Studio in Marin County and Ocean Way Recorders, in which they recorded under producer Kevin Shirley. [69] It was released in late October that year, peaking at number three on the Billboard album charts. The album's hit single " When You Love a Woman ", which reached number 12 on the Billboard charts, was nominated in 1997 for a Grammy Award for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal . [70] The album also produced three top-40 mainstream rock tracks, "Message of Love" reaching number 18, "Can't Tame the Lion" reaching number 33, and "If He Should Break Your Heart" reaching number 38. [71] [72]

Plans for a subsequent tour ended when Perry, troubled by pain while hiking in Hawaii on a 10-day break in August 1996, discovered he had a degenerative bone condition and could not perform without hip-replacement surgery, which for some time he declined to undergo, later admitting he had other physical issues. The accident resulted in the album's release date being delayed. [73] [74] [75]

The band took a break following the album's release to work on solo projects, waiting for Perry to make up his mind on if he wanted to tour. Schon released his solo album Electric World in 1997, later creating Abraxas Pool with former Journey member Gregg Rolie, drummer Michael Shrieve, and a few former Santana members. Cain released his two solo albums, Body Language and For A Lifetime in 1997 and 1998, respectively. [76]

Journey in 2002: Steve Augeri, Jonathan Cain, Ross Valory, Deen Castronovo, and Neal Schon Journeymm2002.jpg

Following the reunion album's release, the band was becoming restless waiting for an answer from Perry regarding touring. Following a phone call between Cain and Perry, the latter announced that he would be departing from Journey, releasing himself from the band's contracts and making the decision to semiretire from the music business, disappearing from the public eye again. Steve Smith later exited the band, citing that Journey would not be the same without Perry, and returning to his jazz career and his project Vital Information. [77]

The band hired drummer Deen Castronovo, Schon's and Cain's Bad English bandmate and drummer for Hardline , to replace Steve Smith. After auditioning several high-profile candidates, including Geoff Tate , Kevin Chalfant, and John West , [78] Journey replaced Perry with Steve Augeri , formerly of Tyketto and Tall Stories . [79] The band later recorded the song "Remember Me", which was featured on the soundtrack for the 1998 film Armageddon . [80]

Following a rehearsal with Augeri and Castronovo, the band performed four gigs in Japan, a reliable touring stronghold for the band. When asked how he felt about touring for the first time in over a decade, Schon commented: "It's a little like we are reborn again." Journey embarked on a tour in the United States titled Vacation's Over, which began in October and concluded at the end of December in Reno. They continued the tour with another leg in 1999, beginning in Minnesota in June and concluding in Michigan in September. [81]

From March to August 2000, the band entered Avatar Studios to record their next studio album, Arrival with producer Kevin Shirley. The album was released in Japan later in the year. A North American release of the album followed in April 2001, peaking at number 56 on the Billboard charts. The album's single "All the Way" failed to boost sales for the album which was considered a disappointment with mixed reviews and resulted in Sony dropping the band from their label. Upon the album's completion, the band embarked on a tour in support of the album in Latin America, the United States, and Europe. [82]

During the events of September 11, 2001, in response to the attacks in New York City, the band joined various other bands at a major fundraising event to help the victims and families of the attack held on October 20 and 21 at the Smirnoff Music Centre in Dallas, Texas. The event raised about $1 million. [83]

Activity for Journey was quiet in 2002, as Schon formed Planet Us with bandmate Castronovo, Sammy Hagar and former Van Halen bassist Michael Anthony until 2004, when Planet Us disbanded. Schon also co-wrote songs with the band Bad Company , while Cain released another solo album. Having made some recordings between 2001 and 2002, the band released a four-track EP titled Red 13 in November under their new label Journey Music, with an album cover design chosen through a fan contest with the online cover designed by Kelly McDonald, while the retail cover designed by Christopher Payne was only made available at the band's performances. The band only performed one club gig in support of the EP, but later began another tour of the United States from May to August in 2003, that included their teaming with Styx and REO Speedwagon in Classic Rock's Main Event. [84] The band then toured the following year on the Summer Detour, which began from June and concluded in September 2004. In November, Journey reteamed with both REO Speedwagon and Styx for a tour around the Caribbean aboard the Triumph cruise ship. [85]

In 2005, the members of Journey were inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame alongside former members Perry, Dunbar, Tickner, Steve Smith, and Fleischmann. Rolie was the only member who did not appear at the ceremony. Surprised to see Perry joining them to accept the induction with the band, Valory commented on the wonderful things Perry had to say in which he looked to be in fine shape, and that it was a pleasant surprise to see him. [86]

Following their accolade on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, the band began recording at the Record Plant in Sausalito, California, for their 12th studio album, Generations , with producer Kevin Elson, who had previously collaborated with the band. The album was released on August 29 in Europe, with a North American release following on October 4. The album peaked at number 170 on the Billboard charts. To promote the album and celebrate the band's 30th anniversary, the band embarked on a tour starting in Irvine, California, in June and concluding in Phoenix in October. Each concert on the tour was three hours long with an intermission and featured many of their classic hits, as well as new songs from the album. [87]

In 2006, the band toured in Europe and then joined Def Leppard in a North American tour. During the tours, however, suggestions arose that Augeri was not singing, but was using backing tracks to cover up his deteriorating vocals, resulting in him getting attacked by the fans. Augeri had been suffering from vocal attrition problems before the band began the tour with Def Leppard, and Journey had been accused of using prerecorded lead vocals, [88] an accusation that former manager Herbie Herbert insists was true. [65] Augeri admitted in a 2022 interview that he wasn't legally allowed to say whether it was true or not. [89] In a press statement, the band later announced that Augeri had to step down as Journey's lead singer and leave the tour to recover. Augeri performed his last show with Journey on July 4 in Raleigh. [90]

With the successful tour still going on, the band was quick to hire Jeff Scott Soto from Talisman as their lead vocalist. He performed as Journey's vocalist for the first time on July 7 in Bristow. Because of its success and popularity, the tour was extended to November. Soto was later officially announced as the band's new vocalist in December 2006. [91] Following tours of Europe and the United States in 2007, the band announced on June 12 that Soto was no longer part of the group. [92] [93] In a statement, Schon stated: "He did a tremendous job for us and we wish him the best. We've just decided to go our separate ways, no pun intended. We're plotting our next move now." [94]

Journey in 2008: Valory, Cain, Pineda, Schon, and Castronovo. Journey band.JPG

Following Soto's departure, the band was again without a lead vocalist. Neal Schon began searching YouTube for a new lead vocalist, with Jeremey Hunsicker of the Journey tribute band Frontiers auditioning and spending a week with the band writing material. [95] [96] Hunsicker claims to have been formally offered the position, but the offer fell through shortly afterwards following tension with Schon. [97] One of the tracks co-written with Hunsicker, "Never Walk Away", later appeared on the Revelation album. Schon later found Filipino singer Arnel Pineda of the cover band The Zoo, covering the song "Faithfully". Schon was so impressed that he contacted Pineda to set up two days of auditions, which went well, naming him the official lead vocalist of Journey on December 5, 2007. [98] [99]

Although Pineda was neither the first foreign national to become a member of Journey (former drummer Aynsley Dunbar is British), nor even the first nonwhite (bass player Randy Jackson is African American), his recruitment resulted in some fans of Journey making racist comments towards the new vocalist. Keyboardist Jonathan Cain responded to such sentiments in the Marin Independent Journal : "We've become a world band. We're international now. We're not about one color." [100] [101]

In 2007, "Don't Stop Believin'" gained press coverage and a sharp growth in popularity when it was used in The Sopranos television series final episode [102] prompting digital downloads of the song to soar. [103]

In November 2007, Journey entered the studio with Pineda to record the studio album, Revelation . The album was released on June 3, 2008. It debuted at number five on the Billboard charts, selling more than 196,000 units in its first two weeks and staying in the top 20 for six weeks. [104] As a multidisc set (2-CD) each unit within that set counts as one sale. [105] Journey also found success on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart where the single " After All These Years " spent over 23 weeks, peaking at number nine. [106] [107]

On February 21, 2008, Pineda performed for the first time with Journey in front of 20,000 fans in Chile. [108] The band began the Revelation tour in the United Kingdom in June, continuing the tour into North America, Asia, Europe, and South America. The 2008 leg concluded in October. [109] Receipts from the 2008 tour made Journey one of the top-grossing concert tours of the year, bringing in over $35,000,000. [110] On December 18, 2008, Revelation was certified platinum by RIAA . [111] [112]

The band performed at the Super Bowl XLIII pregame show in Tampa on February 1, 2009. The band continued their Revelation tour in May and concluded it in October 2009. The band had also performed in Manila to 30,000 fans, which was recorded for a live release, Live in Manila . [113]

In 2009, "Don't Stop Believin'" became the top-selling song on iTunes among those released before 2000. [7] [8]

The band entered into Fantasy Studios on 2010 with Pineda to record their studio album, Eclipse . [114] The album was released on May 24, 2011, and debuted at number 13 on the Billboard 200 charts. [115] The band toured the United Kingdom in June 2011 with Foreigner and Styx. [116] Journey was awarded the prestigious "Legend of Live Award" at the Billboard Touring Awards in October. [117] Greatest Hits 2 was released in November. [118]

In June 2015, Deen Castronovo was arrested following a domestic altercation. [119] [120] He was fired by Journey in August [121] [120] and was ultimately replaced by Omar Hakim on the band's 2015 tour. [119] In 2016, Steve Smith again returned as Journey's drummer, reuniting all of the members of the Escape-Frontiers-Trial by Fire lineup except lead singer Steve Perry. Their tour that year also featured Dave Mason and The Doobie Brothers . [122]

In 2017, Journey was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. [123] At the ceremony held on April 7 at the Barclays Center in New York City, Pat Monahan gave the introduction speech. The members included in the induction were all based from their debut album up to when they originally broke up, with the exception of George Tickner. Dunbar, Rolie, Valory, Schon, Perry, Smith and Cain all gave acceptance speeches. When it came time for the band to play, all but Perry performed, with Pineda taking his place.

In 2018, during the North American tour with Def Leppard, Journey topped the Billboard Hot Tours List by grossing more than $30 million over 17 shows. [124]

On March 3, 2020, Schon and Cain announced that they had fired Smith and Valory and were suing them for an alleged "attempted corporate coup d'état, " seeking damages in excess of $10 million. The lawsuit alleged Smith and Valory tried to "assume control of Nightmare Productions because they incorrectly believe that Nightmare Productions controls the Journey name and mark" to "hold the Journey name hostage and set themselves up with a guaranteed income stream after they stop performing." Valory and Smith contested the firings, with the support of former manager Herbie Herbert and former lead singer Steve Perry. Court filings revealed that Steve Perry had been paid as a member of the band for years despite not performing. In an open letter dated that same day, Schon and Cain stated Smith and Valory "are no longer members of Journey, and that Schon and Cain have lost confidence in both of them and are not willing to perform with them again." [125] [126] Valory countersued Schon and Cain, among other things, for their partnership's claim of owning the Journey trademark and service mark (collectively known as the mark), when that partnership, Elmo Partners, was only the licensee of the mark from 1985 to 1994, when the license was terminated by Herbie Herbert of Nightmare Productions, owners of the mark and name. Valory also sought protection against Schon from using any similarities of the Journey mark and name for his side project, Neal Schon – Journey Through Time. [127] On April 1, 2021 it was announced that an amicable settlement had been reached between Schon/Cain and Valory/Smith [128] In May, Schon and Cain announced that bassist Randy Jackson would once again join the band, replacing Valory, and drummer Narada Michael Walden was announced as an official new member of Journey, replacing Smith. [129] [130]

In June 2020, Schon announced via his social-media page that a new album with Jackson and Walden was "starting to take shape". [131] The following month, he confirmed the album's progress, and confirmed that they would be releasing new music in early 2021. [132] [133] In January 2021, he announced that the first single of the album would be released later that year, with possibly a worldwide tour to follow. [134] [135] In April 2021, the band reached an "amicable settlement" with Valory and Smith, confirming their departures. [136] The single "The Way We Used to Be" was released on June 24, 2021. [137]

In July 2021, Schon confirmed that Deen Castronovo, who was previously in the band, had rejoined as a second drummer. [138] Meanwhile, Jackson's back surgery led to the band bringing in Marco Mendoza to play bass, with Mendoza having previously played with Schon and Castronovo in Neal Schon's Journey Through Time. [139] Mendoza's stint with Journey, though, only lasted a few months due to Schon's feeling that his bass playing did not gel with the band's sound, [140] and he was replaced by Todd Jensen , who had previously played with Schon and Castronovo in Hardline . [141]

On February 16, 2022, the band announced the title and track listing of their 15th studio album Freedom , which was released on July 8, 2022. [142] [143] [144] The second single from the album, "You Got the Best of Me", was released on April 26, 2022; [144] the third, "Let It Rain", on May 17; [145] the fourth, "Don't Give Up on Us", on June 7; [146] and the fifth, "United We Stand", on July 4. [147]

On March 1, 2022, Cain confirmed that neither Walden nor Jackson remained in the lineup, with Walden's exit following a minor heart attack following a live show in Pennsylvania. Nevertheless, both were still featured on Freedom , as they had completed their parts on the album before their departures. [148] [149] Schon later stated that Walden and Jackson were still "musical members" of the band, and he would certainly write again with Walden in the future. [140] Schon also did not rule out the possibility of former members Steve Perry and Gregg Rolie returning for a reunion on the band's 50th anniversary. [150] Although Schon had confirmed that former member Rolie would appear with the band for their tour in January 2023, [151] [152] He later backtracked that same month, stating that Rolie would not be joining for the 50th anniversary tour, [153] [154] although Rolie would later make a guest appearance for the band's performance in Austin on February 22, 2023. [155]

Former member Perry filed a lawsuit against Schon and Cain regarding song trademark registrations on September 21, 2022, [156] although he would later drop the lawsuit on January 7, 2023. [157] Two months later, Schon filed a lawsuit against Cain over a credit card dispute. [158]

On October 27, 2022, Journey announced its fifth live album, Live in Concert at Lollapalooza , which was released on December 9, 2022. [159]

In December 2022, Schon served Cain with a cease and desist order after he performed "Don't Stop Believin'" for Donald Trump, stating Cain "has no right to use Journey for politics". [160] Throughout 2023 to early 2024, the band toured with Toto . [161] [162] On December 7, 2023, it was announced that Journey is set to tour North America again with Def Leppard throughout July to September 2024, as they previously did in 2006 and 2018. [163]

As of 2021 [ update ] :

  • Neal Schon – lead guitar, backing vocals (1973–1987, 1991, 1995–)
  • Jonathan Cain – keyboards, piano, backing vocals, rhythm guitar, harmonica (1980–1987, 1991, 1995–)
  • Deen Castronovo – drums, backing and lead vocals (1998–2015, 2021–)
  • Arnel Pineda – lead vocals (2007–)
  • Jason Derlatka – keyboards, backing and lead vocals (2019–)
  • Todd Jensen – bass, backing vocals (2021–) [140]

On March 8, 2013, a documentary, Don't Stop Believin': Everyman's Journey , was released. The movie, directed by Ramona S. Diaz, chronicles the discovery of Arnel Pineda and his first year with Journey. [164] [165]

During the COVID-19 pandemic , "Don't Stop Believin ' " was used as an anthem for patients who were being discharged from New York Presbyterian Queens Hospital and Henry Ford Health System after defeating the virus. [166] [167] On August 21, 2021, Journey played the song live at New York's "We Love NYC: The Homecoming Concert", which was scheduled to celebrate the city's emergence from the pandemic. [168] [169]

  • Journey (1975)
  • Look into the Future (1976)
  • Next (1977)
  • Infinity (1978)
  • Evolution (1979)
  • Departure (1980)
  • Dream, After Dream (1980)
  • Escape (1981)
  • Frontiers (1983)
  • Raised on Radio (1986)
  • Trial by Fire (1996)
  • Arrival (2001)
  • Generations (2005)
  • Revelation (2008)
  • Eclipse (2011)
  • Freedom (2022)
  • Best-selling music artists
  • List of bands from the San Francisco Bay Area

Related Research Articles

<i>Infinity</i> (Journey album) 1978 studio album by Journey

Infinity is the fourth studio album by American rock band Journey, released in January 1978 by Columbia Records. It was the band's first album with vocalist Steve Perry and the last to feature drummer Aynsley Dunbar.

<i>Raised on Radio</i> 1986 studio album by Journey

Raised on Radio is the ninth studio album by the American rock band Journey, released in April 1986 on the Columbia Records label. It is the first album not to feature founding bassist Ross Valory, who was replaced initially by session bassist Bob Glaub and then by Randy Jackson. Drummer Steve Smith contributed to a few tracks, but was replaced during the recording by session drummer Larrie Londin and then Mike Baird for the subsequent tour.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Neal Schon</span> American guitarist

Neal Joseph Schon is an American musician and songwriter, best known as the co-founder and lead guitarist for the rock band Journey. He is the last original member to remain throughout the group's history. He was a member of the rock band Santana before forming Journey. He was also a member of the group Bad English during Journey's hiatus from 1987 to 1995, as well as an original member of Hardline.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gregg Rolie</span> American musician

Gregg Alan Rolie is an American keyboardist, singer and songwriter. Rolie served as lead singer of the bands Santana and Journey – both of which he co-founded. He also helmed rock group The Storm, performed in Ringo Starr & His All-Starr Band until 2021, and since 2001 with his Gregg Rolie Band. Rolie is a two-time inductee of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, having been inducted both as a member of Santana in 1998 and as a member of Journey in 2017.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jonathan Cain</span> American musician

Jonathan Leonard Friga , known professionally as Jonathan Cain , is an American musician, singer and songwriter. He is best known as the keyboardist and rhythm guitarist for Journey. He has also worked with The Babys and Bad English. Cain was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Journey in 2017. He also maintains a solo career as a contemporary Christian artist.

<i>Time<sup>3</sup></i> 1992 box set by Journey

Time 3 is a 1992 three-CD compilation box set by the American rock band Journey. The tracks are arranged chronologically and include both studio and live tracks. A booklet documenting the band's history and song details is included.

<i>Trial by Fire</i> (Journey album) 1996 studio album by Journey

Trial by Fire is the tenth studio album by American rock band Journey. Released on October 22, 1996, the album marked the reunion of the classic 1981–1985 lineup, which had not recorded together since 1983's Frontiers . Trial by Fire was produced by Kevin Shirley, who continues to produce the band's albums. It is the first album to feature bassist Ross Valory and drummer Steve Smith since Frontiers and the last to feature Smith and vocalist Steve Perry.

<i>Arrival</i> (Journey album) 2000 studio album by Journey

Arrival is the eleventh studio album by the American rock band Journey, released on April 3, 2001. A version with one substituted song was released in Japan in 2000. The album was the band's first full-length studio album with new lead vocalist Steve Augeri, who replaced popular frontman Steve Perry, and with Deen Castronovo, who replaced Steve Smith as the band's drummer.

<i>Generations</i> (Journey album) 2005 studio album by Journey

Generations is the twelfth studio album by the American rock band Journey. It was the band's last album with lead singer Steve Augeri and second album with drummer Deen Castronovo, confirming the line-up of 2000's Arrival and 2002's Red 13 EP. The album was given away for free by the band during most of the concerts of the Generations Tour in 2005, and subsequently released on Sanctuary Records later the same year.

<i>Red 13</i> 2002 EP by Journey

Red 13 is the first EP and to date the only EP by the rock band Journey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Don't Stop Believin'</span> 1981 single by Journey

" Don't Stop Believin ' " is a rock song by American band Journey. It was released in October 1981 as the second single from the group's seventh studio album, Escape (1981), released through Columbia Records. "Don't Stop Believin ' " shares writing credits between the band's vocalist Steve Perry, guitarist Neal Schon, and keyboardist Jonathan Cain. A mid-tempo rock anthem and power ballad, "Don't Stop Believin ' " is memorable for its distinctive opening piano riff.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Any Way You Want It</span> 1980 single by Journey

" Any Way You Want It " is a song by American rock band Journey, released in February 1980 as the lead single from the band's sixth album Departure (1980). Written by lead singer Steve Perry and guitarist Neal Schon, it peaked at number 23 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart.

Walter James "Herbie" Herbert II was an American music manager and musician. He was best known for his work with Santana and Journey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kevin Chalfant</span> American rock singer

Kevin Chalfant is an American singer and a native of Streator, Illinois. He obtained a BMI award for co-writing and singing on one of the most frequently aired rock radio hits of 1992 and 1993, "I've Got a Lot to Learn About Love", by The Storm. In October 1993 he very briefly sat in for Steve Perry in Journey, singing lead at a roast for Journey's manager, Herbie Herbert, and in 2003, he toured as lead vocalist for the Alan Parsons Live Project.

<i>Revelation</i> (Journey album) 2008 studio album by Journey

Revelation is the thirteenth studio album by American rock band Journey, and their first with lead singer Arnel Pineda. It features 11 new songs, 11 re-recorded greatest hits and a DVD featuring the current lineup's March 8, 2008 concert in Las Vegas, Nevada. Three singles penned by Neal Schon and Jonathan Cain were released to radio: the distinctively Journey-sounding "Never Walk Away," "Where Did I Lose Your Love," and the power ballad "After All These Years". "Where Did I Lose Your Love" and "After All These Years" both found success on the adult contemporary charts; "Where Did I Lose Your Love" peaked at No. 19, while "After All These Years" peaked at No. 9 on Billboard ' s Adult Contemporary chart and stayed on the charts for over 23 weeks. It was met with generally positive reviews, with many calling it a return to form from the band and praising Pineda's vocals, musicianship and the band's performance.

The Eclipse Tour was a concert tour by American rock band Journey. It was in support of the group's fourteenth studio album Eclipse . The album is Arnel Pineda's second since joining the band in 2007. Special guests on the 2011 tour include Foreigner and Night Ranger for most of the North American dates, Styx for the European dates, and Sweet for South American dates. The tour was the sixth top-grossing concert tour from July 23, 2011, to September 23, 2011, bringing in over $21 million and selling over 900,000 tickets. For the 2012 U.S. tour, special guests were Pat Benatar and Loverboy, and the guests for the 2013 tour were Deep Purple for the Australian dates, and Whitesnake for the European dates. For the 2014–2015 tour, the Steve Miller Band co-headlined. The 2016 tour saw the band play with The Doobie Brothers, as well as signal the return of "classic" drummer Steve Smith after longtime drummer Deen Castronovo was fired from the group. The 2017 tour had Asia co-headline, and also included the band's induction and performance at their induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. This tour is also the longest-running in the entire history of the band.

<i>Greatest Hits 2</i> (Journey album)

Greatest Hits 2 is a greatest hits album by American rock band Journey. The album was released on November 1, 2011 by Columbia Records.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Be Good to Yourself</span> 1986 single by Journey

" Be Good to Yourself " is a song by Journey from their ninth studio album, Raised on Radio . Released in 1986 as the first single from the album, the song reached number 9 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 .

The Infinity Tour was a concert tour by the American rock band Journey. The tour was in support of their 1978 album Infinity which peaked at #21 on the Billboard 200.

  • ↑ Bashe, Philip (1985). Heavy Metal Thunder: The Music, Its History, Its Heroes . Doubleday . p.   33. ISBN   978-0-3851-9797-7 .
  • ↑ Buckley, Peter (2003). The Rough Guide to Rock (3rd   ed.). Rough Guides . p.   550 . ISBN   1-84353-105-4 .
  • ↑ McCormick, Neil (January 9, 2014). "The greatest American rock band of all time? Surely not Guns N' Roses" . The Daily Telegraph . Archived from the original on September 18, 2017 . Retrieved September 16, 2017 .
  • ↑ George-Warren, Holly; Romanowski, Patricia, eds. (2001). The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll (3rd   ed.). Fireside . p.   511 . ISBN   0-7432-9201-4 . Archived from the original on November 20, 2019 . Retrieved November 17, 2019 .
  • ↑ Lynskey, Dorian (December 16, 2010). "Don't Stop Believin': the power ballad that refused to die" . The Guardian . Archived from the original on August 27, 2017 . Retrieved September 17, 2017 .
  • 1 2 "Gold & Platinum Searchable Database" . Recording Industry Association of America. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015 . Retrieved April 18, 2014 .
  • 1 2 "The Sony Music Journey Home | The Sony Music Journey Site" . Journeyband.com. Archived from the original on July 25, 2009 . Retrieved August 3, 2009 .
  • ↑ "STEVE AUGERI OFFICIAL" . Steve Augeri official website. Archived from the original on June 15, 2020 . Retrieved June 20, 2020 .
  • ↑ "Believe it: Journey brings it in new Las Vegas residency" . The Spokesman-Review . Archived from the original on October 28, 2019 . Retrieved April 26, 2020 .
  • ↑ "Gold & Platinum" . RIAA. Archived from the original on January 3, 2016 . Retrieved May 18, 2020 .
  • ↑ Journey: Infinity . AllMusic . Retrieved September 2, 2010.
  • ↑ Strauss, Chris (December 17, 2013). "Paul McCartney wanted a free Brooklyn Nets T-shirt more than anything" . USA Today . Retrieved February 21, 2018 .
  • ↑ "RIAA Gold and Platinum Data" . Recording Industry Association of America. Archived from the original on July 1, 2007 . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ "And the greatest American rock band ever is" . USA Today . July 5, 2005. Archived from the original on April 16, 2012 . Retrieved August 3, 2009 .
  • ↑ "Journey" . Rock and Roll Hall of Fame . Archived from the original on June 22, 2019 . Retrieved April 17, 2017 .
  • 1 2 Journey: Frontiers and Beyond video, NFL Films, 1983.
  • ↑ "Journey FAQ at Steve Lake's Journey Tribute Page" . Journey-tribute.com. Archived from the original on September 23, 2010 . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   10–11.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   11–13.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   13–15.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   17.
  • 1 2 Daniels 2011 , p.   19.
  • 1 2 3 Daniels 2011 , pp.   22–23.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   24–25.
  • ↑ "Interviews" . Melodicrock.com. Archived from the original on November 27, 2010 . Retrieved March 1, 2011 .
  • ↑ "Robert Fleischman interview at The Journey Zone" . Journey-zone.com. August 14, 2009. Archived from the original on August 24, 2010 . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   26–27.
  • ↑ "Oct. 10th, 1977: Steve Perry Officially Joins "Journey" . Q104.3 .
  • ↑ DeRiso, Nick (October 27, 2017). "When Steve Perry Performed His First Show With Journey" . Ultimate Classic Rock .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   29.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   31.
  • ↑ Campbell, Mary (May 24, 1978). "Journey Takes Off With Vocalist" . Harlan, Kentucky: Harlan Daily Enterprise . Retrieved January 18, 2022 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   34–35.
  • 1 2 "Steve Smith interview at The Journey Zone" . Journey-zone.com. Archived from the original on July 13, 2011 . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   36–38.
  • ↑ Kozak, Roman (November 3, 1979). "Lighting and Trucking Areas Attract Journey". Billboard . New York. p.   36. ISSN   0006-2510 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   42, 44.
  • ↑ Flans, "Journey;" Matt Carty's Herbie Herbert Interview, p. 7. Archived November 24, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  • ↑ Captured reissue (2006) liner notes, p. 15, lines 8–9; Time (Cubed) liner notes pp. 11–14.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   48–51.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   53–55.
  • ↑ Journey: Live in Houston DVD, 1981. The band also pioneered the use of a very large video screen at live performances, allowing them to increasingly perform before stadium-sized crowds.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   57–58, 70.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   58–61.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   63.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   68.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   70.
  • 1 2 Daniels 2011 , pp.   76–77.
  • ↑ "Discography" . Journeymusic.com. Archived from the original on February 3, 2008.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   78–81.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   83–84.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   83.
  • ↑ Kielty, Martin (February 1, 2017). "When Steve Perry Played His Last Full Show With Journey" . Ultimate Classic Rock . Retrieved February 1, 2022 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   86–87.
  • ↑ "2001 Herbie Herbert Interview with Matt Carty, pp. 13–14" . Members.cox.net. Archived from the original on October 23, 2011 . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ "The Q: GQ" . Men.style.com. Archived from the original on February 1, 2009 . Retrieved March 1, 2011 .
  • 1 2 Daniels 2011 , p.   89.
  • ↑ Cain 2018 , pp.   17–18.
  • 1 2 Daniels 2011 , pp.   91–93.
  • ↑ "Gold & Platinum – August 3, 2009" . RIAA. Archived from the original on July 1, 2007 . Retrieved August 3, 2009 .
  • ↑ "Ship of Dreams" . Spin . Vol.   21, no.   3. SPIN Media LLC. March 2005. p.   66. ISSN   0886-3032 . Retrieved February 9, 2023 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   95.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   97.
  • 1 2 "Herbie Herbert: One Man's Journey" . MelodicRock.com . March 13, 2014. Archived from the original on April 3, 2020 . Retrieved April 22, 2020 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   96–97.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   98.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   100.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   102.
  • ↑ "39th Annual Grammy Award Winners and Nominees for 1997" . Rock on the Net. February 26, 1997. Archived from the original on December 28, 2007 . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ Billboard.com Journey's Trial by Fire singles
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   109.
  • ↑ "Behind the Music: Journey" . Vh1 . Archived from the original on April 23, 2009 . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ Pappademas, Alex (May 29, 2008). "Foolish, Foolish Throat: A Q&A with Steve Perry" . Men.style.com. Archived from the original on February 1, 2009 . Retrieved March 1, 2011 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   106–107.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   110–111.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   115–117.
  • ↑ "Melodicrock Interviews: Neal Schon" . melodicrock.com. Archived from the original on September 10, 2018 . Retrieved September 10, 2018 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   118.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   121.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   122–123.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   123–126, 131.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   132–133.
  • ↑ "Jul 27, 2003: Classic Rock's Main Event at Carolina Amphitheater Marion, SC | Concert Archives" .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   133–136.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   137–138.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   139–146.
  • ↑ "A Personal Journey Chapters Six, Seven, and Eight" . Journey-zone.com. Archived from the original on September 9, 2019 . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ "Before His First Gig With Journey, Steve Augeri Got So Nervous He Threw Up" . Rolling Stone . June 6, 2022 . Retrieved January 14, 2023 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   148–151.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   152–153, 158.
  • ↑ " 'Journey names Jeff Scott Soto official new lead singer' at" . Punktv.ca. Archived from the original on March 4, 2012 . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ " 'Journey announces departure of Jeff Scott Soto' reprinted from journeymusic.com at The Journey Zone" . Journey-zone.com. Archived from the original on March 25, 2010 . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   166–168.
  • ↑ Dickens, Tad (January 9, 2008). "His new Journey leads to old Frontiers" . Roanoke Times . Archived from the original on February 1, 2013.
  • ↑ "Jeremey Hunsicker - Different Guy, Same Ol' Sound." Yahoo Voices. April 7, 2008. Archived from the original on July 28, 2014 . Retrieved April 18, 2014 .
  • ↑ "Covering every little thing... Muirsical Conversation with Jeremey Frederick Hunsicker" . FabricationsHQ. March 2012 . Retrieved August 6, 2021 .
  • ↑ "Journey Finds New Singer the Old-Fashioned Way: On the Internet" . Rolling Stone . December 6, 2007. Archived from the original on October 31, 2018 . Retrieved October 31, 2018 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   171.
  • ↑ Liberatore, Paul (December 27, 2007). "An incredible journey for band's new frontman" . Marinij.com. Archived from the original on March 11, 2012 . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   173.
  • ↑ "Free Services for PR   :: News   :: Press Releases" . pr-inside.com . Archived from the original on March 8, 2008.
  • ↑ "Journey Members Reflect on Importance of 'Sopranos' and 'Glee,' Talk PBS Doc" . The Hollywood Reporter . August 6, 2013 . Retrieved October 19, 2013 .
  • ↑ "Three Lions (Frontiers, 2014)" . Melodicrock.com. Archived from the original on March 19, 2005 . Retrieved April 18, 2014 .
  • ↑ "Certification Criteria" . Recording Industry Association of America. Archived from the original on July 1, 2007 . Retrieved April 18, 2014 .
  • ↑ "Journey - Chart history" . Billboard . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   173, 176–177.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   174.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , pp.   179–180.
  • ↑ "Top 25 Tours - Billboard Year In Music 2008" . Billboard . November 11, 2008. Archived from the original on May 20, 2009.
  • ↑ "Gold & Platinum Searchable Database" . Recording Industry Association of America. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015 . Retrieved September 10, 2010 .
  • ↑ "Madonna still tops the list of the top-grossing concert tours" . Jam! . December 3, 2008. Archived from the original on December 5, 2008. {{ cite web }} : CS1 maint: unfit URL ( link )
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   182.
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   183.
  • ↑ "The Billboard 200 for the 6/11/2011 issue" . Reuters . June 3, 2011. Archived from the original on June 25, 2013 . Retrieved April 18, 2014 .
  • ↑ Daniels 2011 , p.   184.
  • ↑ "Journey to Receive Billboard's 'Legend of Live' Award" . Billboard . October 24, 2011. Archived from the original on August 23, 2020 . Retrieved May 18, 2020 .
  • ↑ "JOURNEY GREATEST HITS, VOLUME 2 RELEASED AFTER FANS WAIT "PATIENTLY" " . ArtisanNewsService . November 2, 2011. Archived from the original on March 3, 2020 . Retrieved October 30, 2019 .
  • 1 2 DeRiso, Nick (October 13, 2015). "Journey's Deen Castronovo Sentenced in Domestic Assault Case" . Ultimate Classic Rock . Archived from the original on January 26, 2020 . Retrieved January 26, 2020 .
  • 1 2 Gaita, Paul (November 19, 2015). "Journey's Deen Castronovo On His Journey Back To Sanity And Sobriety" . The Fix . Archived from the original on January 26, 2020 . Retrieved January 26, 2020 .
  • ↑ Stephens, Stephanie (November 16, 2015). "Drummer Deen Castronovo: On a New Journey after Losing Everything" . Parade: Entertainment, Recipes, Health, Life, Holidays . Archived from the original on January 26, 2020 . Retrieved January 26, 2020 .
  • ↑ "Journey Welcome Back Drummer Steve Smith, Announce 2016 Tour With Doobie Brothers" . Ultimate Classic Rock . November 24, 2015. Archived from the original on November 25, 2015 . Retrieved November 24, 2015 .
  • ↑ https://www.rockhall.com/inductees/journey . Retrieved March 7, 2024 . {{ cite web }} : Missing or empty | title= ( help )
  • ↑ "Journey & Def Leppard Are No 1 On The Hot Tours List" . Billboard . August 17, 2018. Archived from the original on July 12, 2020 . Retrieved May 18, 2020 .
  • ↑ "Why Journey Are Paying Steve Perry Not to Sing" . WRRL.com. March 6, 2020. Archived from the original on August 23, 2020 . Retrieved March 9, 2020 .
  • ↑ "Miller Barondess Files Lawsuit on Behalf of Key Members of Iconic Rock Band Journey—Neal Schon and Jon Cain—Against Dissident Band Members" . Business Wire (Press release). March 3, 2020. Archived from the original on August 23, 2020 . Retrieved March 4, 2020 .
  • ↑ "Attorneys Fire Back with Cross-Complaint in Lawsuit Involving Journey Bass Player Ross Valory" . Business Wire . April 15, 2020. Archived from the original on June 11, 2020 . Retrieved June 17, 2020 .
  • ↑ "Journey Reach 'Amicable Settlement' with Ross Valory, Steve Smith" . April 2021.
  • ↑ Neale, Matthew (May 26, 2020). "Journey announce line-up changes as former bassist Randy Jackson rejoins" . NME.com . Retrieved December 15, 2020 .
  • ↑ Wilkening, Matthew (May 24, 2020). "Three New Journey Members Announced by Neal Schon" . Ultimate Classic Rock . Retrieved April 3, 2021 .
  • ↑ "New JOURNEY Album Is 'Starting To Take Shape', Says NEAL SCHON" . Blabbermouth. June 17, 2020. Archived from the original on June 18, 2020 . Retrieved June 23, 2020 .
  • ↑ "Archived copy" . Facebook . Archived from the original on August 23, 2020 . Retrieved July 23, 2020 . {{ cite web }} : CS1 maint: archived copy as title ( link )
  • ↑ "New JOURNEY Music Coming In Early 2021: 'It Sounds Amazing,' Says NEAL SCHON" . Blabbermouth . October 24, 2020 . Retrieved October 24, 2020 .
  • ↑ "JOURNEY's New Single 'Should Be Coming Out Mid-February', Says NEAL SCHON" . BLABBERMOUTH.NET . January 7, 2021 . Retrieved January 7, 2021 .
  • ↑ DeRiso, Nick (January 8, 2021). "How Neal Schon Made Peace With Jonathan Cain to Revive Journey" . Ultimate Classic Rock . Retrieved January 10, 2021 .
  • ↑ Rolli, Bryan (April 1, 2021). "Journey Reach 'Amicable Settlement' With Ross Valory and Steve Smith" . Ultimate Classic Rock.
  • ↑ "JOURNEY Shares Snippet Of New Single, 'The Way We Used To Be' " . BLABBERMOUTH.NET . June 23, 2021 . Retrieved June 23, 2021 .
  • ↑ Rolli, Bryan (July 29, 2021). "Neal Schon Confirms Deen Castronovo Is Back in Journey" . Ultimate Classic Rock . Retrieved August 12, 2021 .
  • ↑ "JOURNEY Returns To Live Stage With Revamped Lineup Featuring DEEN CASTRONOVO, MARCO MENDOZA (Video)" . Blabbermouth . July 30, 2021 . Retrieved July 7, 2022 .
  • 1 2 3 Greene, Andy (July 6, 2022). "Neal Schon on Journey's New LP 'Freedom,' Ambitious 50th Anniversary Plans" . Rolling Stone . Retrieved July 7, 2022 .
  • ↑ "JOURNEY Introduces New Bassist TODD JENSEN At Las Vegas Residency Kick-Off" . Blabbermouth . December 4, 2021 . Retrieved July 7, 2022 .
  • ↑ Rolli, Bryan (February 16, 2022). "Journey Reveal 'Freedom' Album Title and Track Listing" . Ultimate Classic Rock . Retrieved February 16, 2022 .
  • ↑ "Journey Announces New Album, 'Freedom' " . Blabbermouth.net . February 16, 2022 . Retrieved February 16, 2022 .
  • 1 2 "Listen To Journey's New Single 'You Got The Best Of Me' " . Blabbermouth.net . April 26, 2022 . Retrieved April 26, 2022 .
  • ↑ "JOURNEY Releases New Single 'Let It Rain' " . Blabbermouth.net . May 17, 2022 . Retrieved May 17, 2022 .
  • ↑ "Journey Releases New Single 'Don't Give Up On Us' " . Blabbermouth.net . June 7, 2022 . Retrieved June 8, 2022 .
  • ↑ Irwin, Corey (July 4, 2022). "Listen to Journey's New Single 'United We Stand' " . Ultimate Classic Rock . Retrieved July 5, 2022 .
  • ↑ "Jonathan Cain Says Journey 'Step Out a Little Bit' on New Album" . Ultimate Classic Rock . March 2022 . Retrieved March 1, 2022 .
  • ↑ "Why Narada Michael Walden Left Journey" . Ultimate Classic Rock . May 13, 2022 . Retrieved May 14, 2022 .
  • ↑ DiVita, Joe (July 20, 2022). "Neal Schon Says Journey Will Play Stadiums for 50th Anniversary, Doesn't Rule Out Steve Perry Return" . Loudwire . Retrieved July 20, 2022 .
  • ↑ "Neal Schon Says Fans Will See Journey Co-Founder Gregg Rolie On Band's 50th-Anniversary Tour" . Blabbermouth.net . January 4, 2023 . Retrieved January 5, 2023 .
  • ↑ Anderson, Carys (January 5, 2023). "Journey's original keyboardist Gregg Rolie to join band on upcoming tour" .
  • ↑ Fooks, Todd (January 17, 2023). "Now Neal Schon Says Original Journey Keyboardist Gregg Rolie Won't Be Part of 50th Anniversary Tour" . Loudwire . Retrieved January 18, 2023 .
  • ↑ "Neal Schon Now Says Gregg Rolie Won't Be Part Of Journey's Upcoming Tour" . Blabbermouth.net . January 17, 2023 . Retrieved January 18, 2023 .
  • ↑ Rolli, Bryan (February 23, 2023). "Journey Tears Through Deep Cuts With Gregg Rolie" . Ultimate Classic Rock . Retrieved February 23, 2023 .
  • ↑ "Steve Perry suing Journey band members over song trademarks" . Guitar.com . September 21, 2022 . Retrieved December 27, 2022 .
  • ↑ Kreps, Daniel (January 7, 2023). "Steve Perry Withdraws Lawsuit Against Journey Over Band's Trademarks" . Rolling Stone . Retrieved January 10, 2023 .
  • ↑ "Neal Schon Sues Jonathan Cain Over Journey Credit Card" . Blabbermouth.net . November 21, 2022 . Retrieved December 27, 2022 .
  • ↑ Lewry, Fraser (October 31, 2022). "Watch Journey tear up Lollapalooza with sparkling version of Be Good To Yourself" . Louder Sound . Retrieved November 1, 2022 .
  • ↑ IYoungs, Ian (December 22, 2022). "Journey star tells his bandmate to stop performing for Donald Trump" . BBC News . Retrieved December 22, 2022 .
  • ↑ Childers, Chad (October 17, 2022). "Journey Announce Huge 2023 North American Tour With Toto" . Loudwire . Retrieved February 27, 2024 .
  • ↑ "Journey Announces Early 2024 North American Tour With Toto" . Blabbermouth.net . September 25, 2023 . Retrieved February 27, 2024 .
  • ↑ Greene, Andy (December 7, 2023). "Def Leppard and Journey Unite for Massive U.S. Stadium Tour" . Rolling Stone . Retrieved December 8, 2023 .
  • ↑ Owens, Andy. "Don't Stop Believin': Everyman's Journey" . Everymansjourney.com. Archived from the original on July 16, 2017 . Retrieved July 17, 2017 .
  • ↑ "Don't Stop Believin': Everyman's Journey (2012)" . IMDb . March 8, 2013. Archived from the original on August 1, 2018 . Retrieved July 17, 2017 .
  • ↑ "Hospital plays Don't Stop Believin when COVID-19 patients are discharged" . Good Morning America . Archived from the original on April 28, 2020 . Retrieved May 18, 2020 .
  • ↑ "WATCH: Henry Ford Health plays 'Don't Stop Believin' ' as COVID-19 patients are discharged" . WXYZ . April 14, 2020. Archived from the original on May 1, 2020 . Retrieved May 18, 2020 .
  • ↑ Arnold, Chuck (August 21, 2021). "We Love NYC concert: Music history before Central Park was washed out" . New York Post. Archived from the original on August 22, 2021 . Retrieved August 22, 2021 .
  • ↑ Sisario, Ben (August 21, 2021). "Central Park Concert Draws Thousands to Cheer New York's Comeback" . The New York Times . Archived from the original on August 21, 2021 . Retrieved August 22, 2021 .
  • Cucu, Laura Monica (2006). Steve Perry – A Singer's Journey . Lulu.com. ISBN   978-1-84728-858-5 .
  • Daniels, Neil (2011). The Untold Story of Journey . London: Omnibus Press. ISBN   978-1-84938-657-9 .
  • Cain, Jonathan (2018). Don't Stop Believin': The Man, the Band, and the Song that Inspired Generations . Grand Rapids: Zondervan. ISBN   9780310351955 .
  • Golland, David Hamilton (2024). Livin' Just to Find Emotion: Journey and the Story of American Rock . Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN   978-1-5381-8702-9 .
  • Official website
  • Journey at Curlie
  • The Journey Zone
  • Translation missing: en.general.social.links.spotify
  • Translation missing: en.general.social.links.apple
  • Translation missing: en.general.social.links.amazon

.header-logo { --ar: 9.509803921568627%; --mw: 330px; max-width: 100%; /* needed for the psuedoelement */ width: 330px; margin: 0% auto 0%; } @media (max-width: 1000px) { .header-logo { --mw: 245px; width: 245px; } } @media (max-width: 600px) { .header-logo { --mw: 170px; max-width: calc(100vw - 140px); width: 170px; } }

Item added to your cart.

journey the band biography

2024 Tour Dates

journey the band biography

You Got The Best Of Me

  • Listen on Spotify
  • Listen on Apple Music
  • Listen on Youtube Music
  • Listen on Amazon Music
  • Listen on Deezer
  • Listen on Pandora

journey the band biography

The Way We Used To Be

The first new song from Journey in 10 years. Listen as the classic band roars back to form.

journey the band biography

A soaring, modern album of 12 original songs. "This is Journey with combat boots on."

journey the band biography

11 re-recorded classics in union with 11 new, hard-hitting tracks. Find your revelation.

journey the band biography

Steve Augeri’s debut album with the band, featuring "All the Way" and "Higher Place"

journey the band biography

Trial By Fire

The blazing, rowdy reunion after a 10-year hiatus.

journey the band biography

Raised On Radio

The ninth studio album from Journey

journey the band biography

4-times platinum, and featuring the legendary ballad "Faithfully"

journey the band biography

The legendary origin of "Don't Stop Believing", "Open Arms", and 9 more epic tracks.

journey the band biography

The ferocious hit album including "Any Way You Want It" and more.

journey the band biography

The breakthrough triple-platinum album, bringing Journey into the mainstream with "Touchin', Lovin', Squeezin'".

journey the band biography

Journey arrives at its iconic style on their fourth studio album, featuring "Wheel In the Sky"

journey the band biography

Look Into the Future

journey the band biography

Jonathan Cain

Keys, songwriting.

journey the band biography

Lead Guitar, Songwriting

journey the band biography

Arnel Pineda

Lead vocals, 2024 freedom tour merch, platinum logo 50th anniversary zip hoodie, gold logo 50th anniversary zip hoodie, black/grey elmo raglan, 2024 50th anniversary tour tee, 2024 mineral wash deco scarab tee, 2024 green tie dye infinity wings tee, ladies infinity tee - black, ladies infinity tee - mauve, crystal scarab freedom tee, 50th anniversary trucker hat, 2024 soar trucker hat, 50th anniversary bronze scarab bandana, 50th anniversary bronze scarab koozie, journey’s “don’t stop believin’” recognized by forbes as officially the biggest song of all time.

You’ve heard it literally everywhere since the 80’s: on the radio of every car you’ve ever owned, at every major sporting event you’ve attended in the last 20 years...

journey the band biography

ROCK ROYALTY REUNITE: DEF LEPPARD AND JOURNEY ANNOUNCE 2024’s BIGGEST SUMMER STADIUM TOUR

THE BANDS WILL BE JOINED IN VARIOUS CITIES BY ROCK LEGENDS: STEVE MILLER BAND, HEART & CHEAP TRICK  (December 7, 2023) – Two of rock's most iconic and influential bands, JOURNEY...

You’ve heard it literally everywhere since the 80’s: on the radio of every car you’ve ever owned, at every major sporting event you’ve attended in the last 20 years (including...

THE LEGENDARY ROCK BAND JOURNEY CELEBRATING THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY FREEDOM TOUR 2023

One of the most legendary rock bands of all time, JOURNEY, announces the continuation of their highly successful tour with the 50th Anniversary Celebration Freedom Tour 2023 featuring, very special guest TOTO. JOURNEY , Diamond-selling Rock & Roll Hall of Famers will take the stage in 38 cities across North America with their catalog of global chart-topping hits, including "Don't Stop Believin”, "Any Way You Want It", "Faithfully", "Lights" and more.

Presented by AEG Presents, JOURNEY Freedom Tour 2023 begins February 4 in Allentown, PA – making stops in Austin, Montreal, Memphis and more – before wrapping April 25 at the brand new Acrisure Arena in Palm Springs, CA. The 2023 run includes rescheduled dates in Washington DC, Hartford, Toronto and Quebec that were postponed earlier this year due to covid.

journey the band biography

Q&A: Neal Schon On The ‘Freedom’ Of Journey, His Friendship With Carlos Santana And Much More

Journey will release Freedom , their first album in 11 years, this Friday (July 8). With the 11-year gap between records, the band's longest break between albums, and the presence of drummer/producer Narada Michael Walden, Freedom , according to guitarist Neal Schon, is a true representation of who Journey is in 2022.

Neal Schon on Journey’s New LP ‘Freedom,’ Ambitious 50th Anniversary Plans

It’s been 11 years since Journey released their last studio record, and for a while it was looking like they’d never get around to making one. “Nobody was really interested in making new music,” Journey founder and guitarist and Neal Schon tells Rolling Stone via Zoom from his California home. “It’s very difficult to get new material played and to get people familiar with it before you go out and play live. Everybody in the band was like, ‘I don’t want to do it.'”

journey the band biography

JOURNEY DELIVERED FOR PITTSBURGH FANS

Neal Schon soloed many times throughout the one-hour-45-minute set, mustering an entertaining mélange of crisp, piercing notes, with blistering bluster and straight-up shredding.

journey the band biography

Journey's 'Escape' Album Gets Diamond Status In U.S. Ahead Of Anniversary

Journey 's  Escape  album has been certified diamond by the RIAA for sales in excess of 10 million equivalent units in time for its 40th anniversary tomorrow (July 17).

Following its initial release in 1981,  Escape  hit No. 1 on the  Billboard  200...

journey the band biography

JOURNEY Among 'Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve 2022' Performers

JOURNEY will perform from New York City's Times Square for "Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve With Ryan Seacrest 2022 " . This year marks the 50th anniversary of America's go-to annual New Year's tradition that celebrates the year's very best in music.

  • Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.

journey the band biography

  • Arts & Photography

Kindle app logo image

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required .

Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.

Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.

QR code to download the Kindle App

Image Unavailable

Journey: Don&#39;t Stop Believin&#39;: The Untold Story

  • To view this video download Flash Player

Follow the author

Neil Daniels

Journey: Don't Stop Believin': The Untold Story Paperback – May 1, 2011

  • Print length 288 pages
  • Language English
  • Publisher Omnibus Press
  • Publication date May 1, 2011
  • Dimensions 6.2 x 0.83 x 9.16 inches
  • ISBN-10 1849386579
  • ISBN-13 978-1849386579
  • See all details

The Amazon Book Review

Similar items that may ship from close to you

Don't Stop Believin': The Man, the Band, and the Song that Inspired Generations

Editorial Reviews

About the author, product details.

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Omnibus Press (May 1, 2011)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 288 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1849386579
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1849386579
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 14.6 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.2 x 0.83 x 9.16 inches
  • #2,608 in Rock Band Biographies
  • #3,109 in Rock Music (Books)

About the author

Neil daniels.

Based in the UK, Neil Daniels has written about rock, metal and pop culture for a wide range of magazines, fanzines and websites.

He has penned books on Judas Priest, Robert Plant, Linkin Park, Bon Jovi and Journey, and co-authored Dawn Of The Metal Gods: My Life In Judas Priest & Heavy Metal with original Judas Priest singer/co-founder Al Atkins. His third book on Judas Priest is Rock Landmarks: Judas Priest's British Steel.

His acclaimed series, All Pens Blazing: A Rock & Heavy Metal Writer's Handbook Volumes I & II, collects over a hundred original and exclusive interviews with some of the world's most famous rock and heavy metal scribes. His other duel collection, Rock 'N' Roll Mercenaries - Interviews With Rock Stars Volumes I & II, compiles over sixty interviews with many well-known rock stars and rock writers.

His books have so far been translated into Brazilian, Bulgarian, Czech, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Polish and Swedish with more foreign titles in the works.

2012 saw the publication of his books on Metallica, Iron Maiden and You Me At Six.

2013/14 saw the release of his books on AC/DC, Pantera, UFO, ZZ Top, Bon Jovi and Iron Maiden.

It's not just rock 'n' roll. Matthew McConaughey – The Biography was published in November 2014 by John Blake Publishing. 2015 saw the release of more film biographies, including actor Martin Freeman and film director J.J. Abrams.

His Createspace books include AOR Chronicles, Rock & Metal Chronicles, Hard Rock Rebels - Talking With Rock Stars, Rock 'N' Roll Sinners - Volumes I, II & III, Rock Bites, Love It Loud and the fictional rock 'n' roll novel, It's My Life, amongst several more weighty tomes. And then there's a book on former American Idol contestant turned Queen frontman Adam Lambert. Also, In A Dark Room - Exploits Of A Genre Fan collects his articles, features and reviews on books, comics, TV and film and is also published by Createspace. His 'Casual Guide' series (also published by Createspace) includes titles on Neal Schon, Bryan Adams, Richie Sambora, Rob Halford and Brian May. Further Createspace works are planned for 2015/16.

His reviews, articles and interviews on music and pop culture have been published in The Guardian, Classic Rock Presents AOR, Classic Rock Presents Let It Rock, Rock Sound, Record Collector, Big Cheese, Powerplay, Fireworks, MediaMagazine, Rocktopia.co.uk, Get Ready To Rock.com, Lucemfero.com, musicOMH.com, Ghostcultmag.com, Drowned In Sound.com, BBCNewsOnline.co.uk, Carling.com, Unbarred.co.uk and Planet Sound on Channel 4's now defunct Teletext service.

He has also written several sets of sleeve notes for Angel Air and BGO Records.

He can be found on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and Tumblr. He has author pages on both Amazon US and UK sites. Further details can also be found on Wikipedia.

His primary interests are music, films and books. He has a degree in Film Studies.

His official website is www.neildanielsbooks.com.

Please take some time to check out his latest business venture - an online reselling business called otherrealmscollectibles primarily dealing with action figures, toys and superheroes merch as well as t-shirts, books, CDs and DVDs. Favourites include Star Trek, Star Wars, Doctor Who, Toy Story and Disney. There are hundreds of items for sale.

Here is the link: http://stores.ebay.co.uk/otherrealmscollectibles/

And here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aag/main/ref=olp_merch_name_4?ie=UTF8&asin=B013GMNN8Y&isAmazonFulfilled=1&seller=A20WM3YMHHYSZO

Customer reviews

Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.

To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.

  • Sort reviews by Top reviews Most recent Top reviews

Top reviews from the United States

There was a problem filtering reviews right now. please try again later..

journey the band biography

Top reviews from other countries

journey the band biography

  • Amazon Newsletter
  • About Amazon
  • Accessibility
  • Sustainability
  • Press Center
  • Investor Relations
  • Amazon Devices
  • Amazon Science
  • Start Selling with Amazon
  • Sell apps on Amazon
  • Supply to Amazon
  • Protect & Build Your Brand
  • Become an Affiliate
  • Become a Delivery Driver
  • Start a Package Delivery Business
  • Advertise Your Products
  • Self-Publish with Us
  • Host an Amazon Hub
  • › See More Ways to Make Money
  • Amazon Visa
  • Amazon Store Card
  • Amazon Secured Card
  • Amazon Business Card
  • Shop with Points
  • Credit Card Marketplace
  • Reload Your Balance
  • Amazon Currency Converter
  • Your Account
  • Your Orders
  • Shipping Rates & Policies
  • Amazon Prime
  • Returns & Replacements
  • Manage Your Content and Devices
  • Recalls and Product Safety Alerts
  • Conditions of Use
  • Privacy Notice
  • Consumer Health Data Privacy Disclosure
  • Your Ads Privacy Choices

For more audio journalism and storytelling, download New York Times Audio , a new iOS app available for news subscribers.

Hamas Took Her, and Still Has Her Husband

The story of one family at the center of the war in gaza..

This transcript was created using speech recognition software. While it has been reviewed by human transcribers, it may contain errors. Please review the episode audio before quoting from this transcript and email [email protected] with any questions.

I can’t remember the word, but do you know the kind of fungi connection between trees in the forest? How do you call it?

Mycelium. We are just — I just somehow feel that we are connected by this kind of infinite web of mycelium. We are so bound together. And I don’t think we really realized that until all this happened.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

It’s quite hard to explain, to me in a sense, because some people would say, oh, I’m so hoping your father will come, and then everything will be OK. And it’s very hard to explain that really this group of people decided to bring us up together, shared all their resources over 75 years, grow into each other, fight endlessly with each other, love and hate each other but somehow stay together. And their children will then meet and marry and make grandchildren.

And there’s so many levels of connection. And I’m sitting here in the room, and I see their faces, some of them. And we are incredibly — it’s hard to explain how much these people are missing from our kind of forest ground. [CHUCKLES SOFTLY]

From “The New York Times,” I’m Sabrina Tavernise, and this is “The Daily.”

It’s been nearly six months since Hamas attacked Israel on October 7 and took more than 200 people into Gaza. One of the hardest hit places was a village called Nir Oz, near the border with Gaza. One quarter of its residents were either killed or taken hostage.

Yocheved Lifshitz was one of those hostages and so was her husband, Oded Lifshitz. Yocheved was eventually released. Oded was not.

Today, the story of one family at the center of the war.

It’s Friday, March 29.

OK, here we go. OK.

Good morning, Yocheved. Good morning, Sharone.

Good morning.

Yocheved, could you identify yourself for me, please? Tell me your name, your age and where you’re from.

[SPEAKING HEBREW]

OK, I’ll translate. My name is Yocheved Lifshitz. I’m 85 years old. I was born in 1938. When I was 18, I arrived at kibbutz Nir Oz. I came alone with a group of people who decided to come and form and build a community on a very sandy territory, which was close to the Gaza Strip.

And my name is Sharone Lifschitz. I am 52 years old. I was raised in kibbutz Nir Oz by my mom and dad. So I lived there until I was 20. And I live for the last 30-something years in London.

And, Sharone, what do you have next to you?

Next to me I have a poster of my dad in both English and Hebrew. And it says, “Oded Lifshitz, 83.” And below that it says, “Bring him home now.” And it’s a photo where I always feel the love because he is looking at me. And there’s a lot of love in it in his eyes.

And why did you want to bring him here today, Sharone?

Because he should be talking himself. He should be here and able to tell his story. And instead, I’m doing it on his behalf. It should have been a story of my mom and dad sitting here and telling their story.

The story of Oded and Yocheved began before they ever met in Poland in the 1930s. Anti-Semitism was surging in Europe, and their families decided to flee to Palestine — Yocheved’s in 1933, the year Hitler came to power, and Oded’s a year later. Yocheved remembers a time near the end of the war, when her father received news from back home in Poland. He was deeply religious, a cantor in a synagogue. And he gathered his family around him to share what he’d learned.

And he said, we don’t have a family anymore. They’ve all been murdered. And he explained to us why there is no God. If there was a God, he would have protected my family. And this means that there is no God.

And suddenly, we stopped going to synagogue. We used to go every Saturday.

So it was a deep crisis for him. The shock and the trauma were very deep.

Abstention.

Abstention. Soviet Union? Yes. Yes. The United Kingdom? Abstained.

Yocheved’s father lived long enough to see a state establish for his children. The UN resolution of 1947 paved the way for a new country for Jews. And the next spring, Israel declared its independence. Yocheved remembers listening to the news on the radio with her parents.

The General Assembly of the United Nations has made its decision on Palestine.

We had a country. So now we’ll have somebody who’s protecting us. It’s a country for the people, to rebuild the people. This was the feeling we had.

In other words, if God could not protect you, this nation maybe could?

Yes. But the next day, it was already sad.

Israel was immediately forced to defend itself when its Arab neighbors attacked. Israel won that war. But its victory came at a great cost to the Palestinian Arabs living there. More than 700,000 either fled or were expelled from their homes. Many became refugees in Gaza in the south.

Suddenly, Yocheved and Oded saw themselves differently from their parents, not as minorities in someone else’s country, but as pioneers in a country of their own, ready to build it and defend it. They moved to the south, near the border line with Gaza. It was there, in a kibbutz, where they met for the first time.

The first time I met him, he was 16, and I was 17. And we didn’t really have this connection happening. But when we arrived at Nir Oz, that’s where some sort of a connection started to happen. And he was younger than I am by a year and a half. So at first I thought, he’s a kid. But for some reason, he insisted. Oded really insisted. And later, turned out he was right.

What was it about him that made you fall in love with him?

He was cute.

He was a cute kid. He was a cute boy.

What’s so funny?

He was a philosopher. He wrote a lot. He worked in agriculture. He was this cute boy. He was only 20, think about it.

And then I married him. And he brought two things with him. He brought a dog and he brought a cactus. And since then we’ve been growing a huge field of cacti for over 64 years.

What did it feel like to be starting a new life together in this new country? What was the feeling of that?

We were euphoric.

And what did you think you were building together?

We thought we were building a kibbutz. We were building a family. We were having babies. That was the vision. And we were thinking that we were building a socialist state, an equal state. And at first, it was a very isolated place. There were only two houses and shacks and a lot of sand. And little by little, we turned that place into a heaven.

Building the new state meant cultivating the land. Oded plowed the fields, planting potatoes and carrots, wheat and cotton. Yocheved was in charge of the turkeys and worked in the kitchen cooking meals for the kibbutz. They believed that the best way to live was communally. So they shared everything — money, food, even child-rearing.

After long days in the fields, Oded would venture outside the kibbutz to the boundary line with Gaza and drink beer with Brazilian peacekeepers from the UN and talk with Palestinians from the villages nearby. They talked about politics and life in Arabic, a language Oded spoke fluently. These were not just idle conversations. Oded knew that for Israel to succeed, it would have to figure out how to live side by side with its Arab neighbors.

He really did not believe in black and white, that somebody is the bad guy and somebody is the good guy, but there is a humanistic values that you can live in.

Sharone, what was your father like?

My father was a tall man and a skinny man. And he was —

he is — first of all, he is — he is a man who had very strong opinion and very well formed opinion. He read extensively. He thought deeply about matters. And he studied the piano. But as he said, was never that great or fast enough for classical. But he always played the piano.

[PIANO MUSIC]

He would play a lot of Israeli songs. He wound play Russian songs. He would play French chansons.

And he had this way of just moving from one song to the next, making it into a kind of pattern. And it was — it’s really the soundtrack of our life, my father playing the piano.

[PLAYING PIANO]:

[CONVERSATION IN HEBREW]:

[PLAYING PIANO]

So one side of him was the piano. Another side was he was a peace activist. He was not somebody who just had ideals about building bridges between nations. He was always on the left side of the political map, and he actioned it.

[NON-ENGLISH CHANTING]:

I remember growing up and going very regularly, almost weekly, to demonstrations. I will go regularly with my father on Saturday night to demonstrations in Tel Aviv. I will sit on his shoulders. He will be talking to all his activist friends. The smoke will rise from the cigarettes, and I will sit up there.

But somehow, we really grew up in that fight for peace.

Yocheved and Oded’s formal fight for peace began after the Arab-Israeli war of 1967. Israel had captured new territory, including the West Bank, the Sinai Peninsula, and the Gaza Strip. That brought more than a million Palestinians under Israeli occupation.

Oded immediately began to speak against it. Israel already had its land inside borders that much of the world had agreed to. In his view, taking more was wrong. It was no longer about Jewish survival. So when Israeli authorities began quietly pushing Bedouin Arabs off their land in the Sinai Peninsula, Oded took up the cause.

He helped file a case in the Israeli courts to try to stop it. And he and Yocheved worked together to draw attention to what was going on. Yocheved was a photographer, so she took pictures showing destroyed buildings and bulldozed land. Oded then put her photographs on cardboard and drove around the country showing them to people everywhere.

They became part of a growing peace movement that was becoming a force helping shape Israeli politics. Israel eventually returned the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt in 1982.

[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]

Whenever there is a movement towards reconciliation with our neighbors, it’s almost like your ability to live here, your life force, gets stronger. And in a way, you can think of the art of their activism as being a response to that.

And why did he and your mother take up that fight, the cause of the land? Why do you think that was what he fought for?

My father, he had a very developed sense of justice. And he always felt that had we returned those lands at that point, we could have reached long-term agreement at that point. Then we would have been in a very different space now. I know that in 2019, for example, he wrote a column, where he said that when the Palestinians of Gaza have nothing to lose, we lose big time. He believed that the way of living in this part of the world is to share the place, to reach agreement, to work with the other side towards agreements.

He was not somebody who just had ideals about building bridges between nations. Two weeks before he was taken hostage, he still drove Palestinians that are ill to reach hospital in Israel and in East Jerusalem. That was something that meant a lot to him. I think he really believed in shared humanity and in doing what you can.

Do you remember the last conversation you had with your father?

I don’t have a clear memory which one it was. It’s funny. A lot of things I forgot since. A lot of things have gone so blurred.

We actually didn’t have a last conversation. The last thing he said was, Yoche, there is a war. And he was shot in the hand, and he was taken out. And I was taken out. I couldn’t say goodbye to him. And what was done to us was done.

We’ll be right back.

Yocheved, the last thing Oded said was there’s a war. Tell me about what happened that day from the beginning.

That morning, there was very heavy shelling on Nir Oz. We could hear gunfire. And we looked outside, and Oded told me, there are a lot of terrorists outside. We didn’t even have time to get dressed. I was still wearing my nightgown. He was wearing very few clothes. I remember him trying to close the door to the safe room, but it didn’t work. He wasn’t successful in closing it.

And then five terrorists walked in. They shot him through the safe room door. He was bleeding from his arm. He said to me, Yoche, I’m injured. And then he fainted. He was dragged out on the floor. And I didn’t know if he was alive. I thought he was dead. After that, I was taken in my nightgown. I was led outside. I was placed on a small moped, and I was taken to Gaza.

And we were driving over a bumpy terrain that had been plowed. And it didn’t break my ribs, but it was very painful.

And I could see that the gate that surrounds the Gaza Strip was broken, and we were driving right through it.

And as we were heading in, I could see so many people they were yelling, “Yitbach al Yahud,” kill the Jews, slaughter the Jews. And people were hitting me with sticks. And though the drivers on the moped tried to protect me, it didn’t help.

What were you thinking at the time? What was in your mind?

I was thinking, I’m being taken; I’m being kidnapped. I didn’t know where to, but this decision I had in my head was that I’m going to take photographs in my mind and capture everything I’m seeing so that when I — or if and when I am released, I’ll have what to tell.

And when I came to a stop, we were in a village that’s near Nir Oz. It’s called Khirbet Khuza. We came in on the moped, but I was transferred into a private car from there. And I was threatened that my hand would be cut off unless I hand over my watch and my ring. And I didn’t have a choice, so I took my watch off, and I took my ring off, and I handed it to them.

Was it your wedding ring?

Yes, it was my wedding ring.

After that, they led me to a big hangar where the entrance to the tunnel was, and I started walking. And the entrance was at ground level, but as you walk, you’re walking down a slope. And you’re walking and walking about 40 meters deep underground, and the walls are damp, and the soil is damp. And at first, I was alone. I didn’t know that other people had been taken too. But then more hostages came, and we were walking together through the tunnels.

Many of whom were from kibbutz Nir Oz. These were our people. They were abducted but still alive. And we spoke quietly, and we spoke very little. But as we were walking, everybody started telling a story of what had happened to him. And that created a very painful picture.

There were appalling stories about murder. People had left behind a partner.

A friend arrived, who, about an hour or two hours before, had her husband murdered and he died in her hands.

It was a collection of broken up people brought together.

So you were piecing together the story of your community and what had happened from these snapshots of tragedies that you were looking at all around you as you were walking. What’s the photograph you’ll remember most from that day?

It would be a girl, a four-year-old girl. People kept telling her — walk, walk, walk. And we tried to calm her down. And her mom tried to carry her on her arms. It was the most difficult sight to see a child inside those tunnels.

What were you feeling at that moment, Yocheved?

Very difficult.

Where did they lead you — you and your community — from Nir Oz.

They led us to this chamber, a room, that they had prepared in advance. There were mattresses there. And that’s where we were told to sit.

I saw people sitting on the mattresses, bent down, their heads down between their hands. They were broken. But we hardly spoke. Everybody was inside their own world with themselves, closed inside his own personal shock.

Yocheved was without her glasses, her hearing aids, or even her shoes. She said she spent most days lying down on one of the mattresses that had been put out for the hostages. Sometimes her captors would let her and others walk up and down the tunnels to stretch their legs.

She said she was given a cucumber, spreading cheese, and a piece of pita bread every day to eat. They had a little bit of coffee in the morning and water all day long.

One day, a Hamas leader came to the room where she and others were being held. She said she believes it was Yahya Sinwar, the leader of Hamas, who is believed to be the architect of the October 7 attack. Two other hostages who were held with Yocheved also identified the man as Sinwar, and an Israeli military spokesman said he found the accounts reliable.

He came accompanied with a group of other men. He just made rounds between the hostages, I suppose. And he spoke in Hebrew, and he told us not to worry, and soon there’s going to be a deal and we’ll be out. And others told me, don’t speak. And I said, what is there for me to be afraid of? The worst already happened. Worst thing, I’ll be killed.

I want to say something, and I spoke my mind. I told Sinwar, why have you done what you just did to all of the same people who have always helped you? He didn’t answer me. He just turned around and they walked off.

Were you afraid to ask him why Hamas did what it did, to challenge him?

I wasn’t afraid.

I was angry about the whole situation. It was against every thought and thinking we ever had. It was against our desire to reach peace, to be attentive and help our neighbors the way we always wanted to help our neighbors. I was very angry. But he ignored what I said, and he just turned his back and walked away.

In this entire time, you had no answers about Oded?

What was the hardest day for you, the hardest moment in captivity?

It’s when I got sick. I got sick with diarrhea and vomiting for about four days. And I had no idea how this will end. It was a few very rough days. And probably because of that, they decided to free me.

They didn’t tell me they were going to release me. They just told me and another girl, come follow us. They gave us galabiya gowns to wear and scarves to wear over our heads, so maybe they’ll think that we are Arab women. And only as we were walking, and we started going through corridors and ladders and climbing up we were told that we’re going home.

I was very happy to be going out. But my heart ached so hard for those who were staying behind. I was hoping that many others would follow me.

It’s OK. Let’s go. It’s OK. Let’s go.

You go with this one.

Shalom. Shalom.

There was a video that was made of the moment you left your captors. And it seemed to show that you were shaking a hand, saying shalom to them. Do you remember doing that?

I said goodbye to him. It was a friendly man. He was a medic. So when we said goodbye, I shook his hand for peace, shalom, to goodbye.

What did you mean when you said that?

I meant for peace.

Shalom in the sense of peace.

An extraordinary moment as a freed Israeli hostage shakes hands with a Hamas terrorist who held her captive.

I literally saw my mom on CNN on my phone on the way to the airport. And it was the day before I was talking to my aunt, and she said, I just want to go to Gaza and pull them out of the earth. I just want to pull them out of the earth and take them. And it really felt like that, that she came out of the earth. And when she shook the hand of the Hamas person, it just made me smile because it was so her to see the human in that person and to acknowledge him as a human being.

I arrived in the hospital at about 5:30 AM. My mom was asleep in the bed. And she was just — my mom sleeps really peacefully. She has a really quiet way of sleeping. And I just sat there, and it was just like a miracle to have her back with us. It was just incredible because not only was she back, but it was her.

I don’t know how to explain it. But while they were away, we knew so little. We were pretty sure she didn’t survive it. The whole house burned down totally. So other homes we could see if there was blood on the walls or blood on the floor. But in my parents’ home, everything was gone — everything. And we just didn’t know anything. And out of that nothingness, came my mom back.

It was only when she got to the hospital that Yocheved learned the full story of what happened on October 7. Nir Oz had been mostly destroyed. Many of her friends had been murdered. No one knew what had happened to Oded. Yocheved believed he was dead. But there wasn’t time to grieve.

The photograph she had taken in her mind needed to be shared. Yocheved knew who was still alive in the tunnels. So she and her son called as many families as they could — the family of the kibbutz’s history teacher, of one of its nurses, of the person who ran its art gallery — to tell them that they were still alive, captive in Gaza.

And then in November came a hostage release. More than 100 people came out. The family was certain that Oded was gone. But Sharone decided to make some calls anyway. She spoke to one former neighbor then another. And finally, almost by chance, she found someone who’d seen her father. They shared a room together in Gaza before he’d gotten ill and was taken away. Sharone and her brothers went to where Yocheved was staying to tell her the news.

She just couldn’t believe it, actually. It was as if, in this great telenovela of our life, at one season, he was left unconscious on the floor. And the second season open, and he is in a little room in Gaza with another woman that we know. She couldn’t believe it.

She was very, very, very excited, also really worried. My father was a very active and strong man. And if it happened 10 years ago, I would say of course he would survive it. He would talk to them in Arabic. He will manage the situation. He would have agency. But we know he was injured. And it makes us very, very worried about the condition in which he was — he’s surviving there. And I think that the fear of how much suffering the hostages are going through really makes you unable to function at moment.

Yocheved, the government has been doing a military operation since October in Gaza. You have been fighting very hard since October to free the hostages, including Oded. I wonder how you see the government’s military operation. Is it something that harms your cause or potentially helps it?

The only thing that will bring them back are agreements. And what is happening is that there are many soldiers who have been killed, and there is an ongoing war, and the hostages are still in captivity. So it’s only by reaching an agreement that all of the hostages will be released.

Do you believe that Israel is close to reaching an agreement?

I don’t know.

You told us that after the Holocaust, your father gathered your family together to tell you that God did not save you. It was a crisis for him. I’m wondering if this experience, October 7, your captivity, challenged your faith in a similar way.

No, I don’t think it changed me. I’m still the same person with the same beliefs and opinions. But how should I say it? What the Hamas did was to ruin a certain belief in human beings. I didn’t think that one could reach that level that isn’t that much higher than a beast. But my opinion and my view of there still being peace and reaching an arrangement stayed the same.

You still believe in peace?

Why do you believe that?

Because I’m hoping that a new generation of leaders will rise, people who act in transparency, who speak the truth, people who are honest, the way Israel used to be and that we’ll return to be like we once were.

I go to many rallies and demonstrations, and I meet many people in many places. And a large part of those people still believe in reaching an arrangement in peace and for there to be no war. And I still hope that this is what we’re going to be able to have here.

Bring them home now! Bring them home now! Bring them home now! Bring them home now! Bring them home! Now! Bring them home! Now! Bring them home! Now! Bring them home!

Yocheved is now living in a retirement home in the suburbs of Tel Aviv. Five other people around her age from Nir Oz live there too. One is also a released hostage. She hasn’t been able to bring herself to go back to the kibbutz. The life she built there with Oded is gone — her photographs, his records, the piano. And the kibbutz has become something else now, a symbol instead of a home. It is now buzzing with journalists and politicians. For now, Yocheved doesn’t know if she’ll ever go back. And when Sharone asked her, she said, let’s wait for Dad.

So I’m today sitting in this assisted living, surrounded by the same company, just expecting Oded, waiting for Oded to come back. And then each and every one of us will be rebuilding his own life together and renewing it.

What are you doing to make it a home for Oded?

We have a piano. We were given a piano, a very old one with a beautiful sound. And it’s good. Oded is very sensitive to the sound. He has absolute hearing. And I’m just hoping for him to come home and start playing the piano.

Do you believe that Oded will come home?

I’d like to believe. But there’s a difference between believing and wanting. I want to believe that he’ll be back and playing music. I don’t think his opinions are going to change. He’s going to be disappointed by what happened. But I hope he’s going to hold on to the same beliefs. His music is missing from our home.

[SPEAKING HEBEW]:

[SPEAKING HEBREW] [PLAYING PIANO]

I know that my father always felt that we haven’t given peace a chance. That was his opinion. And I think it’s very hard to speak for my father because maybe he has changed. Like my mom said, she said, I hope he hasn’t changed. I haven’t changed. But the truth is we don’t know. And we don’t the story. We don’t know how the story — my father is ending or just beginning.

But I think you have to hold on to humanistic values at this point. You have to know what you don’t want. I don’t want more of this. This is hell. This is hell for everybody. So this is no, you know? And then I believe that peace is also gray, and it’s not glorious, and it’s not simple. It’s kind of a lot of hard work. You have to reconcile and give up a lot. And it’s only worth doing that for peace.

[PIANO PLAYING CONTINUES]

After weeks of negotiations, talks over another hostage release and ceasefire have reached an impasse. The sticking points include the length of the ceasefire and the identity and number of Palestinian prisoners to be exchanged for the hostages.

[BACKGROUND CONVERSATION IN HEBREW]:

Here’s what else you should know today. Sam Bankman-Fried was sentenced to 25 years in prison on Thursday, capping an extraordinary saga that upended the multi-trillion-dollar crypto industry. Bankman-Fried, the founder of the cryptocurrency exchange, FTX, was convicted of wire fraud, conspiracy, and money laundering last November.

Prosecutors accused him of stealing more than $10 billion from customers to finance political contributions, venture capital investments, and other extravagant purchases. At the sentencing, the judge pointed to testimony from Bankman-Fried’s trial, saying that his appetite for extreme risk and failure to take responsibility for his crimes amount to a quote, “risk that this man will be in a position to do something very bad in the future.”

Today’s episode was produced by Lynsea Garrison and Mooj Zaidie with help from Rikki Novetsky and Shannon Lin. It was edited by Michael Benoist, fact checked by Susan Lee, contains original music by Marion Lozano, Dan Powell, Diane Wong, Elisheba Ittoop, and Oded Lifshitz. It was engineered by Alyssa Moxley. The translation was by Gabby Sobelman. Special thanks to Menachem Rosenberg, Gershom Gorenberg, Gabby Sobelman, Yotam Shabtie, and Patrick Kingsley. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsverk of Wonderly.

That’s it for “The Daily.” I’m Sabrina Tavernise. See you on Monday.

The Daily logo

  • April 1, 2024   •   36:14 Ronna McDaniel, TV News and the Trump Problem
  • March 29, 2024   •   48:42 Hamas Took Her, and Still Has Her Husband
  • March 28, 2024   •   33:40 The Newest Tech Start-Up Billionaire? Donald Trump.
  • March 27, 2024   •   28:06 Democrats’ Plan to Save the Republican House Speaker
  • March 26, 2024   •   29:13 The United States vs. the iPhone
  • March 25, 2024   •   25:59 A Terrorist Attack in Russia
  • March 24, 2024   •   21:39 The Sunday Read: ‘My Goldendoodle Spent a Week at Some Luxury Dog ‘Hotels.’ I Tagged Along.’
  • March 22, 2024   •   35:30 Chuck Schumer on His Campaign to Oust Israel’s Leader
  • March 21, 2024   •   27:18 The Caitlin Clark Phenomenon
  • March 20, 2024   •   25:58 The Bombshell Case That Will Transform the Housing Market
  • March 19, 2024   •   27:29 Trump’s Plan to Take Away Biden’s Biggest Advantage
  • March 18, 2024   •   23:18 Your Car May Be Spying on You
  • Share full article

Hosted by Sabrina Tavernise

Produced by Lynsea Garrison and Mooj Zadie

With Rikki Novetsky and Shannon Lin

Edited by Michael Benoist

Original music by Marion Lozano ,  Dan Powell ,  Diane Wong and Elisheba Ittoop

Engineered by Alyssa Moxley

Listen and follow The Daily Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music

Warning: this episode contains descriptions of violence.

It’s been nearly six months since the Hamas-led attacks on Israel, when militants took more than 200 hostages into Gaza.

In a village called Nir Oz, near the border, one quarter of residents were either killed or taken hostage. Yocheved Lifshitz and her husband, Oded Lifshitz, were among those taken.

Today, Yocheved and her daughter Sharone tell their story.

On today’s episode

Yocheved Lifshitz, a former hostage.

Sharone Lifschitz, daughter of Yocheved and Oded Lifshitz.

A group of people are holding up signs in Hebrew with photos of a man. In the front is a woman with short hair and glasses.

Background reading

Yocheved Lifshitz was beaten and held in tunnels built by Hamas for 17 days.

There are a lot of ways to listen to The Daily. Here’s how.

We aim to make transcripts available the next workday after an episode’s publication. You can find them at the top of the page.

Fact-checking by Susan Lee .

Additional music by Oded Lifshitz.

Translations by Gabby Sobelman .

Special thanks to Menachem Rosenberg, Gershom Gorenberg , Gabby Sobelman , Yotam Shabtie, and Patrick Kingsley .

The Daily is made by Rachel Quester, Lynsea Garrison, Clare Toeniskoetter, Paige Cowett, Michael Simon Johnson, Brad Fisher, Chris Wood, Jessica Cheung, Stella Tan, Alexandra Leigh Young, Lisa Chow, Eric Krupke, Marc Georges, Luke Vander Ploeg, M.J. Davis Lin, Dan Powell, Sydney Harper, Mike Benoist, Liz O. Baylen, Asthaa Chaturvedi, Rachelle Bonja, Diana Nguyen, Marion Lozano, Corey Schreppel, Rob Szypko, Elisheba Ittoop, Mooj Zadie, Patricia Willens, Rowan Niemisto, Jody Becker, Rikki Novetsky, John Ketchum, Nina Feldman, Will Reid, Carlos Prieto, Ben Calhoun, Susan Lee, Lexie Diao, Mary Wilson, Alex Stern, Dan Farrell, Sophia Lanman, Shannon Lin, Diane Wong, Devon Taylor, Alyssa Moxley, Summer Thomad, Olivia Natt, Daniel Ramirez and Brendan Klinkenberg.

Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsverk of Wonderly. Special thanks to Sam Dolnick, Paula Szuchman, Lisa Tobin, Larissa Anderson, Julia Simon, Sofia Milan, Mahima Chablani, Elizabeth Davis-Moorer, Jeffrey Miranda, Renan Borelli, Maddy Masiello, Isabella Anderson and Nina Lassam.

Advertisement

COMMENTS

  1. Journey (band)

    History 1973-1977: Formation, Journey, Look into the Future and Next Neal Schon, the remaining original member of Journey in 2008. The original members of Journey came together in San Francisco in 1973 under the auspices of former Santana manager Herbie Herbert.Originally called the Golden Gate Rhythm Section and intended to serve as a backup group for established Bay Area artists, the band ...

  2. Steve Perry

    Steve Perry was the lead singer of pop rock band Journey from 1977 to 1987. He is known for having a wide vocal range, which can be heard on such popular hits as "Don't Stop Believin'" and "Oh ...

  3. Journey: Band Members and History

    Journey Band Members Over the Years . In 2005, the band (along with original members Schon and Valory) marked its 30th anniversary with the release of its 23rd album, Generations and an anniversary tour, at times featuring some of the many former members of the group.In December 2006, Jeff Scott Soto replaced Steve Augeri as lead vocalist.

  4. List of Journey band members

    Journey is an American rock band from San Francisco, California.Formed in February 1973 as the Golden Gate Rhythm Section, the group was renamed Journey in the summer and originally included keyboardist and vocalist Gregg Rolie, lead guitarist Neal Schon, rhythm guitarist George Tickner, bassist Ross Valory and drummer Prairie Prince.The band's lineup as of 2021 features Schon, alongside ...

  5. New JOURNEY Band Biography 'Worlds Apart' Now Available

    Time Passages has announced "Journey: Worlds Apart", the definitive accounting of the "Don't Stop Believin'" hitmakers by award-winning journalist Nick DeRiso. A multiple columnist of the year ...

  6. About

    Keys, Songwriting. In 1976 Jonathan Cain released his first solo record, Windy City Breakdown. In 1979 he joined the band, The Babys, and in 1980 joined the rock band, Journey, rounding out the songwriting genius behind the defining album, Escape, which was RIAA certified Diamond this year. Cain's signature piano, synth playing and songwriting ...

  7. Journey

    We're bringing you the stories behind your favorite band's songs and sounds. As their name suggests, Journey's career has been an epic adventure since day one. A meteoric force in the stadium rock scene, Journey insured their legacy in rock 'n' roll history using a mix of musical virtuosity, soaring balladry and undeniable appeal. 00:00.

  8. Journey Songs, Albums, Reviews, Bio & More

    This lineup recorded Journey (1975), the first of three moderate-selling jazz-rock albums ( Journey, Look Into the Future, and Next) essentially given over to instrumentals. By 1977, the band was looking to emulate the rock radio dominance of contemporaries like Foreigner and Boston. They conscripted Bay Area singer Steve Perry, whose soulful ...

  9. Steve Perry Walked Away From Journey. A Promise Finally Ended His

    In 1977, an ambitious but middlingly successful San Francisco jazz-rock band called Journey went looking for a new lead singer and found Mr. Perry, then a 28-year-old veteran of many unsigned ...

  10. Journey Band History

    Journey's band history is the epitome of 80s rock and the clashes between some of the most extraordinary rock musicians of the time. Like all Journey fans, the first songs I heard were Steve Perry's lead emotional ballads. He was the perfect singer for the ideal backing band. Yet, listening years later as a musician, I understood that it ...

  11. Journey (band)

    Some of the members used to be members of the band Santana. The band has sold 75 million albums and were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2017. Discography Studio albums. Journey (1975) Look into the Future (1976) Next (1977) Infinity (1978) Evolution (1979) Departure (1980) Escape (1981) Frontiers (1983) Raised on Radio (1986)

  12. Journey

    Journey was formed in 1973 by Santana manager Walter "Herbie" Herbert, with the classic lineup featuring Steve Perry on vocals and Neal Schon on guitar and vocals. The band's self-titled debut albu…

  13. Journey biography

    Biography. Journey is an American rock band formed in San Francisco, California in 1973. The band has gone through several phases since its inception by former members of Santana. The band's greatest commercial success came in the late 19 70s through the early 19 80s with a series of power ballads and songs such as "Don't Stop Believin'", "Any ...

  14. Arnel Pineda

    Arnel Pineda was born on September 5, 1967, in Sampaloc, Manila, in the Philippines. Throughout his childhood, Pineda endured grave misfortune. When he was just 13 years old, his mother, who was ...

  15. Journey

    The band was originally formed with the intention of being a back-up band for Bay Area musicians but the band quickly moved on from being a 'backup' band. The original members of the band included Neal Schon, Gregg Rolie, Ross Valory, George Tickner and Prairie Prince. The name 'Journey' was suggested by roadie John Villaneuva.

  16. New Journey Book Takes Definitive Look At the Band's History

    A new book about classic rock legends, Journey, has arrived from award-winning journalist Nick DeRiso. Journey: Worlds Apart, described as "the definitive accounting" of the "Don't Stop Believin'" hitmakers, was published on December 8, 2023, via Time Passages.A multiple columnist of the year award-winner with the USA Today network, DeRiso conducted dozens of interviews for the ...

  17. Journey discography

    2. Singles. 52. Soundtrack albums. 1. American rock band Journey has released 15 studio albums, five live albums, 11 compilation albums, and 52 singles since 1975.

  18. Journey (band)

    Journey (band) History 1973-1977: Formation, Journey, Look into the Future and Next 1977-1980: New musical direction, Infinity, Evolution, and Departure 1981-1983: Height of popularity, Escape and Frontiers 1984-1987: Raised on Radio and more personnel changes 1987-1995: Hiatus 1995-1997: Reunion and Trial by Fire 1998-2007: Lead singer and drummer replaced, Arrival and ...

  19. Journey (band)

    History 1973-1977: Formation, Journey, Look into the Future and Next Neal Schon, the remaining original member of Journey in 2008. The original members of Journey came together in San Francisco in 1973 under the auspices of former Santana manager Herbie Herbert.Originally called the Golden Gate Rhythm Section and intended to serve as a backup group for established Bay Area artists, the band ...

  20. George Tickner, co-founder of Journey, dies at 76

    George Tickner, a founding member of the rock group Journey who left the band in the mid-1970s to pursue a career in medicine, has died, his former bandmate Neal Schon said on Facebook. Tickner ...

  21. Journey Music

    Journey will release Freedom, their first album in 11 years, this Friday (July 8). With the 11-year gap between records, the band's longest break between albums, and the presence of drummer/producer Narada Michael Walden, Freedom, according to guitarist Neal Schon, is a true representation of who Journey is in 2022.

  22. Journey: Don't Stop Believin': The Untold Story: Daniels, Neil

    Journey: Don't Stop Believin': The Untold Story Paperback - May 1, 2011. by Neil Daniels (Author) 4.0 133 ratings. See all formats and editions. Journey are undoubtedly one of America's most successful melodic rock bands, with record sales in excess of 75 million. And with the recent phenomenal success of "Don't Stop Believin'" now the most ...

  23. Journey (Journey album)

    Journey is the debut studio album by American rock band Journey.It was released on April 1, 1975, by Columbia Records.Unlike their later recordings, this is a jazzy progressive rock album which focuses mainly on the band's instrumental talents. It is the only album to include rhythm guitarist George Tickner among their lineup.. Journey recorded a demo album prior to the release of Journey ...

  24. How to write an effective musician bio (with examples!)

    Choose the most relevant and recent thing that you've done with your music, and add that to your musician bio. If you're in a band, you can write out the full band bio at the top of your page. Beneath it, you can add text talking about each band member. Include an image with each musician bio to create visual interest.

  25. BEHIND THE HORROR

    915 likes, 18 comments - behindthehorrorband on March 31, 2024: " www.behindthehorror.net NEW MUSIC ON BIO/LINK Check our Spotify/Streaming on bio/link and follow us for more. We're BEHIND THE HORROR, a Brazilian Metal band rocking in the US, bringing Metal Chaos and Destruction across our path 卵亂 Join us in this epic journey as we thrive to write our names In The Book Of Heavy-Metal落 ...

  26. Hamas Took Her, and Still Has Her Husband

    Fact-checking by Susan Lee.. Additional music by Oded Lifshitz. Translations by Gabby Sobelman.. Special thanks to Menachem Rosenberg, Gershom Gorenberg, Gabby Sobelman, Yotam Shabtie, and Patrick ...