According to Perry, the song was heavily influenced by Irish hard rock band
Thin Lizzy and more particularly by bassist
Phil Lynott. In July 1979, Journey were touring with Thin Lizzy across the
United States when Lynott, Perry and Schon decided to share rhyme scheme exercises while they were hanging out in
Miami. The "basic" work on "the guitar-vocal-guitar-vocal interchange thing that happened between Phil and his lyrics and the guitarist and his arrangements, inspired the 'Any Way You Want It' sorta give and take thing. It's guitar-voice, guitar-voice, more guitar-guitar-guitar-voice. It be voice-voice and back and forth and that's something that Neal and I think just instinctually picked up by hanging out with him", commented Perry. Schon and Perry would then rework on the song in the band bus, with Schon on acoustic guitar and Perry on vocals. Lynott's contribution later influenced other songs built on the same scheme such as "
Stone in Love". For the studio version, keyboardist
Gregg Rolie originally used a
Mellotron. Since it was defective, co-producer
Geoff Workman decided to fix the sound by doubling it with Rolie's regular organ in the final mixing, thus creating the unique sounding background support for the song. ==Reception==