Showing posts with label Any Way You Want It. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Any Way You Want It. Show all posts

Saturday, March 1, 1980

Journey “Any Way You Want It” charted

Any Way You Want It

Journey

Writer(s): Steve Perry, Neal Schon (see lyrics here)


First Charted: March 1, 1980


Peak: 23 US, 21 CB, 23 HR, 18 RR, 3 CL, 50 CN, 4 DF (Click for codes to singles charts.)


Sales (in millions): -- US, 0.2 UK


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, 61.7 video, 290.85 streaming

About the Song:

Journey released three albums in the mid-‘70s before taking off with 1978’s Infinity, thanks to songs like “Wheel in the Sky” and “Lights” which have become album-rock favorites. 1979’s Evolution followed, becoming the band’s highest charting album to-date at #20. The band also got to the top 40 on the Billboard charts for the first time with “Lovin’, Touchin’, Squeezin’” at #16. The band reached even greater heights the next time out when 1980’s Departure landed them in the top 10. Journey logged two more top-40 hits with “Any Way You Want It” (#23) and “Walks Like a Lady” (#32).

In a review of “Any Way You Want It,” Cash Box said Journey had “tightened up the rhythm section” and that the song was paced by “short, smart drum shots and quick, choppy guitar licks.” WK The song is also marked by a double-tracked keyboard effect which came about when Gregg Rolie played a Mellotron in the studio, but it was defective so co-producer Geoff Workman corrected the sound and dbouled it with Rolie’s regular organ. SF

Lead singer Steve Perry said “Any Way You Want It” was inspired by Irish rock band Thin Lizzy. Journey toured with them in July 1979 and Thin Lizzy’s Phil Lynott shared guitar-voice, guitar-voice rhyme scheme exercises with Perry and Journey guitarist Neal Schon.

The song was featured in a classic Rodney Dangerfield dance scene from 1980’s Caddyshack. The song was also used during a blooper reel for Charlie’s Angels 2: Full Throttle. It was also used in a State Farm commercial with an agent telling a customer, “we’re here, anytime, anywhere, anyway you want it.” SF


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First posted 7/8/2022.

Friday, February 29, 1980

Journey’s Departure released

First posted 10/12/2008; updated 9/11/2020.

Departure

Journey


Released: February 29, 1980


Peak: 8 US, -- UK, 48 CN, -- AU


Sales (in millions): 3.0 US, -- UK, 4.0 world (includes US and UK)


Genre: classic rock


Tracks:

Song Title (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to singles charts.

  1. Any Way You Want It (3/1/80, 23 US, 50 CN)
  2. Walks Like a Lady (5/24/80, 32 US, 31 CN)
  3. Someday Soon
  4. People and Places
  5. Precious Time
  6. Where Were You
  7. I’m Cryin’
  8. Line of Fire
  9. Departure
  10. Good Morning Girl (8/23/80, 55 US)
  11. Stay Awhile (8/23/80, 55 US)
  12. Homemade Love


Total Running Time: 37:49


The Players:

  • Steve Perry (vocals)
  • Neal Schon (guitar, backing vocals)
  • Gregg Rolie (keyboards, backing vocals, co-lead vocals on “Someday Soon”)
  • Ross Valory (bass, backing vocals)
  • Steve Smith (drums)

Rating:

3.518 out of 5.00 (average of 12 ratings)

About the Album:

“The third and final album of what could be called Journey’s cocoon phase (Escape would give birth to a fully formed butterfly and put the band through the stratosphere), 1980’s Departure would also be the quintet’s last with keyboardist/vocalist Gregg Rolie.” FR “He tired of life on the road and decided to resign his position in the band.” JM

“Produced by Geoff Workman and Kevin Elson (essentially both engineers turned producers), the album continued to build on the band’s previous two recordings, but offered an added edge, arrangement-wise. This was likely due to the fact that the band had walked into Automatt Studios with 19 new tunes and proceeded to record most of them live, eventually trimming down to 11 songs.” FR

Departure would be the band’s highest charting album to date, giving Journey their first appearance in the top 10 of the Billboard album charts.” JM It “got off to an explosive start with the driving riffs and chorused vocals of” FR “the jubilant Anyway You Want It,” CRM “another radio smash.” FR “Never sounding tighter, the quintet then launched into Walks Like a Lady (another future FM staple…) and a string of outstanding rockers, including future concert opener Where Were You and the stop-go-stop-go energy of Line of Fire.” FR

“On the other hand, elegant power ballads like Good Morning and Stay Awhile would foreshadow the band’s future commercial triumphs on Escape. And even though it packs the occasional filler like Someday Soon and Homemade Love (a weak attempt to boogie that falls absolutely flat and, tellingly, was the only Gregg Rolie-sung tune here), Departure is a solid record all around. Soon, Rolie would be replaced by the greater pop-savvy songwriting muscle of former Babys keyboard man , met Jonathan Cain” FR who Rollie even assisted in finding, JM “and Journey would go from huge cult act to monster superstars,” FR “setting the template for 80s arena rock.” CRM

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