1. 개요 [편집] 미국 의 하드 록, 팝 록 밴드 저니 가 1981년 발매한 싱글로 그들의 대표곡이다. 앨범 Escape 의 첫번째 트랙에 수록되었다. 2. 상세 [편집] 1980년대 AOR 을 상징하는 노래 중 하나다. [1] 저니의 모든 명곡중에서도 그 인지도가 가장 높은 노래로 Just a small town girl, livin' in a lonely world She took the midnight train goin' anywhere Just a city boy, born and raised in south Detroit He took the midnight train goin' anywhere A singer in a smokey room A smell of wine and cheap perfume For a smile they can share the night It goes on and on and on and on (Chorus) Strangers waiting, up and down the boulevard Their shadows searching in the night Streetlights people, living just to find emotion Hiding, somewhere in the night. Working hard to get my fill, Everybody wants a thrill Payin' anything to roll the dice, Just one more time Some will win, some will lose Some were born to sing the blues Oh, the movie never ends It goes on and on and on and on (Chorus) Don't stop believin' Hold on to the feelin' Streetlights people Don't stop believin' Hold on Streetlight people Don't stop believin' Hold on to the feelin' Streetlights people Journey. Piano/Vocal/Guitar. Digital Sheet Music Download. Pianists will delight in this updated songbook, in which the piano/vocal arrangements have been notably improved (compared to older published sheet music renditions) to accurately reflect what was played on the band's original hit recordings. Basic guitar chord grids are also included. (A Tekst piosenki: Don't Stop Believing Teskt oryginalny: zobacz tłumaczenie › Tłumaczenie: zobacz tekst oryginalny › Just a small town girlLivin' in a lonely worldShe took the midnight train goin' anywhereJust a city boyBorn and raised in south DetroitHe took the midnight train goin' anywhereA singer in a smoky roomA smell of wine and cheap perfumeFor a smile they can share the nightIt goes on and on, and on, and onStrangers waitingUp and down the boulevardTheir shadows searching in the nightStreetlights, peopleLiving just to find emotionHiding somewhere in the nightWorking hard to get my fillEverybody wants a thrillPayin' anything to roll the diceJust one more timeSome will win, some will loseSome were born to sing the bluesOh, the movie never endsIt goes on and on, and on, and onStrangers waitingUp and down the boulevardTheir shadows searching in the nightStreetlights, peopleLiving just to find emotionHiding somewhere in the nightDon't stop believin'Hold on to the feelin'Streetlights, peopleDon't stop believin'Hold onStreetlights, peopleDon't stop believin'Hold on to the feelin'Streetlights, peopleDon't stop Brak tłumaczenia! Pobierz PDF Słuchaj na YouTube Teledysk Informacje Journey - amerykański zespół hard rockowo/AOR-owy, z wpływami rocka progresywnego, powstał w 1973 roku w San Francisco. Jego skład zmieniał się bardzo często, a jedynym stałym członkiem formacji był gitarzysta Neal Schon, zawiązany wcześniej z grupą Santana, Carlosa Santany. Debiutancki album, zatytułowany "Journey", ukazał się w 1975 roku. Był to pierwszy z serii trzech krążków, które cieszyły się umiarkowaną popularnością i zawierały mieszankę jazzu i rocka. Read more on Słowa: brak danych Muzyka: brak danych Rok wydania: brak danych Płyta: brak danych Ostatnio zaśpiewali Inne piosenki Journey (1) 1 0 komentarzy Brak komentarzy
I enjoyed listening to Journey’s Greatest Hits. I liked the following tracks: Don’t stop believing’, Wheel in the sky, Faithfully, Anyway you want it, Who’s crying now, Separate Ways (worlds apart), Lights, and Open arms.
Dołącz do innych i śledź ten utwór Scrobbluj, szukaj i odkryj na nowo muzykę z kontem O tym wykonwacy Journey 2 137 518 słuchaczy Powiązane tagi Journey - amerykański zespół hard rockowo/AOR-owy, z wpływami rocka progresywnego, powstał w 1973 roku w San Francisco. Jego skład zmieniał się bardzo często, a jedynym stałym członkiem formacji był gitarzysta Neal Schon, zawiązany wcześniej z grupą Santana, Carlosa Santany. Debiutancki album, zatytułowany "Journey", ukazał się w 1975 roku. Był to pierwszy z serii trzech krążków, które cieszyły się umiarkowaną popularnością i zawierały mieszankę jazzu i rocka. W 1977 roku muzycy zdecydowali o zmianie wokalisty i już ze Stevem Perrym nagrali płytę "Infinity&qu… dowiedz się więcej Journey - amerykański zespół hard rockowo/AOR-owy, z wpływami rocka progresywnego, powstał w 1973 roku w San Francisco. Jego skład zmieniał się bardzo często, a jedynym stałym czło… dowiedz się więcej Journey - amerykański zespół hard rockowo/AOR-owy, z wpływami rocka progresywnego, powstał w 1973 roku w San Francisco. Jego skład zmieniał się bardzo często, a jedynym stałym członkiem formacji był gitarzysta Neal Schon, zawi… dowiedz się więcej Wyświetl pełny profil wykonawcy Podobni wykonawcy Styx 1 054 715 słuchaczy Wyświetl wszystkich podobnych wykonawców
Official Audio for "Don't Stop Believin'" by JourneyListen to Journey: https://Journey.lnk.to/listenYDWatch more Journey videos: https://Journey.lnk.to/liste
There’s no denying it: Rarely a wedding or party goes by without Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin’” being in June 1981, the song appeared on the rock band’s seventh album, “Escape.” Although it never made it to No. 1 on the charts, “Don’t Stop Believin’” has seeped into our culture in countless ways. The “Sopranos” series finale. That memorable “Glee” pilot episode. Broadway’s “Rock of Ages” musical. Your karaoke night. You probably know the words by heart, but you may not know the details behind the making of the song. Journey keyboardist Jonathan Cain tells the story of the tune’s genesis in his new memoir, Don’t Stop Believin’: The Man, the Band and the Song That Inspired the 1970s, Cain ― then an aspiring musician ― left his hometown of Chicago for Los Angeles in hopes of landing his big break. When things didn’t go as planned, he phoned his father for some help. It turned out to be a fateful call. “My dog got hit by a car, and I was in Hollywood, and I had to pay the vet bill. And luckily they saved her life,” Cain told HuffPost at Build Series. “I had called him for some money, for another loan. And I hated calling my dad for a loan. I said, ‘Dad, should I just give up on this thing and come home? It seems like I might be pushing it back to Chicago.’ ‘No, no, don’t come home. Stick to your guns. Don’t stop believin’. I went, ‘OK.’ Everything he would say to me somehow I would just doodle in my little notebook that I wrote songs in. That’s basically what happened. He had said to me, ‘Don’t stop believin’,’ and I took it to heart. He sent me the money, and great things started to happen.”Jonathan Cain speaking at Build Studio in New York City on April Pont/BuildIn 1980, Cain left his previous group, the Babys, to join Journey, replacing Gregg Rolie on keyboards. While writing songs for “Escape” with Journey singer Steve Perry and guitarist Neal Schon, Cain began to flip through his notebook. “Steve Perry asked me, ‘Is there another idea around? We need one more song.’ And when I looked in the back of the spiral notebook, there was ‘Don’t stop believin’’ ... and I thought, ‘Well, Steve Perry would sing this if I can bring in a chorus of some kind,’” Cain said. “So I wrote this chorus, and I brought it in, and all of us together finished the song in a room. It was magical.” Cain said they could feel the momentum of the song, particularly after recording it in the studio. “Workin’ hard to get my fill. Everybody wants a thrill, payin’ anything to roll the dice just one more time.”- “Don’t Stop Believin’”“I think when we finally heard the final mix, Neal looked at me, and he said, ‘There’s something special about this.’ And I said, ‘Let’s make it the first song on the album, because it sounds like it draws a listener in. Let’s make it Track 1.’ So that’s how we sequenced the album,” Cain said.“Don’t Stop Believin’” reached No. 9 on the Billboard singles chart, but he said he doesn’t recall that it was “a huge hit.”Steve Perry and Jonathan Cain at the 2017 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in Brooklyn, New Wargo via Getty ImagesYears after the release of “Don’t Stop Believin,’” Perry ― the voice behind the song ― parted ways with Journey, leaving a big hole to fill. After a couple of other frontmen, the group secured a steady lead singer in Arnel Pineda, who joined in year Journey was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Although Perry attended the ceremony, he didn’t perform with the the band. Still, Cain thinks Perry enjoyed the moment.“He seemed very, very vibrant and proud to be standing there with us,” Cain said. “He lives a very private life, and he chooses to keep it that way. Whenever I see him at these events, he seems very, very happy, content with his life. I know he’s gone through some troubles, like we all have. But he’s moved on.” Arnel Pineda and Neal Schon at a Journey show in Los Angeles in Mazur via Getty ImagesCain has moved on too. He said he hopes to work on some new music with Journey soon. And you can count on the band performing “Don’t Stop Believin’” on tour this summer. “I don’t ever get tired of it,” he said. “For me, it’s an honor to have a song that’s loved by three, four generations by now … Anyone who gets tired of a song is working off their own ego. When we’re in Journey, we check our egos at the door.” And as for the future of “Don’t Stop Believin’”? “It’s like Thomas the train. It keeps chugging along,” Cain said.
From Glee to The X Factor, Journey's Don't Stop Believin' became inescapable in 2010. Dorian Lynskey on the 30-year-old track that slowly burned its way into our consciousness
As the title implies (“Don’t Stop Believin’”), this song is based on the concepts of positivity thinking and remaining optimistic in the face of uncertainty. Its origins can famously be traced back to one of its co-writers, Steve Perry, calling his dad one day from Hollywood. He went there to pursue his dream of becoming a famous musician, but things weren’t working out for him. So he asked his dad if he should quit and come home, upon which his father replied, in summation, “don’t stop believing”. And Steve Perry and the rest of Journey were able to take that piece of inspiration and turn it into one of the greatest rock classics in the history of American music. Now let’s get back to the song’s lyrics meaning. In this song, the band depicts people from different walks of life who are facing challenges somewhat similar to what Steve went through. For instance, in the first verse we are introduced to two individuals who “took the midnight train”, as in ventured away from home, “going anywhere”. That is to say that they have set off into the unknown, more or less in search of their destiny. Then in the second verse we have “a singer in a smoky room”. In all it reads as if he is an itinerant entertainer. He appears to be a hustler who is just enjoying his gig for the night with no telling what fortune will come his way tomorrow. Indeed in the third verse we are made privy to the uncertainty the characters who make up this song (including the singer himself) face, as Perry states that “some will win; some will lose.” But the one thing they all have for common is that they are looking for something. Or as Steve sings in the pre-chorus in reference to the “streetlight people” (who are basically synonymous with city dwellers in general), they are “living just to find emotion”. Chorus of “Don’t Stop Believin'” But amidst it all, the chorus (which unconventionally comes at the end of the song) brings home the main point of this track. And that is even amidst this uncertainty and wandering if you will, these people should “hold on to that feeling” – as in a sense of optimism and destiny – and ‘not stop believing’. In other words, whatever they set forth looking for in the first place, as in “that feeling”, they should continue to strive for. This is intrinsically even in the face of obstacles, specifically within the context of this song perhaps those which evolve internally. And this general theme of this song is of course a piece of timeless, faith-based inspiration. Thus it is likely that “Don’t Stop Believin'” will continue to be a staple of American pop culture, as its overall sentiment is applicable to a variety of situations. Release Date of “Don’t Stop Believin’” Journey released this motivational song through Columbia Records on 6 October 1981. It was the lead song and second single from the band’s most-successful album titled Escape. Chart Performance It fared well upon its original release, peaking at number 9 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 62 on the UK Singles Chart. It also managed to chart in Australia, Canada and the Netherlands. However, “Don’t Stop Believin’” has proven to be a timeless hit, charting annually in the UK from 2008-2012. Furthermore, till date, it frequently makes appearances on the music charts in many countries around the world. This is largely due to the song being utilized in a number of different venues in pop culture in more-recent years. When this phenomena began is a matter of debate. Some say it started when the track was featured in the iconic 1998 film The Wedding Singer starring Adam Sandler. Others would argue it is due to the song playing a prominent role in the 2003 hit movie Monster, starring Charlize Theron. And still others may assert that this classic’s modern popularity is attributable to it being featured on the final episode of the hit television show The Sopranos in 2007. Popular Usage of “Don’t Stop Believin’” Indeed “Don’t Stop Believin’” has been featured in a quite a few movies and sports venues ( Major League Baseball games, being the theme song of the 2005 World Series’ champions Chicago White Sox). It has also appeared on many a television show, including popular sitcoms like The Simpsons and Glee. It is also commonly used in reality-based musical contests like X-Factor. In fact this song is also known to be a karaoke favorite. Talking about this song’s appearance in Glee, it should be noted that it has been performed, in varying capacities, on at least six different episodes of the show. And the rendition the cast released in 2010 was actually nominated for a Grammy Award, making it the only song from the show to ever accomplish this feat. Moreover a 2009 rendition of the song by X-Factor champion Joe McElderry charted higher on the UK Singles Chart than the original version of the track. Commercial Success in America Indeed in terms of digital sells, “Don’t Stop Believin’” set the record for being the top-selling song from the 20th century ( the pre-digital era), specifically in the United States. As of 2019, in the United States alone, it has sold in excess of 7 million copies. Many believe it was able to achieve this great feat due to it being featured The Sopranos. Covers of “Don’t Stop Believin’” And logically “Don’t Stop Believin’” has been covered by a number of musicians. Prominent names on this list include the likes of Bruce Springsteen, Elton John, Sting and Lady Gaga. Who wrote “Don’t Stop Believin’”? Steve Perry wrote “Don’t Stop Believin'” along with fellow Journey band members Jonathan Cain and Neal Schon. The city of Detroit plays a prominent role in the composition of this song. Indeed Perry was inspired to write part of it by watching people in the Motor City. It’s no wonder, he gives a shoutout to “South Detroit” in the track’s lyrics. However, it has been pointed out that there is not actually a “South Detroit” as he references in the song. This is something Perry did not become aware of until more recently. And he has stated that he chose to say “South Detroit” (as opposed to ‘East’, ‘West’ or ‘North’) because it sounded better. On the production side, record producers Mike Stone as well as Kevin Elson handled the production of “Don’t Stop Believin’”). It’s important to mention that for several years both Stone and Elson were among the band’s regular collaborators.
Cheesy, inspiring and enormously popular, Journey's "Don't Stop Believin'" is a song which became an American Anthem long after it was released. ASMA KHALID, HOST: Nearly 40 years ago, the band
A school custodian was doing a mic-check for a school assembly when someone with a cell phone began filming. Now, he’s gone viral for his epic rendition of Journey’s hit song, “Don’t Stop Believin’,” at a time when many just need to keep the faith. Check out the performance below, which had the children in the audience give the custodian a standing ovation for his pipes. The recording had many on social media celebrating his performance, especially given the song choice at a time when, given recent political decisions, it can be hard to keep holding on to hope. Wrote popular Twitter user Rex Chapman, “He can really sing” and “Man, I needed this today.” Journey’s original version came out in 1981, the second single on the group’s seventh album, Escape. It has since gone on to be one of the most popular songs in American pop music and a fan favorite at karaoke performances. Now, it’s famous again for its school assembly appeal. Man, I needed this today.— Rex Chapman🏇🏼 (@RexChapman) June 24, 2022 Photo via Twitter SlHmegq.
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