The National Midnight Star #218

Errors-To: rush-request@syrinx.umd.edu Reply-To: rush@syrinx.umd.edu Sender: rush-request@syrinx.umd.edu Precedence: bulk From: rush@syrinx.umd.edu To: rush_mailing_list Subject: 04/18/91 - The National Midnight Star #218
** ____ __ ___ ____ ___ ___ ** ** / /_/ /_ /\ / /__/ / / / / /\ / /__/ / ** ** / / / /__ / \/ / / / / /__/ / \/ / / /___ ** ** ** ** __ ___ ____ ** ** /\ /\ / / \ /\ / / / _ /__/ / ** ** / \/ \ / /___/ / \/ / /___/ / / / ** ** ** ** ____ ____ ___ ___ ** ** /__ / /__/ /__/ ** ** ____/ / / / / \ ** The National Midnight Star, Number 218 Thursday, 18 April 1991 Today's Topics: Jack Secret, guitar synths, Neil witch hunt Myster Science Theatre 3000 Re: FM Getting some stuff off my chest... spiteful editors Cinderella Man YYZ & Alex's censored singing Radio days, etc Re: 04/17/91 - The National Midnight Star #216 Marillion... 2112 Tree Talk ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 17 Apr 91 09:13:21 hst From: Hinano Akaka <bigtuna!hinano@uhccux.uhcc.Hawaii.Edu> Subject: Jack Secret, guitar synths, Neil Guten Tag! MINOR POINT: Someone mentioned the other day about Jack Secret being a nickname for anyone who happens to change disks for Geddy and Neil on stage. Did you mean to say "the specific person" who changes them or "anyone in the world" who changes the disks? Because Jack Secret is the nickname for Tony Geranios specifically. Just as Alex is Lerxst, Larry Allen is Shrav, and Skip Gildersleeve is Slider (formerly known as Detroit Slider). Just wanted to clarify... GUITAR SYNTH ON HEMISPHERES: Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't they scrap the guitar synths on Hemispheres? I recall Alex mentioning once upon a time that he had tried to use guitar synths on some songs on the album but they were such a pain that all of the songs it was used on were scrapped. Or am I confusing it with something else? NEIL: For me personally, Neil is the best drummer in the world. However, he is only one among my favourites -- William Calhoun, Jr., Manu Katche, Greg Bissonette (he's coming Saturday!!), Max Roach, Peter Erskine, Dave Weckl, the list goes on. As a drummer, I cannot say that Neil is the best, as much as I love him. Listening to Manu Katche, as an example, you can really hear a different side to drumming that Neil will never be able to master -- his style and his personality are too different for him to master it. He may touch upon it, but he'll never master it as Katche has. When I first started getting interested in playing the drumkit, I wanted to be just like Neil (sound familiar anyone?). If nothing else than just wanting to be smooth and 'flawless'. I think I'll just stick to knitting... but now I fully understand what he means wen he says to listen to a hundred different drummers to learn from all of them. Well, I've got about 90 left to go...and I still haven't figured out the first 10 yet! Well, once upon a time, there was a point to this but now I've forgotten what it was (it's close to finals week and all I can think of is my trip to Australia next Spring Break. sigh.). OH H*LL!!!! If anyone finds my mind, let me know, I seem to have lost it... puanani akaka ---------------------------------------------------------- From: Robert B Simmon <presto@rpi.edu> Date: Wed, 17 Apr 91 15:35:08 EDT Subject: witch hunt On an interview two years or so ago (the series about important albums with Red whoever) they discussed moving pictures, and described the recording of witchunt. Apparently, they went out into the environs of Le Studio and got a little drunk, and recorded twleve tracks of neil ranting and raving & the rest of the band plus the stiudio staff carrying along with neil. they then mixed the tracks specifically to hide what was said. From experience, translation is rather difficult: i.e. impossible. -rob simmon ---------------------------------------------------------- From: cfabrams@eos.ncsu.edu Subject: Myster Science Theatre 3000 Date: Wed, 17 Apr 91 16:49:48 EDT Anyone out there ever see any of the Mystery Science Theatre 3000 episodes on the Comedy Channel (now CTV)? For those of you who don't know about MST3000, it's a show where these science fiction characters watch really awful B movies and crack on them the whole way through. Anyway, on one particular episode, the host, a standup comedian named Joel Hodgeson, is showing pictures that fans, mostly kids, had drawn of him and his robot friends. It seems this one picture he held up to the camera was a sort of Escher-like optical illusion some very talented young artist had sentin. "Ooh," Joel says, "I bet you listen to Rush...."! [ Yes, wasn't that in "The Side Hackers" episode? :rush-mgr ] cAm North Carolina State University "Yup, we luv them compewters!" cfabrams@eos.ncsu.edu ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 17 Apr 91 18:11:24 EDT From: warsaw@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov (Barry A. Warsaw) Subject: Re: FM >> FM was one of the best opening bands I've seen at a Rush >> Concert {one of the worse was Marrillion, at the Radio City >> Music Hall shows- they were booed off the stage.} I'm afraid I have to dispute this. I was also at the RCMH shows (well, really just 1). It was a great experience all around (ever eaten chinese food while watching Rush live?). I think the reason Marillion got booed off the stage was due to the preponderance of teenie-bops (saw *lots* of parents and <16 year olds there) at the show, and because they were relatively unknown at the time. My friends and I had never heard of them before, but we were struck by how good they were, and how like Genesis as well. We'd stand up and cheer and yell just so they'd know that not everyone in the house had bad tastes in music. BTW, Rush was incredible, playing many songs from the upcoming album (i.e. previously unreleased)! -Barry ---------------------------------------------------------- From: yackob@eeserv.ee.umanitoba.ca Date: 17 Apr 91 17:46 -0500 Subject: Getting some stuff off my chest... >X-Mailer: Mail User's Shell (7.2.1 10/31/90) Excuse my righteous indignation, but in response to yesterday's episode, where dave.bbs@shark.cs.fau.edu (David Edward Weiss) asserts >some more answers (concerning The Trees) >i know a lot of people don't remember this, but Canada wasn't always >an independent country. it used to belong to England -- you may have >heard of it. >hint: >Maples (note it is capitalized in the lyrics) == Canada >Oaks (see above comment) == England >this song was written just before the split. think about it, and then >think about it some more. you'll see i'm right. The split was in 1867, although arguments could be made that Canada was not truly independent of England until the end of the Great War. David Edward Weiss is referring to the repatriation of the Canadian Constitution, which occurred in 1982, and wasn't a big deal for anyone but constitutional and parliamentiary fanatics. I was going to let this go, but I feared that someone might mistake this for the truth. You can't possibly believe that Canada was a colony until 1982. Also, rush-mgr was right when he said that the Canadians and English pronounce the letter "Z" as "Zed" - this has nothing to do with the French pronunciation, as Chip Hart guessed, except it might have evolved from it centuries ago. This is the English pronunciation and has been for a long time. Also, cs132042@cs.brown.edu (Jason Rosenberg) said his English teacher noted that Maples are dark wood and Oaks are light - I don't know about Oak, but all the maple I've seen is light - my guitar necks, my guitars.... -- Kerry Yackoboski <yackob@eeserv.ee.umanitoba.ca> The Scanning Tunneling Microscopy Laboratory, ECE Dept., U of Manitoba Mysterious Moon Man of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada ---------------------------------------------------------- Subject: spiteful editors [ Hey, watch it! :-) :rush-mgr ] Date: Wed, 17 Apr 91 16:36:53 -0700 From: Michael J. Konopik <zzz@erg.sri.com> Every year, Playboy conducts their music poll. With the ballot, they list like ten of their recommendations for each category (pretty nearly all the way from "best rock group" to "best country-western six-string nose-picker"). Several years back (I think it was sometime around '82), Neil took second in rock drumming as a write-in. And the next year he STILL wasn't included in their suggestions list. I also remember that during the P/G and PoW tours I couldn't ever find any Rush dates in the Rolling Stone tour listings. I know that magazine feature editors have a lot of subjective control over what goes into their publications. But is it just my imagination that Rush has gotten a particularly hard time from the media? It sometimes seems as if these writers and editors have it in for the boyz... Does anybody have any insight on what might have caused a rift like this? -Mike ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 17 Apr 91 15:42:37 -0900 From: "SCOTT M CLARK" <JNSMC%ALASKA.BITNET@CORNELLC.cit.cornell.edu> Subject: Cinderella Man Is this based on a real person or what? [ The song, written by Geddy, is based on the movie "Mr Deeds Goes To Town". :rush-mgr ] ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 17 Apr 91 20:07:19 EDT From: t47822@ursa.Calvin.EDU (Mark C. Turner) Subject: YYZ & Alex's censored singing This is my first posting since receiving the NMS last week. I am just wondering if any of you out there new this (probably - if you do... keep scrolling!); the rhythm at the beginning of YYZ (the triangle and subsequent band riff) is morse code for...yep, you guessed it...YYZ. If you don't believe me, check it out. I freaked when I found that out. [ It's also the transponder code for Toronto International airport. When they saw 'YYZ' on their luggage tags, they knew they were going home. :rush-mgr ] Also, I was wondering if any of you out there know what Alex is singing at the beginning of La Villa Strangiato on the ASOH video. It's silenced out and says some humerous tidbit about hazerdous to your health. I don't know...thanks. [ Check the FAQL for the answer to this one. :rush-mgr ] Mark Turner t47822@ursa.calvin.edu - "...grab myself out a nice cold beer..." ---------------------------------------------------------- From: snarkboy@gnu.ai.mit.edu (Snarkboy!) Subject: Radio days, etc Date: Wed, 17 Apr 91 20:12:21 WET DST Hey! I heard Rush on the radio twice today... First was "Limelight." Second was [oops! I don't know the name!] the one with "..Concert Hall!" and "...Salesmen!!" toward the end. If you're ever around, tune into 97.5 KLT in NORTHERN MICHIGAN and maybe you to will be able to sample some of these tunes! Poetry/Interpretations: Can you ever look too far into something? I always get into huge arguments with teachers because of poetic interpretations. We say that, for example, the trees are Canada and England or Black and White, etc. I realize that no-one here knows for sure if either of these is "correct," but what if RUSH didn't even think of these possibilities? What if they were simply talking of the trees in their back yard? I'm not trying to deny that certain themes were put into the songs, but that doesn't always have to be the case. Even I could write something wordy today and then look at it in a week and FIND morals and themes in it. Ever heard of the poem, "The Red Wheelbarrow"? Well, if you haven't it is approx. 6-7 lines long and talks about rain and a wheelbarrow and, I think, chickens. Pretty exciting, eh? Well, my english teacher INSISTED that the author put each object there for a reason, that each object had a meaning, and that we all should understand the poem to have that specific meaning. He's a great teacher, but I think that he got a little simple-minded that day. Here's my question: Was I or he right? -- Snark! "Forever is a mountain we've yet to climb..." -King's X ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 17 Apr 91 22:11 EDT From: <DXT100@PSUVM.PSU.EDU> Subject: Re: 04/17/91 - The National Midnight Star #216 please remove my email from you mail list. Thank you. ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 18 Apr 91 13:41:11 +1000 From: Stuart Raymond Mills <stum@cs.su.oz.au> Subject: Marillion... WRTo : DSchmidt seeing MArillion live WHY ON EARTH WERE THEY BOOED OFF STAGE??? ESPECIALLY by RUSH fans??? Personally I think MArillion are a GREAT band. They rate nearly in the same class as RUSH!! They are progressive , have intelligent lyrics (better that RUSH in some cases) etc etc!! I can't BELIEVE that any intelligent audience couldn't appreciate their music!! OH well, that's my A$0.02 worth!! >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> *********** stum@minnie.cs.su.OZ.AU *********** >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> *********** UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY *********** >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> *********** "Todays Tom Sawyer, mean mean pride...." *********** >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 18 Apr 91 09:41:43 EDT From: rlr@bbt.com (Ron Rader) Subject: 2112 I usually ignore song interpretations, but I'll add my voice from the peanut gallery regarding 2112. Our protagonist commits suicide, we go into a hard fast section of the song, and we're bombarded with the voice proclaiming "Attention All Planets Of The Solar Federation, We Have Assumed Control." Most of you feel that this is a positive note, with the Elder Race coming back to wrest control from the Priests Of Syrinx and free the people from tyranny. I wonder though... considering the vast amount of material Neil has written condemning societal control by force, do you really think "we have assumed control" spoken in a deep and menacing voice is meant to be positive? I've always thought this was the Priests reasserting their iron grip over the Solar Federation, but the idea that it is the Elder Race returning has merit. Regardless of which group is speaking, I most definitely feel that the final note of the song is depressing and negative (which I enjoy more than a 'happily ever after' ending). The real antagonist in 2112 is collect- ivism by force, not just the Priests. So what do you all think? -- ron rader, jr rlr@bbt.com OR ...!mcnc!bbt!rlr = Opinions are my own and do | | i gotta six-pack & nothing to do... = not necessarily reflect those | | i gotta six-pack & i don't need you = of BroadBand Tech. (SO THERE!) *** Punk ain't no religious cult, punk means thinking for yourself - DKs *** ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 18 Apr 1991 09:49 MST From: "Eric Kay (303) 499-7577" <KAY_E@CUBLDR.Colorado.EDU> Subject: Tree Talk I'd like to add to the current discussion about "The Trees". As one interpretation I consider the song almost as a satire on current society. We know that the maples ARE shorter and do indeed recieve less light when surrounded by oaks, but that's the way Mother Nature (God, for the creationists) set things up. That the Maples could actually form a union and enforce equal heights is, in reality, rediculous. However, this does occur in society as evidenced by the industrial unions and all sorts of labor and equal rights laws. Is this man's attempt to govern his own system of competition? It seems to me that man is attempting to apply to society a luxury simply not available in nature. Should we let "natural" competition run un-checked in society? Sounds like an economics issue to me.... Anyways, lets not get caught up in interpretations. Just take it as another musically awesome, fun little RUSH song. -Eric Kay ----------------------------------------------------------
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