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Infinity

 
Album Review: Infinity

  • Artist: Journey
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1978 05
  • Total Time: 36:30
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

By 1977 Journey had reached a creative crossroads, with three underwhelming studio albums under their belt and little to show in the way of commercial success. At the prodding of manager Herbie Herbert, who felt a major shakeup was needed in order to reignite their spark, the band was convinced to audition and eventually recruit the services of former Alien Project vocalist Steve Perry. Sure enough, adding him to the band just prior to the sessions for Infinity proved to be a stroke of genius, and a move that undeniably altered the course of history for the fledging Bay Area act. Released in January of 1978, Infinity easily proved to be the band's most cohesive work to date. Dead and buried were the jazz fusion overtones of previous offerings, and with the new songwriting combo of Perry/Neal Schon leading the march, the band set out to completely redefine their sound. Traditional pop arrangements were now adopted, cutting out the unnecessary musical fat, and allowing each bandmember to play to his strength: Perry's soaring, whale of a voice, Schon's scorching fret work, and Gregg Rolie's subtle keyboard arrangements. Enlisting eccentric producer Roy Thomas Baker (already famous for guiding the likes of Queen and Nazareth to giant commercial triumphs of their own) also proved to be a rewarding move for the boys. With newfound confidence, Journey crafted a record that could finally land them on the radio. Loaded with future FM staples like "Wheel in the Sky" (which hit the Top 50 in April of 1978), "Lights" (which quietly peaked at number 68 that August), and "Anytime" (pretty much a flop, crawling to number 83 in July), Infinity introduced Journey to an entirely new audience. Even non-singles like "Patiently (the first tune Perry ever wrote with Schon) and "Somethin' to Hide" were leaps and bounds beyond the band's previous accomplishments. And, ultimately, though Infinity merely introduced the band to mainstream radio (it was the never-ending tour on which the band embarked on to support it that drove the disc past the platinum plateau), it effectively cemented their rep as one of America's most beloved (and sometimes hated) commercial rock/pop bands. With over 170 shows under their belts, Journey had just begin to hit their stride. [Infinity was reissued in 2006, housed in a fancy digipack with an expanded booklet.] ~ John Franck & Ed Rivadavia, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Lights (Lyrics) Steve Perry, Neal Schon Journey (3:10)
Feeling That Way (Lyrics) Gregg Rolie, Aynsley Dunbar, Steve Perry Journey (3:27)
Anytime (Lyrics) Gregg Rolie, Neal Schon, Ross Valory, Robert Fleischman Journey (3:28)
La Do Da Neal Schon, Steve Perry Journey (3:01)
Patiently (Lyrics) Steve Perry, Neal Schon Journey (3:20)
Wheel in the Sky (Lyrics) Robert Fleischman, Neal Schon, Ross Valory, Dianne Valory Journey (4:12)
Somethin' to Hide (Lyrics) Steve Perry, Neal Schon Journey (3:26)
Winds of March (Lyrics) Gregg Rolie, M. Schon, Neal Schon, Steve Perry, Robert Fleischman Journey (5:04)
Can Do (Lyrics) Steve Perry, Ross Valory Journey (2:39)
Opened the Door (Lyrics) Neal Schon, Gregg Rolie, Steve Perry Journey (4:34)

Credits

Ross Valory (Group Member), Steve Perry (Group Member), Gregor Schäfer (Amplifiers), Roy Thomas Baker (Producer), Steve Smith (Drums), Pat Johnson (Photography), Ross Valory (Guitar), Joe Chiccarelli (Recording), Gregg Rolie (Vocals), Ross Valory (Vocals), Patrick Morrow (Management), Ross Valory (Bass), Pat Morrow (Liner Notes), Gregor Schäfer (Stage Manager), Gregor Schäfer (Guitar Technician), Joe Chiccarelli (Engineer), Paul Natkin (Photography), Gregg Rolie (Keyboards), Neil Zlozower (Photography), Neal Schon (Group Member), Geoff Workman (Engineer), Aynsley Dunbar (Group Member), Brian Lee (Remastering), Neal Schon (Guitar), Aynsley Dunbar (Percussion), Geoffrey Workman (Engineer), Michael Putland (Photography), Barry Schultz (Photography), Mouse (Artwork), Roy Thomas Baker (Mixing), Ken Mednick (Lighting Design), Steve Perry (Vocals), Bob Ludwig (Remastering), Scott Ross (Drum Technician), Neal Schon (Vocals), Gregg Rolie (Group Member), Sam Emerson (Photography), Aynsley Dunbar (Drums), Randy Bachman (Photography), Mark Linett (Live Sound), Sam Emerson (Cover Photo), Scott Ross (Equipment Manager), Tom Steele (Design), Mouse (Cover Art)
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Wikipedia: Infinity (Journey album)
Top
Infinity
Studio album by Journey
Released January 20, 1978 (1978-01-20)
Recorded His Master's Wheels Studio, San Francisco, and Cherokee Studios, Los Angeles, California, Oct-Dec 1977
Genre Rock
Length 36:30
Label Columbia
Producer Roy Thomas Baker
Professional reviews
Journey chronology
Next
(1977)
Infinity
(1978)
Evolution
(1979)
Singles from Infinity
  1. "Wheel in the Sky"
    Released: 1978
  2. "Feeling That Way / Anytime"
    Released: 1978
  3. "Lights"
    Released: 1978

Journey's fourth album, Infinity, was released in January 1978 on the Columbia Records label.

Looking for a stronger lead vocalist, Journey briefly enlisted front man Robert Fleischman and even recorded one track, "For You", which would later appear on the Time3 collection, and Fleischman's solo album, Perfect Stranger. Fleischman was soon replaced by Steve Perry.

With the song "Feeling That Way", Perry would share the vocals with former singer of the band and keyboardist Gregg Rolie.

Perry and Neal Schon penned their first song together, "Patiently", which would appear on the new studio album. Other popular singles include "Lights" and "Wheel in the Sky", the latter written by temporary front man Fleischman.

Journey's manager, Herbie Herbert, enlisted producer Roy Thomas Baker to engineer Infinity. This produced a layered sound approach, similar to his work with Queen, as demonstrated on tracks such as "Winds of March". In addition, Baker's method of stacked harmonies, notable on several other albums he produced, would become trademarks of Journey's sound. Baker achieved this by having each vocalist (usually Perry and Rolie, sometimes joined by Valory and/or Schon) sing each harmony part in unison. This had the effect of making three or four voices sound like more, and is notable on the songs "Feeling that Way" and "Anytime," which are often played consecutively on radio stations.

The addition of Perry solidified their more mainstream sound and helped Journey attain their highest chart success to date. Infinity marked the last appearance of drummer Aynsley Dunbar.

Infinity went 3x platinum in the United States and was certified gold in Canada.

Track listing

  1. "Lights" (Steve Perry, Neal Schon) – 3:10
  2. "Feeling that Way" (Aynsley Dunbar, Perry, Gregg Rolie) – 3:27
  3. "Anytime" (Robert Fleischman, Rolie, Schon, R. Silver, Ross Valory) – 3:28
  4. "Lă Do Dā" (Perry, Schon) – 2:58
  5. "Patiently" (Perry, Schon) – 3:20
  6. "Wheel in the Sky" (Fleischman, Schon, Diane Valory) – 4:12
  7. "Somethin' to Hide" (Perry, Schon) – 3:26
  8. "Winds of March" (N. Schon, M. Schon, Fleischman, Perry, Rolie) – 5:04
  9. "Can Do" (Perry, Valory) – 2:39
  10. "Opened the Door" (Perry, Rolie, Schon) – 4:34

Personnel

Chart performance

Year Chart Peak
position
1978 US Billboard 200 21

 
 

 

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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