The National Midnight Star #30

Errors-To: rush@syrinx.umd.edu Reply-To: rush@syrinx.umd.edu Sender: rush@syrinx.umd.edu Precedence: bulk From: rush@syrinx.umd.edu To: rush-list-all Subject: RUSH Fans Digest of 08/14/90 (#30)
RUSH Fans Digest, Number 30 Tuesday, 14 August 1990 Today's Topics: Administrivia (none) Dos Passos book Listen! The ultimate band? Thanks ---------------------------------------------------------- From: rush-mgr Subject: Administrivia Hello all, I don't want to sound like a nudge, but please try to keep submissions to within 75 characters or so per line. If you go over 80 characters, many systems force the reader to go over to the end of the line to see what was out there. Also, please put manual carraige returns in your postings; while your system may (apparently) break lines for you, on this end it sometimes looks like one looooong line, which I feel compelled to break up for read- ability, and also to prevent incredibly long record lengths of the Digest. Hopefully, you know who you are. Thank you for your support... Manager, RUSH Fans Mailing List ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 13 Aug 90 10:14:16 MST From: Jeff Jonsson <DATACTL%UTAHLIB.BITNET@CORNELLC.cit.cornell.edu> Well, I just have to throw in my $.02 on this request for the perfect band, the "ultimate" band. I used to think in terms like that, always thinking that if so and so got together with so and so, it would be the greatest band/basketball team/football team/etc. It took me a while to realize that it is not the just a combination of the best people that make a band, etc., it is the chemistry. That chemistry only comes about through familiarity, and shared history. On the other hand, I find no qualms with giving out lists of 'favorite' performers, it is just the idea of creating an ultimate band, actually saying "gee wouldn't it be great if Geddy Lee, teamed up with Joe Satriani", that makes me uneasy. As far as my favorites go, it is too difficult to say. I like Chris Squire on Bass, David Gilmour or Mark Knopfler on Guitar, and oh, Richard Wright on Keyboard. Drums, I might have to go with someone like Reni, from the Stone Roses. Never heard of them? Well, I don't blame you. And on to other things. "Show Don't Tell" is a popular phrase used by fiction writers. It means to always show the action rather than telling about it in writing fiction. I'm sure some of you know what I mean, and the others of you can figure out the difference with a little thought. I never thought that the song Show Don't Tell, was anything to do with religion, but then I never dissected the lyrics either. I'll check them out tonight. I always thought that the song was about being a good writer or something. I *really* need to listen to it again. Adios amigos. . . ======================================================================== Come! See the violence | Jeff Jonsson ___ inherent in the system! | <DATACTL@UTAHLIB.BITNET> | |__ Help! Help! I'm being | | UofU | repressed! | |______| ======================================================================== ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 13 Aug 90 13:05:18 EDT From: nth@cs.brown.edu (Nathan Huang) Subject: Dos Passos book In response to Kerry's request for a Dos Passos book to read, the obvious choice is The Big Money. I finally worked my way through it a few weeks ago - pretty dull, (intentionally) disjointed book about how money corrupts the values of people. It does paint a good picture of America's prosperity in the 20's. In addition, every once in awhile, there is a 2-3 page section entitled "The Camera Eye", from which the Rush song's lyrical mechanism is based. All in all, I would recommend saving your time and reading something else. Dos Passos also has a book The Grand Design, but I stayed away. Nate ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 13 Aug 90 14:00:11 EDT From: cygnus@wpi.wpi.edu (Marshall Robin) Subject: Listen! OK, here's a bunch of replies and answers from the past 2 digests since I have been out of touch for a while >nyx.UUCP!fpeabody%nyx.uucp@nike.cair.du.edu (Fred Peabody) > Could someone please post the correct order of all the songs on the >Caress of Steel album? I'm afraid my tape has them all scrambled up. >Thank you very much. Sure: Bastille Day, I Think I'm Going Bald, Lakeside Park, The Necromancer, and the Fountain of Lamneth, the parts of which were named in order 2 digests ago (sorry I don't remember them offhand) > Someone said that they thought A Passage to Bangkok was about drugs. >Can you explain? I didn't think Rush would be the kind of band to be into >drugs... In "Visions", it is said that Neil used to be quite an aficionado of Marijuana. I forget the exact quote.... >From: Ron Chrisley <chrisley@parc.xerox.com> >PS: Oh yeah, somebody a while back suggested that we don't know what Peart >has read besides Rand. But we do: Hemmingway, Marquez, "A Confederacy of >Dunces", and another hispanic-named author whose name escapes me at the >moment (two of his books: "Grand Designs" and another Rush song title; >someone help me out here). John Dos Passos. He wrote that along with "The Big Money". Also, he has a gimmick where he writes a few chapters in a book and then has a section called "The Camera Eye" (!) between sets of them. As far as the reading goes, I've heard it's really dry stuff but not anything about the actual content. >From: "Brad_Armstrong.WBST129"@Xerox.COM >Just a quick note on a comment Derek made yesterday. The only Rush videos >I can recall seeing on MTV more than once were Distant Early Warning and >The Body Electric.. I seem to remember "Show Don't Tell" being in their top 10 requested videos for a while, so it was shown every day practically when it first came out. They played "The Pass" fairly often as well. >From: Donald Cross <CROSS@ucf1vm.cc.ucf.edu> >"That's nice!" - ?Alex? Yep. The story on this was posted a few weeks ago, but I don't remember the tech's name. He had a habit of sampling things Alex would say and then playing them back with effects on them for laughs. I guess the guys liked this one. Also, I asked a question a while ago but never got a reply. I was wondering if Digital Man was based on a story or something. The lyrics "He's got a force field and a flexible plan/He's got a date with fate in a black sedan" seem pretty specific to be just imagery to conjure a feeling or impression. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Internet: |We can go from boom to bust cygnus@wpi.wpi.edu |From dreams to a bowl of dust [????]@apollo.com (coming soon)|We can go from rockets red glare |Down to brother can you spare |Another war |Another wasteland |Another lost generation -Rush ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 13 Aug 90 14:10 EDT From: "Derek D. Lichter [MacLover]" <DEREK%ALBNYVMS.BITNET@UACSC2.ALBANY.EDU> Subject: The ultimate band? Mark S. opens up a can of worms yesterday by asking what musicians we'd like to see as part of an "ultimate" band. I have a feeling any responses are gonna be very biased towards Rush... :-) Anyway, some of my choices would overlap: Drums -- Peart, Bruford Bass -- Lee, Stanley Clarke Keys/synths -- Thomas Dolby, Rick Wakeman guitars, lead and etc-- Satriani, Adrian Belew, Robert Fripp, Ed Van Halen Robert Cray (rhythm) vocalists -- (hoo boy) Freddie Mercury, David Bowie, Amy Ray/Emily Saliers, Deborah Holland (heck, even Billy Joel) songwriters -- Peart, Peter Gabriel I seriously doubt this band could play together or even fit all their egos in the same room! :-) Ahh, to dream... Derek L. ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 13 Aug 90 13:44:37 MDT From: nyx.UUCP!fpeabody%nyx.uucp@nike.cair.du.edu (Fred Peabody) Subject: Thanks Thanks to one and all for the interpretations of A Passage to Bangkok. To be quite honest, as kid who has spent most of his life in the 80's, I never heard of the drug references before, so when I heard the song, I figured it must've been about world travel or something like that. I guess I took it too literally. Plus, when Frank from Holland first brought it up, I just couldn't picture the boyz using drugs. Then again, when I look at the 2112 group photo, maybe I can. Thanks again for the help! Also, a thank-you to those who helped out w/ the "lovers pause to find an open store" line. My Ideal Band: Guitar: Kirk Hammet and Alex Lifeson Drums: Neil Peart and Lars Ulrich Bass: Geddy Lee and Jeff Berlin Vocals: Robert Plant >>>>*Freddy*<<<< [The Only Living Peabody] [of course it's an alias!] ----------------------------------------------------------
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