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Victoria takes Journey back to the '80s

You can forget all about Marty McFly and his retrofitted Delorean. The quickest way to go back in time in 2012 is to attend an 聮80s rock extravaganza featuring the likes of Journey, Loverboy and Night Ranger.

You can forget all about Marty McFly and his retrofitted Delorean. The quickest way to go back in time in 2012 is to attend an 聮80s rock extravaganza featuring the likes of Journey, Loverboy and Night Ranger.

Last night聮s sold-out concert at the Save-on-Foods Memorial Centre was proof of that. In fact, there was such a footloose, 聮80s feel to the four-hour concert, it was hard to argue with the results, however discerning your musical tastes. The only requirement? You had to buy into the night in order to fully enjoy the ride. Those who didn聮t probably thought it sucked.

There wasn聮t anything remotely newsworthy to report on the music side 聴 which is entirely the point of an exercise such as this. The bands put the emphasis on fun, trotting out every back-to-back guitar solo and classic rock cliche known to mankind.

This was a night dedicated solely to the good times, the memorable moments of rock music past when football stadiums were full of party people and FM radio was dominated by a particular brand of band who had as much attitude and style as talent, as many hooks and choruses as they did cheeky videos.

The exact type which took to the stage on Tuesday night in Victoria for the final night stop on Journey聮s tour of sa国际传媒.

Night Ranger, the five-piece fronted by singer-bassist Jack Blades, was up first with its hair-friendly stadium rock, which they delivered to a modest crowd as if they were headlining Wembley.

It was hard not to like the band聮s energy, in part because they knew how to pace their set. After a somewhat sloppy Sister Christian 聴 far away the biggest song of their career 聴 Night Ranger sprinted into (You Can Still) Rock in America, a jacked-up anthem far more indicative of the band聮s 35-minute set.

Loverboy聮s Mike Reno was in fine vocal shape for his band聮s well-received appearance, hitting some seriously high notes on The Kid is Hot Tonite, the first song of the entire night to roust the crowd from its seats. He did the same during Turn Me Loose, to utter adulation from the audience.

Reno was a force of nature, even though he was a little heavier and a little thinner on top than most remember. Dressed in black, with a pair of wraparound shades 聴 the only red being his trademark bandana 聴 he was every bit the conquering rock star.

Reno and his bandmates made the most of their 50 minutes, save for a totally unnecessary (albeit well-received) battle royale between drummer Matt Frenette and bassist Ken (Spider) Sinnaeve, who went head-on for what seemed like an eternity.

It was that type of night. Everything that should not have worked came up aces; everything from a slice of double-cheese stage banter to a cringe-worthy power ballad had fans going nuts. It was like the past two decades of musical evolution never existed.

聯It kind of feels like the weekend to me,聰 Reno said, riding a wave of appreciation from the crowd near the end of its set. 聯Of course, every day feels like the weekend to Loverboy.聰

Indeed it must.

Here聮s the kicker: Journey took what Loverboy and Night Ranger did and multiplied it ad infinitum, from its very first note to the close of its 90-minute set.

Four songs in, when the group dropped a spot-on Faithfully and had the crowd singing its praises, it was all-out insanity.

When the group got around to the meat of its set, trotting out one hit after another, the thunder being brought to the stage was even more impressive.

The catalyst was singer Arnel Pineda, who joined the group in 2007. The fact that you could close your eyes and hear Steve Perry, the longtime frontman for the group and singer of its most famous songs, was only part of it. Pineda was frenetic phenom, a performer who made up for his imperfections with an engaging sense of theatricality.

He didn聮t say much to the audience, but that mattered little. He had some help 聴 drummer Dean Castronovo handled lead vocals on Keep on Runnin聮, and shared duties with  keyboardist Jonathan Cain on Just the Same Way 聴 but he matched blistering Journey guitarist Neal Schon, the group聮s towering presence and top songwriter, as the night聮s co-MVP.

There is no way that Journey could have known, way back in 1981, that their much-ballyhooed and hugely successful seventh album would bear such a prescient title.

Escape, the album which spawned the non-stop megahit, Don聮t Stop Believing, is not simply an apt moniker 聴 it聮s a catch-all term for everything Journey in 2012.

Escapism is what the long-running San Francisco band provides in concert. Forget that it聮s style of arena rock looks and sounds distinctly out of place alongside what dominates the charts today. If you聮re looking for fun, Journey is your Rodney Dangerfield.

They might not get respect from some circles, but they certainly deserve it.

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Setlist 1. Never Walk Away2. Any Way You Want It3. Ask the Lonely4. Faithfully5. O sa国际传媒 [Neal Schon guitar Solo]6. Only the Young7. Stone in Love8. Keep on Runnin' [drummer Dean Castronovo on vocals]9. Just the Same Way [keyboardist Jonathan Cain and drummer Dean Castronovo on vocals]10. Lights11. [Jonathan Cain keyboard solo]12. Open Arms13. Escape14. La Do Da15. Be Good to Yourself16. [Neal Schon solo]17. Wheel in the Sky18. Don't Stop Believin'19. Separate Ways (Worlds Apart)ENCORE20. Lovin', Touchin', Squeezin'