Journey Blog
четверг, 11 августа 2011 г.
Journey interview – Jonathan Cain looks forward to Birmingham
Journey is the band that didn’t stop believing. Ian Harvey talks to keyboard player Jonathan Cain about the band’s upcoming Birmingham concert, their new album and that song.
Jonathan Cain
When Journey, Foreigner and Styx take to the stage at the LG Arena on Sunday, it will represent the ultimate dream ticket for many rock fans.
These are three giants of the melodic rock world (also known as AOR or adult-orientated rock), between them responsible for almost 300 million record sales.
They are also bands who each feature a new singer and for whom fortunes are on the up after the grunge era looked set to have put paid to their aspirations.
Jonathan Cain, on the phone from the States, is clearly excited to be bringing Journey’s full arena show over to the UK, promoting the band’s 15th studio album Eclipse, which was released this week.
“We always enjoy meeting our fans,” says Cain. “Basically the UK fan club – www.journeyrock.co.uk - have been very tenacious and supportive and really have helped. They’re awesome. Their energy is appreciated over here. They were the reason that we got there in the first place.”
While still full of Journey’s melodic style, Eclipse is more guitar-driven than some of the band’s albums, and Cain is excited to see how fans respond to that.
Neal Schon at Wolverhampton Civic Hall in 2008
“We have classic Journey, which tends to be pop rock, and then the new songs will be the balance of the rock side. So you have this maybe heavier, rawer sound mixed in with the classic hits.
“And it works really well. We tried it in South America where we played a two-hour show and played four or five of the new songs in the context of the greatest hits and I think it works exceptionally.
“People have really embraced it and we feel that in the UK that it’s one of the places that we can play the new music and it will be appreciated. It’s not like going to Vegas and you look at that crowd and think ‘They’re not going to get this’.
“I think that the listening ability of the European rock fan is much deeper. He goes for the detail and wants to get the content and is hungry for that content. They’re very good listeners in Europe.”
Despite a hiatus after their lauded frontman Steve Perry left the band, Journey have continued to tour and record with a variety of singers including Steve Augeri, Jeff Scott Soto and now Arnel Pineda, a singer from the Philippines whom the band discovered on YouTube singing Journey covers with extraordinary accuracy.
The band has seen its fortunes turn around quite astonishingly in the past few years in a large part after their perennial 1981 hit Don’t Stop Believin’ was featured in the closing moments of the last episode of The Sopranos and particularly after a new generation discovered the song via Glee.
It is now, officially, the most downloaded song in history. So what is it about Don’t Stop Believin’ that so resonates with music fans?
“Perhaps because it gives you permission to dream,” replies Cain.
Arnel Pineda and Neal Schon
“That’s the only way I can describe it. It has a hopeful tone to it and in certain times it resonates.
He explains how the song was born after he was drafted into Journey.
“I brought that chorus in, right up to the line ‘streetlight people’.
“When I was in my 20s and struggling to make it in LA my father always used to say: ‘Don’t stop believing Jon. You’ve got the goods, hang on in there, something will happen’.
“So when I got the Journey nod I thought I would bring them his idea.
“And they added to it. That’s what you do in a band. You take one piece and you connect it with another piece. So when Perry heard the chorus it was, ‘Oh why don’t you do the same tune but we’re going to break it down, so just play the piano thing like you do, with those chords, and I’ll see if I can come up with something’.
“Ross Valory created the signature bass line, Perry came up with some great vocal melodies over it and off we went. It was very much an ‘improv’ kind of creation.”
And did you have even the slightest clue what that song would become?
“We didn’t. We thought it was a lovely song and it definitely was kind of dramatic. With the piano starting, I think it has a particular colour to it. It wasn’t just one continual blast.
“When we recorded it, it was done pretty quickly. I remember Steve had to leave with just the basic track done and he came back the next week and sang the vocal in three takes. We did the background vocals and that was the end of it.”
Journey’s message of hope continues with the release of Eclipse, an album that, according to Cain, Neal Schon, the band’s leader and guitarist has been wanting to make for a decade or more.
“It’s a raw rock album. It’s guitar driven. Neal said early on ‘I want to go with this. Will you go with me?’ I said, well lyrically it’s got to be profound, I don’t want to put out any old stuff. If we’re going to go in this direction, it’s got to be to some mystical place, like Zeppelin did with their music.
“Neal came to me with this conceptual idea, the Hindu interpretation of life as an endless circle. So I started doing research on the internet and writing ideas down. And I really liked the concept, you known for a band that sings about hopeful things.
Journey's new album Eclipse
“Without being religious, I believe in a universal god, and I like the idea of the endless circle. I’ve always dabbled in the metaphysical belief. I was meditating and performed yoga and I always noted this wonderful high energy and I wondered how can I trigger this peace of mind and this happiness?
“I thought this is something that we should look at, maybe with this album. With the conflict and turmoil that we face every day in our society sometimes it’s good to see how you relate to the universe and god.
“Neal had some ideas and it encompasses physical, spiritual and metaphysical ideas which go really deep, without being too ‘heavy’ about it.
“I was able to craft some very sensual lyrics. Neal allowed me to write these lyrics. He’s a Buddhist, he’s a spiritual man, he likes the idea of eternal peace – that conflicts can be resolved. I said this is what we should be singing about, not about chasing women around.
“When we finished these songs and we learned them and started singing them in the studio it was like ‘Oh, I was right!’ This was something different.
“But to me it’s an album that is not a one-listen record. You need to listen through it a few times. It’s very complex musically, it has many layers to it and there’s something different every time you listen to it to pick up on.
“Journey has always been a communion between the pop side and the rock side. This is the rock side. We’re really sticking our rock side out into the universe without relying on the pop end of things . . . I can write those songs all day long.”
Jonathan Cain will be playing guitar more on this tour
This tour will also see Cain step away from his keyboards and play more guitar on stage than ever.
“Because there’s so much guitar on this album, live I have to be the rhythm guy. I’ve had to learn these songs for Neal and support my brother.
“And you know what, he’s supported me all these years and stood behind me and my songs, my ballads and this is my payback to him. I like to play guitar. This is kind of a turnabout for me and he’s very proud of this album and so am I. It’s truly a testament to our brotherhood together, this album.”
And what about the fact that there’s a relatively new face fronting the band (this is Pineda’s second album with Journey, after 2008’s Revelation)?
“You know what, the music’s bigger than all of us,” says Cain. “The music speaks for itself. It’s timeless and no matter who sings it, as long as you’re bringing the genuine timbres and tones . . . you want to give the people the best you can be.
“That’s why when we found Arnel and we heard him sing we thought ‘This guy is unique to himself as an artist.’ Now when you see him he’s just cool, you know. He’s evolved.”
A large part of that evolution Cain puts down to the massive concert that Journey played in the Philippines, introducing Pineda as their frontman there for the first time.
”I think a lot changed when he sang the big concert in Manila. Singing for his homeland and getting praised as the hometown boy, the man of the hour. It celebrated his achievement of being something, coming from the street and making something of himself.
“He’s quite a legend over there and after that show, he understood what it was about.
“Now he goes on stage and every night he’s the lead singer of Journey, no question. It takes a lot of time to fill those (Steve Perry’s) shoes. And his voice now . . . it’s like being a stock car racer and you go into the Nascar. And Arnel has this great race car, he’s a great driver and he just needed to learn where to put the gas and where to get off the gas.”
So finally what about the dream ticket of Journey, Foreigner and Styx on the same bill?
“It’s going to be friendly. But it’ll be a real competition, as always, for bragging rights,” laughs Cain.
You’d better believe it.
Jonathan Cain
When Journey, Foreigner and Styx take to the stage at the LG Arena on Sunday, it will represent the ultimate dream ticket for many rock fans.
These are three giants of the melodic rock world (also known as AOR or adult-orientated rock), between them responsible for almost 300 million record sales.
They are also bands who each feature a new singer and for whom fortunes are on the up after the grunge era looked set to have put paid to their aspirations.
Jonathan Cain, on the phone from the States, is clearly excited to be bringing Journey’s full arena show over to the UK, promoting the band’s 15th studio album Eclipse, which was released this week.
“We always enjoy meeting our fans,” says Cain. “Basically the UK fan club – www.journeyrock.co.uk - have been very tenacious and supportive and really have helped. They’re awesome. Their energy is appreciated over here. They were the reason that we got there in the first place.”
While still full of Journey’s melodic style, Eclipse is more guitar-driven than some of the band’s albums, and Cain is excited to see how fans respond to that.
Neal Schon at Wolverhampton Civic Hall in 2008
“We have classic Journey, which tends to be pop rock, and then the new songs will be the balance of the rock side. So you have this maybe heavier, rawer sound mixed in with the classic hits.
“And it works really well. We tried it in South America where we played a two-hour show and played four or five of the new songs in the context of the greatest hits and I think it works exceptionally.
“People have really embraced it and we feel that in the UK that it’s one of the places that we can play the new music and it will be appreciated. It’s not like going to Vegas and you look at that crowd and think ‘They’re not going to get this’.
“I think that the listening ability of the European rock fan is much deeper. He goes for the detail and wants to get the content and is hungry for that content. They’re very good listeners in Europe.”
Despite a hiatus after their lauded frontman Steve Perry left the band, Journey have continued to tour and record with a variety of singers including Steve Augeri, Jeff Scott Soto and now Arnel Pineda, a singer from the Philippines whom the band discovered on YouTube singing Journey covers with extraordinary accuracy.
The band has seen its fortunes turn around quite astonishingly in the past few years in a large part after their perennial 1981 hit Don’t Stop Believin’ was featured in the closing moments of the last episode of The Sopranos and particularly after a new generation discovered the song via Glee.
It is now, officially, the most downloaded song in history. So what is it about Don’t Stop Believin’ that so resonates with music fans?
“Perhaps because it gives you permission to dream,” replies Cain.
Arnel Pineda and Neal Schon
“That’s the only way I can describe it. It has a hopeful tone to it and in certain times it resonates.
He explains how the song was born after he was drafted into Journey.
“I brought that chorus in, right up to the line ‘streetlight people’.
“When I was in my 20s and struggling to make it in LA my father always used to say: ‘Don’t stop believing Jon. You’ve got the goods, hang on in there, something will happen’.
“So when I got the Journey nod I thought I would bring them his idea.
“And they added to it. That’s what you do in a band. You take one piece and you connect it with another piece. So when Perry heard the chorus it was, ‘Oh why don’t you do the same tune but we’re going to break it down, so just play the piano thing like you do, with those chords, and I’ll see if I can come up with something’.
“Ross Valory created the signature bass line, Perry came up with some great vocal melodies over it and off we went. It was very much an ‘improv’ kind of creation.”
And did you have even the slightest clue what that song would become?
“We didn’t. We thought it was a lovely song and it definitely was kind of dramatic. With the piano starting, I think it has a particular colour to it. It wasn’t just one continual blast.
“When we recorded it, it was done pretty quickly. I remember Steve had to leave with just the basic track done and he came back the next week and sang the vocal in three takes. We did the background vocals and that was the end of it.”
Journey’s message of hope continues with the release of Eclipse, an album that, according to Cain, Neal Schon, the band’s leader and guitarist has been wanting to make for a decade or more.
“It’s a raw rock album. It’s guitar driven. Neal said early on ‘I want to go with this. Will you go with me?’ I said, well lyrically it’s got to be profound, I don’t want to put out any old stuff. If we’re going to go in this direction, it’s got to be to some mystical place, like Zeppelin did with their music.
“Neal came to me with this conceptual idea, the Hindu interpretation of life as an endless circle. So I started doing research on the internet and writing ideas down. And I really liked the concept, you known for a band that sings about hopeful things.
Journey's new album Eclipse
“Without being religious, I believe in a universal god, and I like the idea of the endless circle. I’ve always dabbled in the metaphysical belief. I was meditating and performed yoga and I always noted this wonderful high energy and I wondered how can I trigger this peace of mind and this happiness?
“I thought this is something that we should look at, maybe with this album. With the conflict and turmoil that we face every day in our society sometimes it’s good to see how you relate to the universe and god.
“Neal had some ideas and it encompasses physical, spiritual and metaphysical ideas which go really deep, without being too ‘heavy’ about it.
“I was able to craft some very sensual lyrics. Neal allowed me to write these lyrics. He’s a Buddhist, he’s a spiritual man, he likes the idea of eternal peace – that conflicts can be resolved. I said this is what we should be singing about, not about chasing women around.
“When we finished these songs and we learned them and started singing them in the studio it was like ‘Oh, I was right!’ This was something different.
“But to me it’s an album that is not a one-listen record. You need to listen through it a few times. It’s very complex musically, it has many layers to it and there’s something different every time you listen to it to pick up on.
“Journey has always been a communion between the pop side and the rock side. This is the rock side. We’re really sticking our rock side out into the universe without relying on the pop end of things . . . I can write those songs all day long.”
Jonathan Cain will be playing guitar more on this tour
This tour will also see Cain step away from his keyboards and play more guitar on stage than ever.
“Because there’s so much guitar on this album, live I have to be the rhythm guy. I’ve had to learn these songs for Neal and support my brother.
“And you know what, he’s supported me all these years and stood behind me and my songs, my ballads and this is my payback to him. I like to play guitar. This is kind of a turnabout for me and he’s very proud of this album and so am I. It’s truly a testament to our brotherhood together, this album.”
And what about the fact that there’s a relatively new face fronting the band (this is Pineda’s second album with Journey, after 2008’s Revelation)?
“You know what, the music’s bigger than all of us,” says Cain. “The music speaks for itself. It’s timeless and no matter who sings it, as long as you’re bringing the genuine timbres and tones . . . you want to give the people the best you can be.
“That’s why when we found Arnel and we heard him sing we thought ‘This guy is unique to himself as an artist.’ Now when you see him he’s just cool, you know. He’s evolved.”
A large part of that evolution Cain puts down to the massive concert that Journey played in the Philippines, introducing Pineda as their frontman there for the first time.
”I think a lot changed when he sang the big concert in Manila. Singing for his homeland and getting praised as the hometown boy, the man of the hour. It celebrated his achievement of being something, coming from the street and making something of himself.
“He’s quite a legend over there and after that show, he understood what it was about.
“Now he goes on stage and every night he’s the lead singer of Journey, no question. It takes a lot of time to fill those (Steve Perry’s) shoes. And his voice now . . . it’s like being a stock car racer and you go into the Nascar. And Arnel has this great race car, he’s a great driver and he just needed to learn where to put the gas and where to get off the gas.”
So finally what about the dream ticket of Journey, Foreigner and Styx on the same bill?
“It’s going to be friendly. But it’ll be a real competition, as always, for bragging rights,” laughs Cain.
You’d better believe it.
Biography
There are at least three artists with this name
1. A popular American rock band
2. A British psychedelic trance producer
3. An underground rapper
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 1970s through the early 1980s with a series of power ballads and songs such as “Don’t Stop Believin’”, “Any Way You Want It”, “Faithfully”, “Open Arms”, “Separate Ways”, and “Wheel in the Sky”.
Journey has been eligible for induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame since 2000, but Gregg Rolie is currently the only member of Journey who has been inducted — as a member of parent band Santana. In 2009, Steve Perry, the band’s best-known lead vocalist, will be eligible for induction as a solo artist.
Formation, 1973–1976
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 recent Santana alumni Neal Schon on lead guitar and Gregg Rolie on keyboards and lead vocals. Drummer Prairie Prince of The Tubes, bassist Ross Valory and rhythm guitarist George Tickner, both of Frumious Bandersnatch, rounded out the group. The band quickly abandoned the original “backup group” concept and developed a distinctive jazz fusion style. After an unsuccessful radio contest to name the group, roadie John Villaneuva suggested the name “Journey.” The band’s first public appearance came at the Winterland Ballroom on New Year’s Eve, 1973. Prairie Prince rejoined The Tubes shortly thereafter, and the band hired British drummer Aynsley Dunbar, who had recently worked with John Lennon and Frank Zappa. On February 5, 1974, the new line-up made their debut at the Great American Music Hall and secured a recording contract with Columbia Records.
Journey released their eponymous first album in 1975, and rhythm guitarist Tickner left the band before they cut their second album, Look into the Future (1976). Neither album achieved significant sales, so Schon, Valory, and Dunbar took singing lessons in an attempt to add vocal harmonies to Rolie’s lead. The following year’s Next contained shorter tracks with more vocals and featured Schon as lead singer on several of the songs.
New musical direction, 1977–1980
Journey’s album sales did not improve and Columbia Records requested that they change their musical style and add a frontman, with whom keyboardist Gregg Rolie could share lead vocal duties. The band hired Robert fleischman and transitioned to a more popular style, akin to that of Foreigner and Boston. Journey went on tour with Fleischman in 1977 and together the new incarnation of the band wrote the hit “Wheel in the Sky”. But fans were lukewarm to the change, and personality differences resulted in Fleischman being fired within the year.
In the fall of 1977, Journey hired Steve Perry as their new lead singer. Perry added a clean, tenor sound and the band became a true pop act. Their fourth album, Infinity (1978) reached No. 21 on the album charts and gave the band their first RIAA-certified platinum album plus hit singles out of “Lights” and “Wheel In the Sky”.
Drummer Aynsley Dunbar did not get along with singer Steve Perry and did not approve of the new musical direction. He was fired in 1978 and replaced by Berklee-trained jazz drummer Steve Smith. Perry, Schon, Rolie, Smith, and bass player Ross Valory recorded 1979’s Evolution, which gave the band their first Billboard Hot 100 Top 20 single, “Lovin,’ Touchin,’ Squeezin”; and 1980’s Departure, which reached No. 8 on the album charts and included the top-25 hit “Any Way You Want It”.
Journey’s newfound success brought the band an almost entirely new fan base. During the 1980 Departure world tour, the band recorded a live album, Captured. They also recorded the soundtrack to the film Dream After Dream while in Japan.
Exhausted from extensive touring, keyboardist Gregg Rolie now left a successful band for the second time in his career. Keyboardist Stevie Roseman was brought in to record the lone studio track for Captured, “The Party’s Over (Hopelessly in Love)”, but Rolie recommended pianist Jonathan Cain of The Babys as the permanent replacement. With Cain’s replacement of Rolie’s Hammond B-3 organ with his own synthesizers, the band was poised to redefine rock music for a new decade in which they would achieve their greatest musical success.
Height of popularity, 1981–1983
Journey released their eighth and biggest-selling studio album, Escape, in 1981. The album, which has thus far sold nine times platinum, went to number one on the album charts that year, and included three top-ten hits: “Who’s Crying Now”, “Don’t Stop Believin’”, and “Open Arms”.
Capitalizing on their success, the band recorded radio commercials for Budweiser and sold rights to their likenesses and music for use in two video games: the Journey arcade game by Bally/Midway and Journey Escape by Data Age for the Atari 2600.
This success was met with piqued criticism. The 1983 Rolling Stone Record Guide gave each of the band’s albums only one star, with Dave Marsh writing that “Journey was a dead end for San Francisco area rock”. Marsh later would anoint Escape as one of the worst number-one albums of all time.
Journey’s next album, 1983’s Frontiers, continued their commercial success, reaching No. 2 on the album charts. Four hit singles included “Separate Ways”, which reached #8, and “Faithfully, which reached #12. During the subsequent tour, the band contracted with NFL Films to record a video documentary of their life on the road, Frontiers and Beyond.
Break-up, 1984–1994
Lead singer Steve Perry and guitarist Neal Schon both pursued solo projects between 1982 and 1985, and when they returned to Journey to record their 1986 album Raised on Radio, bass player Ross Valory and drummer Steve Smith were fired from the band for musical and professional differences. Studio musicians handled the two vacant slots, including future American Idol judge Randy Jackson and established session player Larrie Londin. The album sold two million copies. A truncated tour followed, which featured Jackson on bass and Mike Baird on drums. Steve Perry left Journey in 1987.
Neal Schon and Jonathan Cain teamed up with Cain’s ex-Babys bandmates John Waite and Ricky Phillips, forming Bad English with drummer Deen Castronovo in 1988. Steve Smith started a jazz band, Vital Information, and teamed up with Ross Valory and Gregg Rolie to create The Storm with singer Kevin Chalfant and guitarist Josh Ramos.
Reunion, 1995–1997
Between 1987 and 1995, Journey’s record label released three compilations. In October 1993, Kevin Chalfant (of The Storm) performed with Neal Schon and Jonathan Cain at a roast for manager Herbie Herbert for the Thunder Road benefit. After that, Schon, Cain, Valory, Smith and Rolie briefly considered reuniting the band with Chalfant as lead singer. But in 1995 Steve Perry agreed to rejoin the band on the condition that they seek new management. Herbie Herbert was fired and The Eagles Manager Irving Azoff retained.
In 1995, Perry, Schon, Cain, Valory, and Smith reunited to record Trial by Fire. Released in 1996, the album included the hit single “When You Love a Woman”, which reached #12 on the Billboard charts and was nominated in 1997 for a Grammy Award for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.
Plans for a subsequent tour ended when Perry injured his hip hiking in Hawaii in the summer of 1997 and could not perform without hip replacement surgery — which he refused to undergo. In 1998, Schon and Cain decided to seek a new lead singer, at which point drummer Steve Smith left the band as well.
Lead singer replaced, 1998–2006
In 1998, Journey hired drummer Deen Castronovo, Schon’s and Cain’s Bad English bandmate, and drummer for Hardline, to replace Steve Smith. The lead vocalist position was filled by Steve Augeri, formerly of Tyketto and Tall Stories.
That same year, Journey with Steve Augeri and Deen Castronovo recorded a track for the soundtrack to the movie Armageddon called “Remember Me”. The band released their next studio album, Arrival, in Japan in late 2000 and in the United States in 2001. “All the Way” became a minor adult contemporary hit from the album. In 2002, the band released a four-track CD titled “Red 13”, with an album cover design chosen through a fan contest. In 2005 the band was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame, embarked on their 30th anniversary tour, and released their twelfth full-length studio album, Generations, in which each band member performed lead vocals on at least one song.
Lead singer replaced again, 2006–present
In July 2006, Steve Augeri was dropped from the band while they toured with Def Leppard, with the official statement citing a ‘chronic throat infection’ as the problem. Augeri had been suffering from vocal attrition problems since 2003 and Journey had been using pre-recorded lead vocals. The band hired singer Jeff Scott Soto from Talisman to fill in, and Soto officially replaced Augeri as Journey’s lead singer in December 2006. On June 12, 2007, Journey announced that Soto was no longer the lead singer, and said that they were looking to move in a new direction.
In December 2007, after briefly considering the lead singer of a Virginia-based tribute band, Journey hired Filipino singer Arnel Pineda of the cover band The Zoo after Neal Schon saw him on YouTube singing covers of Journey songs. Journey debuted their new lead singer in February 2008 in Chile, released the album Revelation, and announced a summer tour with Heart and Cheap Trick. Revelation debuted at #5 on the Billboard charts, selling more than 196,000 units in its first two weeks, making it the band’s best selling album since Trial by Fire.
Although Pineda was not the first foreign national to become a member of Journey (former drummer Aynsley Dunbar is British) nor even the first non-white (former bass player Randy Jackson is Black), the transition was difficult for a number of fans who expressed what Marin Independent Journal writer Paul Liberatore called “an undercurrent of racism.” Keyboardist Jonathan Cain responded to such sentiments: “We’ve become a world band. We’re international now. We’re not about one color.”
Discography:
Journey (1975)
Look Into the Future (1976)
Next (1977)
Infinity (1978)
Evolution (1979)
Departure (1980)
Escape (1981)
Frontiers (1983)
Raised On Radio (1986)
Trial By Fire (1996)
Arrival (2001)
Generations (2005)
Revelation (2008)
2. UK Based psychedelic trance producer Giampiero “Jay” Mastino studied Sound Engineering and Music Technology in 2003 and soon thereafter began solo production under the name Journey, and in collaboration with Anton Petrov as Star~Trip. In 2009 he also started a new progressive project under the name OM. Jay also DJ’s under the name Jay OM.
In 2004, he conceived the vision of a network of like-minded artists in the psy-trance and ambient genres, all working to promote themselves and each other under one banner. Thus the Free-Spirit Records label was born… Originally intended to focus on artist management, the label’s skyrocketing success combined with the enthusiasm of Jay, the artists, and fans enabled Free-Spirit to outgrow its horizons. Free-Spirit continues to build a collective of artists and djs from around the globe, aiming to create and provide access to a combined set of resources not available to them as individuals, making it just a little easier for all to concentrate on what they truly love, which is the music!
Free-Spirit Vol.1 “Brahamaputra”, the debut release for Free-Spirit Records compiled by Jay OM, hit the shops in October 2006, featuring both a Journey and a Star~Trip track amongst others and Christopher Lawrence (ranked No. 4 DJ in the world) featured Journey’s Spotless mind in his Top 10 in December 2006. Free-Spirit Vol.2 “Eupsychia” followed in June 2007 with 2 more tracks from Journey and Star~Trip and in 2008 a another 3 releases on Free-Spirit Vol.3 “Neophilia” and V/A Children of Jah (Revolve Magazine). 2009 saw the release of Journey’s highly anticipated debut solo Album “The Man who Sold the Time” as well as further releases on various V/A Compilations on Mutagen, Antu, Solar Tech. Catalyst, Alchemy and Free-Spirit Records. Jay is currently working on his 2nd Journey solo album.
Today, Jay’s reputation as an active, involved, and hard working individual in the global trance circuit precedes him. His commitment and enthusiasm for trance music has left an indelible impression on the world scene already, and Jay’s future has never looked brighter, from his burgeoningly successful record label to his organized events in the UK, to his upcoming solo releases. Jay works tirelessly at his art and trade and the music he brings to the masses exemplifies the fruits of his labour and energy.
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