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Neal Schon

Neal Schon

Birthday: 27 February 1954, Midwest City, Oklahoma, USA
Birth Name: Neal Joseph Schon
Height: 175 cm

Neal Schon was born in Midwest City, Oklahoma on February 27th, 1954 to Matthew and Barbara Schon. Neal dropped out of school when he was 15 to join Carlos Santana's rock group Santana. Four year ...Show More

Neal Schon
We're a very musical band and we've never really had anybody come in and re-arrange our stuff with P Show more We're a very musical band and we've never really had anybody come in and re-arrange our stuff with Pro Tools. We were always well-rehearsed, we'd walk in the studio, play live, and I'd always play live solos. Hide
A lot of the stuff we've done since the eighties was slower, and with Faithfully or Open Arms or wha Show more A lot of the stuff we've done since the eighties was slower, and with Faithfully or Open Arms or whatever, those songs are embedded in stone and people expect to hear them live... if they don't, they're gonna be pissed and throw shit at you. With this album, I wanted to write grooves that we don't have in our show, and not just make a new Separate Ways or Stone In Love. Once you've written it once, it's easy to repeat it - just move the chords around. It's really simple to do that, but at this point, I don't see the purpose of it. (On the "Eclipse" album) Hide
With radio being in the state it is, I don't really feel the need to make a whole record just for th Show more With radio being in the state it is, I don't really feel the need to make a whole record just for that, and be looking at my watch saying, Okay, this guitar solo has been playing for ten seconds, that's enough. (In 2011) Hide
I think that song is so popular because it's a positive message. We play aggressively, but lyrically Show more I think that song is so popular because it's a positive message. We play aggressively, but lyrically it never got angry or pissed, and it was never 'I hate you'. The whole arrangement of Don't Stop Believin' is really odd. We had this breakdown and I started playing that little guitar solo [at 0.54], which is in the oddest place ever for an AM radio song. People would say that it didn't make sense and I'd say, Well, so what? It sounds good! It fell together fast, and when I listened back in the studio, I remember saying, That song's gonna be big. At the time, when Escape was released, it wasn't the biggest song on the record. Now it is. Hide
Neal Schon's FILMOGRAPHY
as Actor (15)
Solarmovie