Next | ||||
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Studio album by Journey | ||||
Released | February 1977 | |||
Recorded | His Master's Wheels in San Francisco, California, May–October 1976 | |||
Genre | Hard rock, rock, progressive rock | |||
Length | 37:38 | |||
Label | Columbia | |||
Producer | Journey | |||
Journey chronology | ||||
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Next is the third album by Journey and was released in 1977.
Journey continued the formula from 1976's Look into the Future but this album also retains some of Journey's progressive rock style from the first album.
The instrumental entitled "Cookie Duster" was listed in very early pressings of the album, though not actually included on the pressings, and then not listed on the cover art at all. It was later released on their Time³ compilation.
Next reached #85 on the Billboard Pop Album charts.[1]
Although he did not contribute to Next, lead-vocalist Robert Fleischman joined Journey shortly after the album's release as a songwriter and the group's first dedicated frontman, sharing lead-vocal duties with founding bandmember Gregg Rolie during subsequent live shows.
Contents |
Retrospectively, "Next" received a 2 out of 5 on Allmusic. Stephen Thomas Erlewine said that "without a forceful lead vocalist like Steve Perry, the group lacks focus and a pop sensibility and its attempts at straight-ahead pop/rock suffer considerably as a result."
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
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1. | "Spaceman" | Aynsley Dunbar, Gregg Rolie | 4:01 |
2. | "People" | Dunbar, Rolie, Neal Schon | 5:21 |
3. | "I Would Find You" | Tena Austin, Schon | 5:54 |
4. | "Here We Are" | Rolie | 4:18 |
5. | "Hustler" | Dunbar, Rolie | 3:16 |
6. | "Next" | Heidi Cogdell, Dunbar, Rolie | 5:28 |
7. | "Nickel and Dime" (Instrumental) | Rolie, Schon, George Tickner, Ross Valory | 4:13 |
8. | "Karma" | Dunbar, Rolie, Schon | 5:07 |
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