The National Midnight Star #123

Errors-To: rush-request@syrinx.umd.edu Reply-To: rush@syrinx.umd.edu Sender: rush@syrinx.umd.edu Precedence: bulk From: rush@syrinx.umd.edu To: rush_mailing_list Subject: 12/07/90 - The National Midnight Star #123 ** Special Edition **
** ____ __ ___ ____ ___ ___ ** ** / /_/ /_ /\ / /__/ / / / / /\ / /__/ / ** ** / / / /__ / \/ / / / / /__/ / \/ / / /___ ** ** ** ** __ ___ ____ ** ** /\ /\ / / \ /\ / / / _ /__/ / ** ** / \/ \ / /___/ / \/ / /___/ / / / ** ** ** ** ____ ____ ___ ___ ** ** /__ / /__/ /__/ ** ** ____/ / / / / \ ** The National Midnight Star, Number 123 Friday, 7 December 1990 Today's Topics: Rolling Stone Album Reviews --------------------------------------------------------- Subject: Rolling Stone Album Reviews [ Thanks to the combination of Jimmy Lang/Meg Jahnke for these transcriptions. :rush-mgr ] ***************************************************************** * Rolling Stone Magazine Album Reviews. * ***************************************************************** Hemispheres - album review ----------- _Rolling Stone_ - March 22, 1979 Fans will doubtless find _Hemispheres_ another good, solid Rush album. And it's time to apprise the nonfans as well, because this power trio uniquely bridges the gap between heavy metal and sterile technology (sort of where Blue Oyster Cult used to work before going soft rock). The spine of Rush's sound is Alex Lifeson's broad, ringing guitar playing. Drummer Neil Peart is fluent at a large double kit, also adding colorations on various bells and blocks. Geddy Lee plays bass figures that fall just short of melodies, but his extremely high voice -- either a triumphant cry or a grating yowl -- is still a bone of contention. Though Lee can control his singing, he's often unnecessarily strident. The pick to click here is "Circumstances," whose chorus reworks the tidal stresses of "Something for Nothing" in sprung rhythm and whose lyrics are the most personable, least didactic on the record. "Hemispheres," the obligatory space opera, was meant to expand on "Cygnus X-1" from _A Farewell to Kings_, but the musical and thematic references are only tangential; on the new LP, the words belabor the bejesus out of the heart/mind dichotomy and skimp on the science fiction. "The Trees" is an attractively droll political fable with a gorgeously rendered classical-guitar intro (one of Lifeson's arcane strengths). But the real new ground is Rush's first stab at an instrumental: "La Villa Strangiato" boasts taut riffing, acute tempos, flawless phrasing, the discipline to sound effortless and enough energy to flow in torrents. Overall, especially in "La Villa Strangiato," Lifeson, Peart and Lee prove themselves masters of every power-trio convention. In fact, these guys have the chops and drive to break out of the largely artificial bounds of the format, and they constantly threaten to do so but never quite manage. If they don't succeed soon, complacency may set in. Already the lyrics are apporoaching a singsong regularity of meter, and the melodies are beginning to lean too heavily on mere chording. I affirm this band's ability to rock out, but I really want to give Rush a hard shove in the direction it's already heading. -- Michael Bloom ***************************************************************** Permanent Waves - album review --------------- _Rolling Stone_ - May 1, 1980 It's easy to criticize what you don't understand, which at least partly explains why Canadain power trio Rush have suffered so much at the hands of rock journalists since the band's debut album in 1974. Critics find bassist-lead singer Geddy Lee's stratospheric wails and drummer Neil Peart's lyrical excursions into philosophy, science fiction and fantasy easy targets, and usually dismiss Rush as a head-banger's Genesis. True, earlier LPs like _Fly By Night_ and _Caress of Steel_ bear the scars of the group's naivete. but now, within the scope of six short (for them) songs, Rush demonstrate a maturity that even their detractors may have to admire. On _Permanent Waves_, these guys appropriate the crippling riffs and sonic blasts of heavy metal, model their tortuous instrumental changes on Yes-style British art rock and fuse the two together with lyrics that -- despite their occasional overreach -- are still several refreshing steps above the moronic machismo and half-baked mysticism of many hard-rock airs. Fortunately, Rush lead off with their trump card, a frantic, time-changing romp called "The Spirit of Radio." Not only is the sentiment right on, but the tune is packed with insistent hooks, including a playful reggae break that suddenly explodes into a Led Zeppelin-lik bash. Guitarist Alex Lifeson makes the most of these hooks with harmonic inversions and aggressive solo breaks, taking off in "Freewill" and "Jacob's Ladder" with a theatrical agility that could give Jimmy Page pause for thought. Other surprises are a straight-ahead rocker with an artfully segued acoustic chorus ("Entre Nous"), a dramatic Genesis-style ballad ("Different Strings") and an overall sanding down of the abrasive edges of Geddy Lee's voice, revealing a far more competent, expressive singer than his original Robert Plant-like shriek might have suggested. Rush's problem has rarely been competence, however. They simply don't play fashionable music. If they couldn't cut it on their own terms, that's be different. But this band is among the very best in its genre. And if the Top Five status of _Permanent Waves_ is any example, it's a genre wherein critics don't count at all. ***************************************************************** Exit...Stage Left - album review ----------------- _Rolling Stone_ - February 4, 1982 2 1/2 stars given (out of 5) Rush have been unfairly maligned as just another barnstorming heavy-metal act, fit only to vibrate arena walls. Actually, the group is a lot more interesting than cock-rockers like Van Halen or AC/DC, and far less compromised than Journey or Styx. "We didn't change, everybody else did!" proclaim the liner notes to their second live set, _Exit...Stage Left_, and, in a way, they're right. Rush represent the last profitable gasp of high-minded "progressive" rock, the province of virtuosic, storytelling, philosophizing bands that attracted huge audiences in the early Seventies. Now that Yes have been shaken up, Genesis have gotten hip and even Kansas are in limbo, Rush have the underground-FM, "oh, wow"- profound market to themselves. True, Rush are a comedown from the early Yes they ravage, but at least they never mush out like Genesis. Their power-trio lineup keeps them hard-edged, despite the occasional synthesizer whoosh. And they're more single-mindedly propulsive than their forebears. Rush's ingenuity is channeled into complicated riffs below triumphant major chords, with Alex Lifeson's guitar serving largely as reinforcement for Geddy Lee's mammoth bass tones. Both live and in the studios, Rush's mixes make everything above the midrange sound like an afterthought -- and that's just as well. Though Lee's falsetto isn't a shriek anymore, drummer Neil Peart's lyrics can still irritate. Taking individualism to Ayn Rand-inspired extremes, Peart's most pessimistic screeds suggest that in the upcoming apocalypse, every-man-for-himself will turn into a jump-the-other-guy. There's not much propaganda on _Exit...Stage Left_ -- only "The Trees" (the maples unionize and, in the name of equality, destroy the taller oaks), "Free Will" (the group is for it) and "Tom Sawyer" (hardly the fun-loving guy Mark Twain invented). The rest of the record includes pessimistic fables ("Red Barchetta"), travelogues ("A Passage To Bangkok"), hippie-isms ("The Spirit Of Radio") and instrumentals ("YYZ" and "La Villa Strangiato," minus its original subtitle). Except for a singalong in "Closer to the Heart" and a jokey intro to "Jacob's Ladder," the versions here are virtually identical to the studio renditions, so Rush fans may find the set redundant. Others might get a kick out of the big, surging E chords the band keeps pumping out and perhaps appreciate Peart's fine-tuned percussion, but one Rush album (preferably _Moving Pictures_) should be enought for almost anybody. Just about everything Rush do can be found, more compactly, in Yes' "Roundabout," with the remainder in Genesis' "Watcher of the Skies." Everything except the philosophy -- and stage left is, of course, to the audiences's far right. -- Jon Pareles ***************************************************************** Signals - album review ------- _Rolling Stone_ - October 28, 1982 2 stars given (out of 5) On their twelfth album, Rush makes a strong argument for the view that advanced technology is not necessarily the same thing as progress. Unfortunately, they do so largely by screwing up. Although _Signals_ is chockablock with state-of-the-studio gadgetry, ranging from the requisite banks of synthesizers to the latest in digital recording and mixing, none of these electronic add-ons enhances the group's music. If anything, Rush emerges from this jungle of wires and gizmos sounding duller than ever. The band's chief error seems to have been emphasizing synthesizers at the expense of Alex Lifeson's guitar. Because Rush's concept of synthesized sound is so narrow -- consisting mainly or the vague whooshing sounds that are the aural equivalent of dry-ice fog -- the band tends to sound like it is trapped in wads of lint. With no edge to work against, Geddy Lee's congested vocals float through the songs like swamp gas. Ultimately, it's up to drummer Neil Peart's hyperkinetic thrashing to hold the performances together. Ironically, Rush falls into this technological morass on an album that is otherwise their most poppish yet. By and large, the songs on _Signals_ are tuneful and unencumbered by the sort of gratuitous flash that made previous albums seem like clearinghouses for worn-out art-rock licks. Even so, it's mostly a wasted effort, and nearly all of Rush's _Signals_ come across as static. -- J.D. Considine ***************************************************************** Grace Under Pressure - album review -------------------- _Rolling Stone_ - June 21, 1984 3 stars given (out of 5) This album needs no critical assistance: If you like Rush, you'll love it; if not, then _Grace Under Pressure_ is unlikely to alter your assesment of the band as a lumbering metal anachronism. For the record, though, Rush has managed to incorporate a number of modern elements into its sound (note the almost danceable rhythms in "Afterimage" and "Red Sector A," and the swelling synthesizers and electropercussion throughout). Geddy Lee, the group's bassist and vocalist, has also gotten his dog-calling falsetto shriek under control. But these signs of incipient hipness are not what sets young pulses racing throughout the North American heartland. Rush is a band with a message. Briefly put, it's "Be free, and don't let the grown-up world grind you down." Thus, on "The Enemy Within," Lee sings, "I'm not giving in/To security under pressure/I'm not missing out/On the promise of adventure." And the hero of drummer-lyricist Neil Peart's sci-fi allegory, "The Body Electric," is an "android on the run, seeking freedom." The problem, though, is musical. On record, the lack of melody and any but the most rudimentary harmonic development soon becomes oppressive. In addition, Alex Lifeson is not a particularly interesting lead guitarist, and the strictures of the trio format still result in more splattery drum bashing than you'll ever care to hear. Rush delivers the goods, all right: strong social statements enveloped in a massive, pounding sound. But it's old news, and old music, too. -- Kurt Loder ***************************************************************** Power Windows - album review ------------- _Rolling Stone_ While critics routinely dismissed Rush as pretentious operatic heavy-metal bozos, this indeftigable Canadian trio was actually busy becoming the Police of power rock. On their recent studio LPs, leading up to 1984's appropriately titled _Grace Under Pressure_, they tightened up their sidelong suites and rhythmic abstractions into balled-up song fists, art-pop blasts of angular, slashing guitar, spatial keyboards and hyperpercusion, all resolved with forthright melodic sense. "The Big Money," the first hot FM focus track from _Power Windows_, may be the best of Rush's Cool Wave experiment to date. Neil Peart whips up a Molotov drum cocktail that is half Stewart Copeland psycho-ska and half "Blitzkrieg Bop"; from deep within his Edge-like echo pit, guitarist Alex Lifeson opens fire witha metallic descending chord sequence that rips through the song's chrome- finish production like grapeshot. In "Territories," a simple disco-style pulse becomes a Lifeson-spurred gallop, his Chinese gutar chater alternating with the telegrahpic synth patterns and sheet-metal keyboards played by singer-bassist Geddy Lee. To most U2 and Simple Minds fans, these may not seem like major advances. There are moments when _Power Windows_ sounds too much like the sum of its Eighties inspirations -- that ghostly U2 resonance, the Police-like mesh of multirhythms and ping-pong dub effects. Yet Rush, no doubt responidng to familiar impulses, revs up these songs with brute metal force. Lifeson's solo in "Grand Designs" teeters on white noise, his demon strokes dissolving into feedback howls and strangled vibrato, while Peart and Lee subdivide the beat into frenzied algebra. This is not a case of old Seventies arena-rock dogs fudging new tricks. Rush remains faithful to vintage progressive aesthetics but has accepted the challenge of the postpunk upheaval and made notable adjustments. "Manhattan Project" is the first song about the A-bomb that successfullly combines Genesis-like grandeur, real strings and a breakaway middle a la Siouxsie and the Banshees at full throttle. Lee has also toned down his keening shriek to a more accessible tenor; Peart, the group's uncompromising lyricist, has streamlined his verse to pithy effect. None of this is likely to impress the New Wave in crowd, which is their loss. Because _Power Windows_ may well be the missing link between Yes and the Sex Pistols. -- David Fricke ***************************************************************** A Show Of Hands - album review --------------- _Rolling Stone_ - April 20, 1989 1 1/2 stars given (out of 5) Although their fans treat the three members of Rush as if they were the Holy Trinity, the band chose the theme of another threesone -- the Three Stooges -- as the opening fanfare for its thrid live set. It's a bit of self-effacement to be found nowhere else on this album. Most of the material on _A Show of Hands_ is from _Power Windows_ (1985) and _Hold Your Fire_ (1987). Many of the performances stick closely to the studio versions, even down to having 'til Tuesday's Aimee Mann repeat her backing-vocal stint for "Time Stand Still." The sensation of a studio recrding is heightened by the remarkable sound quality of the recording (even the crowd recorded well). Rush's prodigious chops are proven crowd pleasers, but this collection is a morass of muscle-bound technique, quasi-profound lyrics and bassist-keyboardist Geddy Lee's shrill screech. Even the drum solo by the awe-inspiring Neil Peart ("The Rhythm Method"), complete with obligatory gong crash, is not nearly as good as what he throws into the regular songs. In spite of (or perhaps because of) all the pyrotechnics, the music has the emotional emptiness of bad jazz fusion. "Nothing can survive in a vaccuum," as Lee squeals in "Turn the Page." The last four numbers begin to redeem the album, but it's too little too late for this seventy-five minute, double-LP endurance test. -- Michael Azerrad ***************************************************************** Presto - album review ------ _Rolling Stone_ - January 25, 1990 3 stars given (out of 5) When critic Lionel Trilling said, "Immature artists imitate. Mature artists steal," he wasn't talking abotu rush, but he might as well have been. For the past sixteen years, as the group has gone from mimicking Led Zeppelin and Yes to approximating the Police, Rush has been too immaturely concerned with originality to just go ahead and rip off a riff or two from the greats. Consequently, there has always been something mising from thte band's immaculately played techno metal. The band members admitted as much on "Mission," a song from their last studio LP, _Hold Your Fire_: "I hear their passionate music/Read the words/That touch my heart/I gaze at their feverish pictures/The secrets that set them apart." With _Presto_, Rush makes a stab at greatness that rivals its one landmark LP, 1981's _Moving Pictures_. This has a lot to do with Rupert Hine's deft production, which camouflages Geddy Lee's typically shrill vocals to great advantage. But it's also because "Red Tide" doesn't imitate the Police, it simply steals the melody from "Message in a Bottle." Similarly, "Anagram (for Mongo)" doesn't recall Foreigner, it wisely just pilfers the epic chords from "Long, Long Way From Home." Of course, _Presto_ features lots of classic Rush (the fancy drum-bass interplay of "Show Don't Tell," the triumphant guitar solo on "The Pass"), as well as all the foibles -- like overarrangement -- that make the band's style so unpalatable. Although Rush-bashers still have plenty to bitch about, _Presto_ is undeniably loose -- evident in ballsy excursions into dance grooves ("Scars") and virtual folk rock (the title track) -- by the band's standard. Most surprisingly, it's not Alex Lifeson's beyond-Steve-Vai guitar work but Lee's infectious choruses that stand out on _Presto_. The album's only dog, "War Paint," contains a truly great sing-along finale: "Boys and girls together/Let's paint the mirror black." To be sure, ever since "Subdivisions" ("In the high school halls/In the shopping malls/Conform or be cast out"), Rush has been the only band that mattered to lone-wolf suburban kids. Lyricist Neil Peart has typically been too much of a sourpuss to address that constituency intimately and effectively. Until now. -- Bob Mack ----------------------------------------------------------
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