| | Journey (1st LP) CD Journey Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
After splitting their backing musician gig with guitar legend Carlos Santana, guitarist Neal Schon and keyboardist/vocalist Gregg Rolie formed a new band--Journey. The band's 1975 self-titled debut is much more prog-rock/fusion-based than its later pop work, as the quartet jams out on long instrumental sections throughout. "Of a Lifetime" and "Topaz" are particularly noteworthy examples of Journey's early style.
Recorded at CBS Studios, San Francisco, California.
Journey: Gregg Rolie (vocals, keyboards); Neal Schon (guitar, background vocals); George Tickner (guitar); Ross Valory (piano, bass, background vocals); Aynsley Dunbar (drums).
Journey (1st LP) Music Review Purchase Journey (1st LP) CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Captain Beyond CD (1972)
Journey (1st LP) album
$7.95 Captain Beyond is a one-of-a-kind progressive album with rock, heavy metal, and jazz influences with a "space rock" lyrical bend. Formed by former members of Deep Purple (Rod Evans, vocals), Iron Butterfly (Rhino, lead guitar, and Lee Dorman, bass), and Johnny Winter (Bobby Caldwell, drums) Captain Beyond is an album that flows from riff to riff, drumbeat to drumbeat, often with various time signatures within the same song. Taking a tip from the Moody Blues, songs flow directly into each other without benefit of any lag time between selections. Taken as a whole, the album is kind of a rush, as quick, riff-laden guitar lines predominate for a few songs before slowing down temporarily into a lull until the next takeoff. Lyrically, the album differentiates itself by exploring themes of the outer world and meanings of existence, often with references to the moon, ...
| | Porcupine Tree In Absentia CD (2002)
Journey (1st LP) CD music
$8.55 There's a breed of (post-1980s) bands with the same degree of grand rock experimentalism as Pink Floyd and Yes, who simultaneously adhere to the concept of concise ...
| | Kickboxer DVD (1989) Lions Gate Home Entertainment
Journey (1st LP) music CDs
$7.09
| | Journey Frontiers CD (1983) Bonus Tracks; Remastered; Digipak
Journey (1st LP) songs
$7.59
| | Journey Next CD (1977)
Journey (1st LP) album
$6.89
| | Journey Look Into The Future CD (1976)
Journey (1st LP) CD music
$6.89
| | Reptile Palace Orchestra Iguana Iguana CD (1999)
Journey (1st LP) music CDs
$16.45
| | Kenny Clarke Off Limits CD (1970) (Import) Italy
Journey (1st LP) songs
$21.29
| | Kevin Pike One By One CD (2004)
Journey (1st LP) album
$5.99 The jazz duo is one of saxophonist Kevin Pike's favorite settings for jazz. This album features Kevin Pike on alto and baritone saxophones, accompanied by many of the musicians he has performed with in Chicago. These musicians include Adam Johnson on acoustic bass guitar, Patrick Williams on bass, John Kregor on guitar and Doug Angelaccio on alto saxophone. All songs were arranged by Kevin Pike.The songs on the album include jazz standards, modern pop tunes and original compositions by Kevin Pike. This album is jazz stripped to its essence: musical interaction, improvisation and swing. It was inspired by Kevin's favorite jazz duos, including Stan Getz and Kenny Barron, Bireli Lagrene and Sylvain Luc, Cesar Camargo Mariano and Romero Lubambo, Mark Colby and Vince Maggio, and Jim Hall and Ron Carter.Here is a list of each track with notes about the arrangement:1. Sugar - by Stanley Turrentine (sax and guitar)The song begins with a unison line for sax and guitar and then breaks into the famous melody, only this time with a pedal bass and modal vamp in place of the usual chord changes. This tune really swings.2. One By One - by Wayne Shorter (sax and bass)Wayne Shorter wrote this song for Art Blakey when he was a member of the Jazz Messengers. In this version, Kevin stretches out the melody over 2 sections, one latin and one ...
| | Jayhawks Sound Of Lies CD (2008) (Import)
Journey (1st LP) CD music
$12.65
| | Santana Welcome CD (1973)
Journey (1st LP) music CDs
$5.95 Recorded in 1973. Originally released on Columbia (32445). Includes liner notes by Hal Miller.
The mark that the recording of Caravanserai and Love Devotion Surrender had left on Carlos Santana was monumental. The issue of Welcome, the band's fifth album and its first with the new lineup, was a very ambitious affair and was regarded by traditional fans of Santana with even more strangeness than its two predecessors. However, issued as it was at the end of 1973, after Miles had won a Grammy for Bitches Brew and after Weather Report, Return to Forever, and Seventh House had begun to win audiences from the restless pool of rock fans, Santana began to attract the attention of critics as well as jazz fans seeking something outside of the soul-jazz and free jazz realms for sustenance. The vibe that carried over from the previously mentioned two albums plus the addition of vocalist Leon Thomas to the fold added a bluesy, tougher edge to the sound showcased on Caravanserai. The band's hard root was comprised of Carlos, drummer Michael Shrieve, bassist Doug Rauch, and keyboard king Tom Coster. Add to this the percussion section of Armando Peraza and Chepito Areas as well as a second keyboard by Richard Kermode, and space was the place. The John Coltrane influence that inspired the Santana/John McLaughlin pairing on Love Devotion Surrender echoes here on "Going Home," the album's opening track, arranged by Coltrane's widow, pianist and harpist Alice. The deeper jazz fusion/Latin funk edge is articulated on the track "Samba de Sausalito," and to a much more accessible degree on "Love, Devotion & Surrender," which features Thomas growling through the choruses and also features Wendy Haas, a keyboardist on Love Devotion Surrender who is enlisted here as a second vocalist. In fact, her pairing with Thomas on Shrieve's "When I Look Into Your Eyes" is nothing less than beatific. McLaughlin makes a return appearance here on the stunningly beautiful guitar spiritual "Flame Sky." Brazilian song diva Flora Purim is featured on "Yours Is the Light," a gorgeous Afro-Brazilian workout that embraces Cuba son, samba, and soul-jazz. Welcome also marked the first appearance of French soprano saxophonist Jules ...
| | Carlos Santana Swing Of Delight CD (1980)
Journey (1st LP) songs
$5.95 In the face of the Santana band's more poppish outings, THE SWING OF DELIGHT marks a striking return to Carlos' exploratory, instrumental roots in the form of a potent fusion session. The extraordinary ensemble here is like a Santana-Headhunters encounter, featuring such jazz geniuses as Herbie Hancock on keyboards, saxophonist Wayne Shorter, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Tony Williams. With his newfound title of Devadip, Carlos' vibrant spiritual life permeates every aspect of the recording, not surprisingly including the album title, which takes its name from a poem by Indian guru Sri Chinmoy.
Carlos delivers a tender and pleading solo take on the ...
| | Secret Disintoxication CD (2008)
Journey (1st LP) album
$12.49 The Secret's second album, following some four years after the first, shows that the Italian band, sporting a slightly redone lineup for this effort, can make some punishing efforts in the vein of acts like Refused -- to the point of engaging in the hero worship of recording with Magnus Lindberg at Sweden's Tonteknik Recordings. (A direct tribute to the setting comes with ...
| | Foxboro Hot Tubs Stop Drop And Roll!!! CD (2008)
Journey (1st LP) CD music
$10.45
| | Disco Boys, Vol. 8 CDs (2007) (Import) Germany
Journey (1st LP) music CDs
$22.75
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