Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin” Keeps on Keepin’ on

0

Posted on : 03-11-2009 | By : cara | In : Generation Y, In The News

journey_poster

By Glenn Gamboa
Newsday, (MCT)

The ongoing success of Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin’” is a head-scratcher.

The song, which peaked at No. 9 on the pop charts in 1981, isn’t even the Bay Area band’s biggest hit. That would be “Open Arms” (No. 2 in 1982), followed by “Who’s Crying Now” (No. 4, 1981) and “Separate Ways (Worlds Apart)” (No. 8 in 1983).

Nevertheless, “Don’t Stop Believin’” continues to be a pop culture force today, even used as the finale for the current “American Idols Live” tour, where all the finalists get a crack at a few lines from the classic. And, according to Nielsen SoundScan, it is the top music download from the ’80s as of the end of July, ahead of seven Michael Jackson songs, Bon Jovi’s “Livin’ on a Prayer” and Survivor’s “Eye of the Tiger.” (Last week, the song was still among iTunes’ Top 100 downloads, the oldest song on the current list by far.)

“The lyric is a strong lyric about not giving up, but it’s also about being young,” former Journey singer Steve Perry told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. recently about the song he wrote with keyboardist Jonathan Cain and guitarist Neal Schon, who continue with Journey. “It’s about having hope and not quitting when things get tough, because I’m telling you things get tough for everybody.”

Maybe that’s why “Don’t Stop Believin” lives on and on and on.

Here’s a look at some of its recent incarnations:

THE SOPRANOS (2007)
Used as: The theme music for the HBO series’ final scene, a seemingly regular family meal at a diner that feels ominous, especially when the song cuts out after “Don’t stop” and the screen goes black.
The reaction: The song saw an immediate resurgence from its part in the scene, which became so iconic that Hillary Clinton even parodied it as part of her presidential campaign.

ROCK OF AGES (2009)
Used as: The finale of the Broadway musical, where the entire cast gets together and ties up story lines
The reaction: The scene helped “Rock of Ages” land a Tony nomination for best musical and a nod for Constantine Maroulis as lead actor in a musical.

GLEE (2009)
Used as: The main number in the first episode of the new Fox series about a high school glee club.
The reaction: The cast’s version was an overnight sensation, with its version landing at No. 4 on the pop charts on the strength of its download sales alone.
———
(c) 2009, Newsday.
Visit Newsday online at
http://www.newsday.com/
Distributed by
McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

 

Post a comment

SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline ss_blog_claim=16a82d2f470aae5ed18ce2361a6ae3e8 ss_blog_claim=16a82d2f470aae5ed18ce2361a6ae3e8