That’s exactly what Arnel Pineda did. From
Cubao to Makati to Olongapo to Hong Kong to yes,
even cyberspace and now to San Francisco and beyond,
the journeyman singer from Sampaloc, Manila has
taken the roads most and less traveled in pursuit
of his rock and roll dream.
And at 40, a new life begins for the newly-anointed
frontman of Journey. Yes, Journey, that stadium-filling
rock band responsible for a string of hits in the
80’s that included “Don’t Stop
Believin,” and “Open Arms” has
just welcomed him aboard. And the irony is that
for all his travels, Arnel did not even have to
travel some more to audition for what he now calls
“a dream gig.”
Thanks to the rapid advances in technology in general
and the website YouTube.com in particular, it was
Journey who came looking for Arnel and not the other
way around. See, the band, whose contemporaries
include the likes of Styx, Toto and Foreigner has
been enjoying a renaissance of sorts in recent years
after some of its greatest hits were featured in
such high profile film and TV productions like Charlie’s
Angels (“Anyway You Want It”), the Oscar-winning
Charlize Theron-starrer, Monster (“Don’t
Stop Believin”) and just last year, in the
closing credits of the final episode of the HBO
mob series, The Sopranos (“Don’t Stop
Believin” again).
Problem is, the original voice behind those classics,
Steve Perry, had already left Journey, apparently
for good, way back in 1997. Although Perry’s
shoes have since been filled on two occasions by
sound-alike and okay, look-alike vocalists Steve
Augeri and Jeff Scott Soto, they simply weren’t
acceptable enough for most of the band’s fans.
So the search continued.
“I was frustrated about not having a singer,”
guitarist Neal Schon admitted in an earlier interview.
“So I went on YouTube for a couple of days
and just sat on it for hours. I thought I would
never find anybody.”
Battle-tested
And then Neal found Arnel. A battle-tested veteran
of such touring bands like Ijos, Amo, New Age and
most recently, Zoo, whose cover performances of
Journey’s songs included a stunning note-perfect,
goose-bump worthy reading of “Faithfully”
that got Schon’s attention in YouTube. A couple
of email exchanges and one fateful phone call later
(“I didn’t believe it was Neal Schon
who actually emailed and called me”) and just
like that, the latter’s long musical journey
ended with well, Journey.
Dubbed in YouTube as “the Steve Perry of
the Philippines,” Arnel makes no bones in
acknowledging his longtime admiration for the former.
Still overwhelmed by his sudden good fortune, he
says his stint with Journey also gives him the honor
and opportunity “to preserve Steve Perry’s
legacy.”
“My voice is my weapon and my greatest fear
would be to lose it,” he told the local media
during the recent launch of “Pain in My Heart,”
Zoo’s latest single, a “farewell gift”
of sorts. “I’m happy to be a torch bearer
for Filipinos. With this gig, the fire of the Filipino
spirit is with me.”
“Arnel brings a soulful and passionate voice
to Journey,” continues keyboardist Jonathan
Cain. “His personality is very well-suited
to our music. He’s a sincere, authentic person
with a great smile and a big heart. I think fans
are really going to love him. With Arnel’s
soaring tenor, Journey returns to our heritage sound.”
The journey begins
Of course, we all know that popular Spiderman mantra
that “with great power comes great responsibility,”
right? Well, Arnel reveals that attached to his
Journey selection are tons of responsibility and
hard work. Arnel’s official Journey begins
with an exciting but grueling world tour that starts
next month in Santiago, Chile and includes stops
in Las Vegas, Paris, Japan, Australia and hopefully
the Philippines by the end of the year. Recording
an album of all-new material is also part of the
band’s busy schedule.
“There’s a lot of hard work involved,”
Arnel admits. “I need to familiarize myself
with all those Journey songs I grew up with and
that require proper vocalization. Although the band
loves my accent, they hired a speech therapist to
soften it a bit and there are also some English
words that I need to fix. I’m also at the
gym everyday to increase my stamina as this will
be a long tour.”
Arnel happily announced that he has already bonded
with his new bandmates that also includes bass player
Ross Valory and drummer Deen Castronovo. “They’re
already asking me what Filipino food I can cook
when we hit the road,” he muses.
“It’s so exciting to sing with one
of the best bands in the world,” he adds.“
I’m actually looking forward to the scrutiny
I’ll get from the hardcore Journey fans. I
know they’ll expect me to sound exactly like
‘the voice’ but that will never happen.
I know there’s only one Steve Perry in this
world. What I’m bringing to the table here
is my own singing, which is pure Filipino. The band
and the fans are going to have a taste of that for
a long time.”
Arnel says it won’t be a problem for him
at all if Steve Perry, whom he never met, decides
to come back to Journey. “If that happens,
I’m more than willing to step aside,”
he reveals. “But I’ll be more than thrilled
to perform with him on the same stage if given the
chance.”
His selection as Journey frontman came at a time
when Zoo was beginning to make waves, whose debut
album Zoology was launched only during the last
quarter of 2007. Its kick-off single, the rollicking
“Gimik” is already a huge radio hit
and has the makings of an OPM classic. He does not
dismiss the possibility of rejoining them in the
future in a possible post-Journey scenario.
“Zoo will move on without me and I’m
sure they’ll be fine,” he declares.
“But me and those guys, we’re like a
brotherhood, and if the time comes that I’m
no longer with Journey, then who knows?”