"Stone in Love" Released: October 29, 1982 (UK)[4]
Escape (stylized as E5C4P3 on the album cover) is the seventh studio album by American
rock band
Journey, released on July 17, 1981 by
Columbia Records.[5] It topped the American
Billboard 200 chart[6] and features four hit
Billboard Hot 100 singles – "
Don't Stop Believin'" (
No. 9), "
Who's Crying Now" (No. 4), "Still They Ride" (No. 19) and "
Open Arms" (No. 2)[7] – plus rock radio staple "Stone in Love". In July 2021, it was certified
Diamond by the
Recording Industry of America (RIAA) for at least ten million sales in the US, making it the band's most successful studio album and second most successful album overall behind Greatest Hits.
Background and writing
Escape was the band's first album with keyboardist
Jonathan Cain, who replaced founding member
Gregg Rolie after he left the band at the end of 1980. The album was co-produced by former
Lynyrd Skynyrd sound technician Kevin Elson and one-time
Queen engineer
Mike Stone, who also engineered the album.
Mike DeGagne of
AllMusic retrospectively awarded Escape four-and-a-half stars out of five, writing, "The songs are timeless, and as a whole, they have a way of rekindling the innocence of youthful romance and the rebelliousness of growing up, built from heartfelt songwriting and sturdy musicianship."[8]Colin Larkin awarded the album four out of five stars in the 2002 edition of the
VirginEncyclopedia of Popular Music.[9] Contemporary Rolling Stone reviews were less favorable. The first review of 1981 by Deborah Frost marked Journey as heavy metal posers and the music in the album as easily playable by any session musician. In the 2004 edition of their album guide, Rolling Stone awarded the album two-and-a-half stars out of five, which was nonetheless an improvement from
Dave Marsh's one star rating in the 1983 edition of the publication.[12]
In 1988, Kerrang! readers voted Escape the greatest
AOR album of all time[13]―Classic Rock expressed the same opinion in 2008.[14] In 1989, Kerrang! ranked Escape number 32 in "The 100 Greatest Heavy Metal Albums of All Time".[15] A 2000
Virgin poll saw the album voted the 24th greatest
heavy metal/
alternative rock album of all time.[16] In 2001, Classic Rock ranked the album
no. 22 in "The 100 Greatest Rock Albums of All Time".[17] In 2006, the same publication included it in their "200 Greatest Albums of the 80s", as one of the twenty greatest albums of 1981.[citation needed]Q magazine ranked Escape 15th among its "Records it's OK to Love" in 2006.[18]
Cash Box described "Still They Ride" as a "
bluesy lament" with a "sad, almost mournful" vocal, "doleful acoustic piano work" and "crying guitar notes."[19]Billboard called "Still They Ride" a "soft, lyrical ballad" with similar "tone and style" to "Open Arms".[20]