Don't Stop Believin'. Just a small town girl, livin' in a lonely world. She took the midnight train goin' anywhere. Just a city boy, born and raised in south Detroit. He took the midnight train goin' anywhere. A singer in a smokey room. A smell of wine and cheap perfume. For a smile they can share the night. Don’t Stop Believing is a widely known song released by the rock band Journey in 1981. It follows a typical four-chord progression and features a piano riff that is instantly recognizable. “Don’t Stop Believing” is sure to get an audience at any party or karaoke bar, and it is just fun to play. E She took B the midnight train going G#m A anywhere. E Just a B city C#m boy, born and raised in A south Detroit. E He took B the midnight train going G#m A anywhere. E A singer in a B smoky C#m room, a smell of wine and A cheap perfume. E For a smile they can B share the night, it goes G#m on and on and A on and on. Don't Stop Believing is one of Journey's most well-known songs. The guitar parts Neal Schon played on this song are awesome.From the repeating pattern in the "Hold on to that feeling"Song: Don't Stop Believin'Artist - JourneyRecommend songs in the comments section below. Dịch Vụ Hỗ Trợ Vay Tiền Nhanh 1s. Journey Journey Journey is an American rock band formed in 1973 in San Francisco by former members of Santana and Frumious Bandersnatch. The band has gone through several phases; its strongest commercial success occurred between 1978 and 1987, after which it temporarily disbanded. During that period, the band released a series of hit songs, including 1981's "Don't Stop Believin'", which became in 2009 the top-selling catalog track in iTunes history. Its parent studio album, Escape, the band's eighth and most successful, reached No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and yielded another of their most popular singles, "Open Arms". Its 1983 follow-up, Frontiers, was almost as successful in the United States, reaching No. 2 and spawning several successful singles; it broadened the band's ap… more » Year: 2014 4:10 23,806 Views Playlists: #10 Watch: New Singing Lesson Videos Can Make Anyone A Great Singer Just a small town girl Livin' in a lonely world She took the midnight train goin' anywhere Just a city boy Born and raised in south Detroit He took the midnight train goin' anywhere A singer in a smoky room A smell of wine and cheap perfume For a smile they can share the night It goes on and on, and on, and on Strangers waiting Up and down the boulevard Their shadows searching in the night Streetlights, people Living just to find emotion Hiding somewhere in the night Working hard to get my fill Everybody wants a thrill Payin' anything to roll the dice Just one more time Some will win, some will lose Some were born to sing the blues Oh, the movie never ends It goes on and on, and on, and on Strangers waiting Up and down the boulevard Their shadows searching in the night Streetlights, people Living just to find emotion Hiding somewhere in the night Don't stop believin' Hold on to the feelin' Streetlights, people Don't stop believin' Hold on Streetlights, people Don't stop believin' Hold on to the feelin' Streetlights, people Become A Better Singer In Only 30 Days, With Easy Video Lessons! Written by: Jonathan Cain, Stephen Ray Perry, Neal Joseph Schon Lyrics © Wixen Music Publishing, WORDS & MUSIC A DIV OF BIG DEAL MUSIC LLC Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind Tekst piosenki: Don't Stop Believing Teskt oryginalny: zobacz tłumaczenie › Tłumaczenie: zobacz tekst oryginalny › Just a small town girlLivin' in a lonely worldShe took the midnight train goin' anywhereJust a city boyBorn and raised in south DetroitHe took the midnight train goin' anywhereA singer in a smoky roomA smell of wine and cheap perfumeFor a smile they can share the nightIt goes on and on, and on, and onStrangers waitingUp and down the boulevardTheir shadows searching in the nightStreetlights, peopleLiving just to find emotionHiding somewhere in the nightWorking hard to get my fillEverybody wants a thrillPayin' anything to roll the diceJust one more timeSome will win, some will loseSome were born to sing the bluesOh, the movie never endsIt goes on and on, and on, and onStrangers waitingUp and down the boulevardTheir shadows searching in the nightStreetlights, peopleLiving just to find emotionHiding somewhere in the nightDon't stop believin'Hold on to the feelin'Streetlights, peopleDon't stop believin'Hold onStreetlights, peopleDon't stop believin'Hold on to the feelin'Streetlights, peopleDon't stop Brak tłumaczenia! Pobierz PDF Słuchaj na YouTube Teledysk Informacje Journey - amerykański zespół hard rockowo/AOR-owy, z wpływami rocka progresywnego, powstał w 1973 roku w San Francisco. Jego skład zmieniał się bardzo często, a jedynym stałym członkiem formacji był gitarzysta Neal Schon, zawiązany wcześniej z grupą Santana, Carlosa Santany. Debiutancki album, zatytułowany "Journey", ukazał się w 1975 roku. Był to pierwszy z serii trzech krążków, które cieszyły się umiarkowaną popularnością i zawierały mieszankę jazzu i rocka. Read more on Słowa: brak danych Muzyka: brak danych Rok wydania: brak danych Płyta: brak danych Ostatnio zaśpiewali Inne piosenki Journey (1) 1 0 komentarzy Brak komentarzy Just a small town girl Livin' in a lonely world She took the midnight train goin' anywhere Just a city boy Born and raised in south Detroit He took the midnight train goin' anywhere A singer in a smoky room A smell of wine and cheap perfume For a smile they can share the night It goes on and on, and on, and on Strangers waiting Up and down the boulevard Their shadows searching in the night Streetlights, people Living just to find emotion Hiding somewhere in the night Working hard to get my fill Everybody wants a thrill Payin' anything to roll the dice Just one more time Some will win, some will lose Some were born to sing the blues Oh, the movie never ends It goes on and on, and on, and on Strangers waiting Up and down the boulevard Their shadows searching in the night Streetlights, people Living just to find emotion Hiding somewhere in the night Don't stop believin' Hold on to the feelin' Streetlights, people Don't stop believin' Hold on Streetlights, people Don't stop believin' Hold on to the feelin' Streetlights, people Lyrics submitted by numb, edited by kymara1053, Mellow_Harsher, Alberto09 Don't Stop Believin' Lyrics as written by Stephen Ray Perry Jonathan Cain Lyrics © Wixen Music Publishing, Songtrust Ave, WORDS & MUSIC A DIV OF BIG DEAL MUSIC LLC Lyrics powered by LyricFind Add your thoughts Log in now to tell us what you think this song means. Don’t have an account? Create an account with SongMeanings to post comments, submit lyrics, and more. It’s super easy, we promise! Steve Perry performs with Journey at a Chicago-area concert in 1981. Paul Natkin/Getty Images hide caption toggle caption Paul Natkin/Getty Images Steve Perry performs with Journey at a Chicago-area concert in 1981. Paul Natkin/Getty Images This story is part of American Anthem, a yearlong series on songs that rouse, unite, celebrate and call to action. Find more at It's midnight on a Tuesday in Richmond, Va. At Sticky Rice, a sushi joint that hosts this college town's most raucous karaoke night, the crowd is already at fire-code capacity, and would-be crooners are forming a line outside. At around 12:30 a set of famous piano chords begins to play, and the place explodes. Friends stand together on tables; the people stuck in line outside press against the windows. For a fleeting moment, everyone's on the same midnight train going anywhere. Twenty-somethings Matt Malone and Shilpa Gangisetty are tonight's lucky performers of Journey's "Don't Stop Believin'," for which the DJ has received as many as five requests — though you can't exactly hear their singing beneath the overflowing crowd shouting along. When they're done, Gangisetty, who is Indian American, says she loves the song because it's something she can enjoy with her immigrant parents. "This came out right before my parents came to this country," she says. "There aren't too many cultural things that we can relate on." "It's like the 'Itsy Bitsy Spider' of, like, middle school," Malone chimes in. "You have to know it. Everyone hates to love it." Thirty-eight years after it debuted on the album Escape, "Don't Stop Believin'" is the go-to anthem for perseverance that has itself persevered, successfully riding wave after new wave of media. Though born in the era of rock radio and cassette mixtapes, the song found its real glory at the dawn of binge TV and the smartphone, and it has woven its way into weddings, bar mitzvahs, graduations, the 2005 World Series, The Sopranos and Glee. YouTube Its fate was hardly a given. Critic Deborah Frost didn't even mention "Don't Stop Believin'" by name in her October 1981 review of Escape in Rolling Stone, which gave the album two out of five stars. "Maybe," she wrote, "there really are a lot of 'streetlight people' out there. If so, my guess is that they'll soon glow out of it." They didn't: According to Nielsen Music, "Don't Stop Believin'" holds the record as the most downloaded 20th-century song, and it has nearly 700 million streams on Spotify, at last count. What is it about this track that just won't stop? The story of the song itself begins with Journey keyboardist Jonathan Cain. In the late 1970s, he was a struggling rocker who was ready to quit SoCal and move back to Chicago. Cain says everything had been going wrong: He and his girlfriend had split up, and he'd had to pay a costly vet bill to save his dog after it was hit by a car. "I called my father for some money," he says. "I said, 'Dad, I'm out of cash here. ... Should I come home? Is this thing just not, you know, panning out?' And he told me, 'We've always had a vision, son. Don't stop believing.' I had a lyric book next to me, and I wrote it down." Things started looking up for the musician after that. Cain found himself in a band opening up for mega-act Journey. Then, Journey itself poached him. In 1981, when the band was recording Escape, lead singer Steve Perry asked Cain to come up with a final track. Cain still had his dad's advice in the dog-eared lyric book and from it drew inspiration for the pedaled, keep-the-faith piano part that builds and releases over and over until the phrase itself arrives in the chorus, more than three-quarters of the way into the track. The characters introduced in the first verse, a small-town girl and a South Detroit city boy, are familiar by now — enough so that it's rarely addressed that there is no such neighborhood as South Detroit, apart from Perry needing an extra syllable. As for the singer in the smoky room with wine and cheap perfume, that tableau evokes the desperation Cain says he felt at the Sunset Strip's Whisky a Go Go during his rough Los Angeles days. "I really believe this song is about wanting to make it," he says, "Where you think you're stuck in life — that you're able to get out, the same way I got out of Chicago." The fictional William McKinley High School's glee club sang "Don't Stop Believin'" in a 2009 episode of Fox's Glee. FOX Image Collection/Getty Images hide caption toggle caption FOX Image Collection/Getty Images By the late 1990s, Perry had left Journey, and the band's career was in the wilderness. But the requests for "Don't Stop Believin'" kept coming. Charlize Theron roller-skated to the song in her Oscar-winning turn as a serial killer in 2003's Monster. Four years later, The Sopranos ended its pioneering six-season run on HBO with — spoiler alert — a tense sequence involving a diner and parallel parking, soundtracked by "Don't Stop Believin'." Downloads of the track on iTunes soared. In 2009, the earnest high school show choir on Glee covered the song for the first of several times throughout the series' run, sending its download numbers through the roof again. "Don't Stop Believin'" has been heard on Scrubs, South Park and Family Guy. A string ensemble played it in the Adam Sandler comedy The Wedding Singer. It was the rally song for the Chicago White Sox in the team's 2005 World Series run, and it was the climax of the hit Broadway jukebox musical Rock of Ages. On social media, you can find plenty of photos of stop signs playfully defaced with the title exhortation. For all its new success, Journey still needed a new lead singer who had something approximating Perry's trademark high tenor altino. Desperate, guitarist Neal Schon turned to searching for singers on YouTube — where, late one night, he discovered Arnel Pineda, a formerly homeless kid in the Philippines who was covering the band's ballads at smoky venues that reeked of wine and cheap perfume. YouTube In 2007, Journey flew him to the for a tryout and hired him — a fairy-tale story chronicled in the 2009 documentary Don't Stop Believin': Everyman's Journey. Pineda told CBS News in 2012, "Even before I discovered 'Don't Stop Believin,' it has been my motto — you know, to never stop believing in myself. The life that I've gone through, all those hardships, I never stopped believing that someday there is something magical that will happen in my life." As for Frost — the critic who originally panned Escape in Rolling Stone — she tells NPR that four decades later she's still not a fan but that maybe those streetlight people might — might — have a point. "You know, I think maybe it helps them celebrate their high school years — or their hopes," she says. "And if it does, what can I tell you? Good for them." Roben Farzad is the host of Full Disclosure on NPR member station VPM. Walter Ray Watson produced this story for broadcast. Daoud Tyler-Ameen adapted it for the Web. Sie ist nur ein Kleinstadtmädchen Sie lebt in einer einsamen Welt Sie nahm den Mitternachtszug, der überall hinfährt Er ist nur ein Stadtjunge Geboren und aufgewachsen im Süden Detroits Er nahm den Mitternachtszug, der überall hinfährt Ein Sänger in einem rauchigen Raum Ein Geruch von Wein und billigen Parfume Für ein Lächeln können sie die Nacht gemeinsam verbringen Es geht weiter und weiter Fremde warten auf dem Boulevard rauf und runter Ihre Schatten suchen in der Nacht Straßenlichter, Menschen, leben nur dafür emotionen zu finden Verstecken sich, irgendwo in der Nacht Ich arbeite hart daran um voll zu werden, Jeder will den Nervenkitzel Zahle alles um die Würfel zu rollen, Nur noch einmal Manche werden gewinnen, manche werden verlieren Manche wurde dazu geboren den Blues zu singen Oh, der Film hört niemals auf Es geht weiter und weiter Fremde warten auf dem Boulevard rauf und runter Ihre Schatten suchen in der Nacht Straßenlichter, Menschen, leben nur dafür emotionen zu finden Verstecken sich, irgendwo in der Nacht Hör nicht auf zu glauben Halte dich an dem Gefühl fest Straßenlicher, Menschen Writer(s): Cain Jonathan, Friga John L Lyrics powered by zuletzt bearbeitet von KArl2507 am 7. März 2010, 18:59

journey don t stop believing text