Even back then?
Oh yeah.
That's surprising.
I think it may have even been worse back then.
How so?
It was such a look-see business. You had MTV indoctrinating everyone with images, for one thing. Before the internet, there was that; before YouTube, there was that. And I think that that was much bigger for it’s time than anything we have going on today. There’s so much information right now, from social media to Instagram and Facebook and God knows what. Back then it was MTV and record stores, so it was very concentrated. And there was the radio. It was very enormous. Also, back then the record business was an enormous industry unto itself. So in perspective I think it was a little bit more intense.
Like everyone from The Grateful Dead to Green Day, Journey were part of the Bay Area's musical firmament. Do you think you get the credit you deserve for that?
That’s an interesting question. I always thought of Journey as being separate from all of that. We were branded as being sort of a corporate rock band back in those days, and I always had arguments against that. I said, ‘What do you mean by corporate?’ And the answer was that we were like a corporation, to which I answered, ‘Well so were Led Zeppelin, and so were The Beatles. What are you talking about?’ It’s about not giving all your money to taxes, that’s all it is. It’s about writing off your expenses. It’s just a business. That’s the reality of that part of it, so I never quite understood what that charge meant. I thought that we were unique unto our own sound. We were lumped in with groups like Foreigner and REO Speedwagon, which I never understood. Looking back now, I don’t think that we sound like those bands.
What is your relationship with the song Don't Stop Believin', which this century has been hummed by everyone in the world?
Well, one of the reasons I had to stop was that my passion for all of the songs was diminishing, which was really frightening, whether the song was Don’t Stop Believing or Lights In The City, or anything else. I was having an emotional emptiness to draw from. It’s like having a sponge that was drawing out. What am I going to do? And at that time, we all were starting to get into…well, I’ll speak for myself, into bad behaviour to try and replenish the sponge. That’s not the solution. So my solution at that point was to stop, which is what I did.
What was the beginning of the re-emergence of Don't Stop Believin'?
Here’s where it started. [Director] Patty Jenkins wrote the movie Monster, which starred Christina Ricci and Charlize Theron. The song had already had its moment, but she gets hold of me and starts to procure the idea of using it in a scene. I get the tape and look at the scene in question and it’s really a beautiful use of the song. So I call her up to talk to her, which was a big surprise to her because she’s heard all these rumours that I’m a recluse and that for me it’s all about the money. The idea that it was all about the money, by the way, came from the fact that I was getting all of these bad scripts to which I’d say no, so people thought that my motivation was money. It wasn’t. The truth is that I loved her film, and we gave her the song for next to nothing. It was an independent film and it was great. So we gave it to her and she used it. That became the beginning of the resurgence of the song. Then it went to the [TV show] The Real OC, then to sporting events, and then to Glee. And it ended up in the final scene of The Sopranos.