

“I hope when people hear this record, they’re teleported in the same way I was when I recorded all these songs-I hope it brings them back to those golden moments with their loved ones, and gives them that feeling of joy and connection and comfort that we all need so much.Steve Perry made his debut with Journey in 1977 as the lead singer. “Music has always been something that rescues me in difficult times,” says Perry. I could see that tree so clearly in my mind, and then I opened my eyes and thought, ‘Whoa-where did I just go?’ Now everybody has passed of course, but for just that moment I was home for Christmas.”įor both artist and audience alike, The Season ultimately serves as a form of emotional time travel, a direct conduit for the kind of memories that sustain the spirit and restore a sense of joyous serenity. “Her Christmas tree was always loaded with presents underneath, and covered with the tinsel that my mother and I put on to make the tree shimmer. “As I was singing that song, I closed my eyes and all of a sudden found myself standing in the doorway that looked onto the living room of my grandmother’s house,” Perry recalls. And in a particularly poignant moment, “I’ll Be Home for Christmas” opens on a cascade of layered vocals that perfectly capture its mood of melancholy longing.

On “What Are You Doing New Year’s Eve,” The Season shifts into a jazzy reverie that lovingly nods to Ella Fitzgerald’s version from 1960. To that end, “Winter Wonderland” merges its lush string arrangements with a Motown-inspired groove, while “Auld Lang Syne” arrives as a bittersweet piano ballad graced with choir-like harmonies.

“I’d never sung with that much simplicity before, and it was incredibly thrilling to bring that kind of expression to these songs.”ĭespite its heartfelt fidelity to the original material-a quality especially striking on the album’s beautifully tender bookends of “The Christmas Song” and “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas”- The Season unfolds with plenty of surprising details that breathe new life into every song. “One of the things I love most about those traditional recordings is they’re not coming at you like a rock song-they’re just sitting there quietly and inviting you in,” says Perry. While most of the album encompasses an understated sonic palette-piano, strings, upright bass-each track leaves an indelible impact thanks to the soulful sincerity of Perry’s vocal work. Mainly recorded at Perry’s home studio, The Season came to life in collaboration with drummer Vinnie Colaiuta (Sting, Joni Mitchell, Frank Zappa) and Dallas Kruse (a multi-instrumentalist who also worked with Perry on his acclaimed 2018 album Traces). I wanted to make sure to record them all in a simple way that honors how I first heard and fell in love with them as a child.” “I used to hear them on the Philco radio that my grandmother always had on in the kitchen when she was cooking the most amazing holiday food, and because of that they hold a very emotional place in my heart. “All the songs on this record were my favorites growing up,” says Perry, who hails from Central California. As the latest turn in a phenomenal career that’s included landing on Rolling Stone’s 100 Greatest Singers of All Time list, fronting Journey during the band’s most massively successful era, and gaining entry into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, the legendary singer/songwriter now returns with The Season: an exquisitely curated holiday album that reveals him as a flawless interpreter of the classic Christmas songbook.Ĭo-produced by Perry and engineer Thom Flowers, The Season embodies an immaculately arranged and richly nuanced sound inspired by such time-honored holiday albums as Nat King Cole’s The Magic of Christmas. One of the most iconic voices in rock & roll history, Steve Perry has captivated generations with the sheer power of his range and extraordinary warmth of his tone.
