Beyond Tiki, Bilge, and Test / Beyond Tiki
Anyway You Want It - on the High Seas!
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TC
Tiki Chris
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Mon, Jul 19, 2004 8:11 PM
Street Light People, Come Sail Away! http://www.rrholidayescape.com/ Make sure you have the audio ON!!! [ Edited by: Tiki Chris on 2004-07-19 20:12 ] |
M
martiki
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Tue, Jul 20, 2004 11:54 AM
If Steve Perry and and Dennis De Young would just come back to their respective bands, hell I'd go! The Wheel in the Sky does indeed keep turning. This reminds me of a classic bit of writing from about five years ago that I think about all the time. If you love Journey, you'll love this: What Would Journey Do? I am here today to tell you that Journey DOES understand. Because, my friend, Journey has been there before. SITUATION ONE It's the quintessential modern struggle: a two-income family, overworked, always pressed for time. You may wonder how Journey, who walked the Earth so long ago, could relate to a problem like this. But did you know that Journey faced precisely this same dilemma -- nearly twenty years ago? In Frontiers 5, 0:48, they tell the story of a musician, always on the road, and the woman he's left behind: "They say that the road ain't no place to start a family. But right down the line, it's been you and me. And lovin' a music man ain't always what it's supposed to be. Oh girl, you stand by me. I'm forever yours, faithfully." Faithfully. It's clear that Journey intends a double meaning to this term: faithfulness to the absent spouse, yes, but also faith in Journey -- and their power to heal broken relationships. Devotional meditation: How secure is my faith in Journey? When is it strong? When does it falter? SITUATION TWO At many points in the Albums, Journey speaks out strenuously on this subject. And their message is always the same: "Any way you want it -- that's the way you need it." False prophets who tell you otherwise are leading you astray. Do not pay them heed. The most striking passage on the topic comes from Departure 1, 0:50: "I was alone -- I never knew -- what good love could do. Then we touched, and we sang, about the lovin' things! All night, all night -- oh, every night!" Devotional meditation: Do I love to move? Do I love to groove? Do I love the lovin' things? SITUATION THREE Journey was no stranger to existential hunger. Escape 1, 2:02, perhaps captures this hunger best of all: "Workin' 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." In the face of such sorrow and hopelessness, does Journey go on to say that we should give up the fight? NO! Instead, we are told to not stop believing. To hold on to that feeling. May the streetlight person in each of us have the courage to listen. Devotional meditation: Have I ever stopped believing -- in life, in love, in Journey? When weighed down by the cares of the world, have I let go of that feeling? Have I taken a midnight train going anywhere? [ Edited by: martiki on 2004-07-20 11:55 ] |
UB
Unga Bunga
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Tue, Jul 20, 2004 12:01 PM
It's probably all three drummers. |
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