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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Frontiers: AWESOME ALBUM!!!!!
I'm a die-hard Journey fan, and of all their albums, "Frontiers" is my favorite. This album contains beautiful heartfelt power ballads like "Send Her My Love," "After The Fall," and "Faithfully," and jamming rock anthems like "Seperate Ways," and "Chain Reaction." The band pours out their heart and soul to you in...
Published on September 26, 2000

versus
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A pleasing album
Frontiers--the eighth full-length disc from Journey--gets the job done. It was released in 1983. I find all ten of the tracks to be enjoyable. Overall, the songwriting is gratifying, the musicianship is skillful, and the sound quality is worthy. The material is in a pop rock musical direction. Steve Perry does a unique, tight job with the vocal duties. The songs...
Published on February 25, 2002 by sauerkraut


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Frontiers: AWESOME ALBUM!!!!!, September 26, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Frontiers (Audio CD)
I'm a die-hard Journey fan, and of all their albums, "Frontiers" is my favorite. This album contains beautiful heartfelt power ballads like "Send Her My Love," "After The Fall," and "Faithfully," and jamming rock anthems like "Seperate Ways," and "Chain Reaction." The band pours out their heart and soul to you in every song, making you feel every bit of the emotion they are expressing. Their harmonizing blends in beautifully across the pounding drums, energetic electric guitars, and melodic keyboards. Lead singer, Steve Perry's wonderful, distinctive voice brings the whole package home, with the strong, intense feeling he presents in each song. Journey is a true rock band, and "Frontiers" is the ultimate rock album. If you want heart-thumping rock, and ballads that make you want to throw your hands up and sway from side to side, this is the album for you. "Frontiers" has it all!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars It Could Have Been A 5 Star Album, August 6, 2006
This review is from: Frontiers (Audio CD)
Journey's "Frontiers" album, released in 1982, stands as one of the band's best. The album spawned four hits ("Separate Ways," "Send Her My Love," "After the Fall", and "Faithfully") and a video game. The synths definitely dominated on this album (who can forget the opening to "Separate Ways?"); yet, despite this, the guitars were more rhythmic and distorted, creating a much harder sound than their previous "Escape" album. Neil Schon's still gets to do his incredible solo work and drummer Steve Smith clearly shows off his talent in "Rubicon" and "Frontiers."

Where the album falls short were the two tracks pulled from it, only to be included on movie soundtracks. These two tracks were "Only the Young," which wound up on the "Vision Quest" soundtrack and peaked at #9 on the Billboard Charts. The other was "Ask the Lonely," a phenomenal tune that was used for the movie "Two of a Kind." It received a fair amount of airplay, but never charted. It is the reviewers opinion that these two should have superceded "Troubled Child" and "Back Talk," neither of which contributed much to the album. Where can you get these tunes? On their "Greatest Hits" album, which also includes 3/4 hits off of "Frontiers."

"Frontiers" is a great album and one that should be included in any Journey fan's collection. Happy buying!

****UPDATE****

The 2006 remaster contains four bonus tracks: "Only the Young," "Ask the Lonely," "Only Solutions," and "Liberty." This is the one to buy!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "Someday love will find you"... But it never did me, April 5, 2002
By 
andy previte (The Land Of The Thirtysomthing Broken Hearted Fools, Yes) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Frontiers (Audio CD)
Having got hooked on Journey with Frontiers' predecessor, Escape, I was going crazy with excitement when this came out. I had cried several times when listening to Escape, to such an extent that my parents with whom I was living at the time asked me if everything was OK. I was 17. So, of course, the answer was "Yes. leave me alone, Mom" Then came Frontiers and that fantastic opening track, Separate Ways. The thrilling crunch of Neal Schon's guitars and that beautiful Steve Perry falsetto floating like a lovely bird over the top. "Someday love will find you... break those chains that bind you". At the time I was bound in the chains of unrequited love and that song cut me to the bone. Send Her My Love, Faithfully and After The Fall stung me in the same way. Exquisite soft rock with bite. Side two of the original vinyl - so the second half here - is heavier, but Edge Of The Blade has a heart-tugging streak beneath the riff that still reminds me of my platonic girlfriend, EJO (let's call her). I never got the girl, but Frontiers still takes me back. I cried while listening to this album and, once again, Mom asked if everything was OK. If only she knew I was a heartbroken, crazy Journey freak with no chick to share it all with.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Super follow up to Escape, June 15, 2006
By 
andykay888 (Melbourne Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Frontiers (Audio CD)
What more needs to be said - a super return to the charts with this release after the spectacular Escape album. It opens with the thumping Separate ways and closes with Rubicon. In between we have the beautiful Faithfully and Send her my love. The weakest songs are Edge of the blade and Back talk. Even these are worthwhile. If you are a Journey fan or just like quality AOR then this as well as Escape should be in your collection.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Journey Album by far, September 4, 2005
By 
Gilberto Orillac (Miami, Florida United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Frontiers (Audio CD)
This album is far superior to what came before and what came after from Journey. From Separate Ways to Rubicon- top notch recording. There is only one thing that could have made Frontiers EVEN BETTER- having kept Only the Young and Ask the Lonely in the album. That's right- a decision was made to put these 2 excellent songs in soundracks. Bottom line- if you are going to buy a Journey CD, buy this one or one of the greatest hits collections.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Worthy Follow-Up To "Escape", November 5, 2004
By 
This review is from: Frontiers (Audio CD)
I recently bought this album and was very surprised by how much it actually rocks. None of the singles that I heard from "Frontiers" over the years impressed me much (other than "Send Her My Love," which is arguably Journey's best ballad ever).

The first half of the album is very good, but it really takes off starting with "Edge Of The Blade." I believe that "Frontiers" is a worthy follow up to "Escape," Journey's best hard-rock album ever. The only misstep is "Back Talk," which is too heavy metal (in a bad sort of 80's way) and not conducive to Steve Perry's vocal style at all.

Stand-out tracks according to me: "Edge Of The Blade," "Troubled Child," "Frontiers," "Rubicon," "Send Her My Love," "Chain Reaction," and "After The Fall."

I had to leave out "Separate Ways," and "Faithfully" because they were both overplayed to death when they were originally released. I never really liked "Seperate Ways" anyway. I always thought it sounded like Journey had spent 5 minutes writing it and 5 minutes recording it, which is why I never wanted to buy this album in the first place. I'm glad I finally did, though, because it is a worthy follow up to "Escape."
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Just An Excellent Album, September 8, 2003
By 
"sapphov" (Philadelphia, PA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Frontiers (Audio CD)
I've recently dusted this one off and given it a listen. Frontiers achieves what very few albums from the early eighties manage--it stands the test of time. My personal favorites are the epic "Chain Reaction" and "Rubicon", the latter of which is a must if you're facing any period of change in your life. To the point, this is one of those rare albums that genuinely lifts the spirit through the mastery of music.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Journey To The Metal Kingdom(With Minor Casualties), December 1, 2001
This review is from: Frontiers (Audio CD)
Frontier released in 1982 shows the Journey's exploration into the harder edge of melodic rock. But the trouble was Journey became too big to venture into such risky business with the huge success of Escape which sold more than 9 million copies. To survive as a rock band, however, metallization was inevitable for them. The band curtly solved the dilennma by placing pop tracks on the first part and hard-edged tracks the second.

Seperate Ways, keyboard heavy opening track is really excellent with dramatism and grace and it became their second largest hit. Send Her My Love is well-written fine ballad and together with another sweet ballad Faithfully they did the job as corporate rock band. Edge Of The Blade,though not as complete as previous five tracks, is a nice example of guitar driven rock. Troubled Child and Frontiers aptly showing Steve Perry's fine vocal makes metal edged part listenable for ordinary music fans. Back Talk has classic hard rock feel with a little blend of latin rock styled drums. Rubicon is my #1 favorite rocker from this album.

Journey as a band, however, went into four-year long sleep with the exception of Only The Young from Vision Quest soundtrack with Ross Valory leaving the band. Ross Valory joined Kevin Chalfant(now the lead vocallist of Two Fires) and became the driving force for Kevin's band VU and The Storm.

Essential if you are a melodic rock fan.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Much Better Than Escape!, March 3, 2001
By 
Jerry Schafer (Bel Air, MD USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Frontiers (Audio CD)
Frontiers is one of the best albums by Journey. Steve Perry's vocals are amazing, and Neal Schon's hard guitar sound, Jon Cain's keyboards, Steve Smith's thunderous drums, and Ross Valory's thrumming bass is the perfect combination for this album.

On songs like 'Edge Of The Blade' (My favorite!) and 'Separate Ways (Worlds Apart) you can hear the band in fine tune. With 'Frontiers' 'Back Talk' and 'Rubicon' three awesome songs that I've never heard played on the radio that should have, have a great sound! And also 'Troubled Child' has a haunting keyboard sound, but is a musically powerful song.

The whole album is a Journey Jem, I think that Japanese Animation fans may enjoy the album as well, while not J-pop, it has the sounds that inspired the music of 80's anime.

Just take a listen to 'Frontiers' and judge the album for yourself!

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars FRONTIERS ROCK, October 9, 2002
By 
Stone Summer (Ormond Beach, FL USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Frontiers (Audio CD)
LEts get off the high horse about corporate rock - BEcause if the white stripes and the strokes get much bigger than they will indeed fit the corporate rock bill also - IN short FRONTIERS SMOKES and what a fantastic flow throughout the whole album - Side one 4 big time hit singles (Seperate Ways - Send her my love - Faithfully - After the fall and 1 minor hit and the best song on side 1 (Chain reaction) - "BUT THIS STUFF IS TOO WIMPY FOR ME " well flip over to side 2 or song 6 and Start with Edge of the blade and tell me this album is Corporate rock fluff or doesnt have any balls - When Steve says - "IF IT HURTS WELL ENJOY YOURSELF " and Neal just lets it rip for about a minute and 1/2 (YOU CANNOT TELL ME THAT YOU DONT HAVE THE VOLUME WIDE OPEN ) - Moving on to Trouble Child (THIS SONG is just HEAVY not fast but HEAVY and check the solo where NEal and Johnathan build it up in the middle (TRULY AWESOME) - SOng 8 BACK TALK ROCKS just no 2 ways about it - I REALLY love the title cut FRONTIERS with its kinda offbeat rock patterns THIS song too needs to be cranked and the album end on a very high note with RUBICON - I just get blown away that this corporate rock label is despised that great bands like JOURNEY are casted off as simple corporate rocks bands (AND LETS NOT EVEN GET INTO FOREIGNER CAUSE IF ANYONE SAYS HEAD GAMES IS CORP ROCK is CORP CRAZY) - FRONtiers rocks and rocks hard expeically once you get past the 5 hits on the beginning of the cd -
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Frontiers
Frontiers by Journey (Audio CD - 1996)
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