The National Midnight Star #812

Precedence: bulk From: rush@syrinx.umd.edu To: rush_mailing_list Subject: 11/09/93 - The National Midnight Star #812 *** Special Edition ***
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The banners are in honor of drummer Neil Peart; the nickname refers to his excellence on the drums. But if the sign-makers had a chance to sit and talk to Peart, they might call him "The Professor" for another reason: Peart is as articulate a rock star as you're likely to find, given to lengthy explanations for his actions and feelings, alwasy ready to discuss everything from the failings of the nuclear protest movement to the problems of corporate sponsorship of rock tours to resisting the temptations inherent with a life in rock 'n' roll. And as lyricist for the group that will perform at the Arena Monday, Peart often puts his thoughts on vinyl. In years gone by, those thoughts were often disguised in the symbolism of science fiction or sword and sorcery, in songs like "2112," "Hemispheres," and "Cygnus X-1." But now, Peart says, he prefers the straight approach. "I was never really that enamoured of science-fiction writing," Peart said during a telephone interview, "but at the time, it was a convenient vehicle. And using the mythology and symbolism was a phase that I had to grow out of. And I have; now I can't stand symbolism, either to read it or write it. I want to deal in issues involving idealism and romanticism, which I still care about, but I want them to apply to the real world and what's going on. If you don't move into the real world, you wind up sitting in a room with no windows, dreaming about a world you weren't born into. "It takes a log of maturity to be able to write about the real world," Peart added. "I hope I've reached that level of maturity." On the latest Rush album, "Power Windows," Peart writes about the challenges of improving your lot in life ("Middletown Dreams"), the similarities between life and a long-distance race ("Marathon"), the pitfalls and power of being rich ("Big Money"), and even the start of the Atomic Age ("Manhattan Project"). "Manhattan Project" is a straight historical retelling of the creation and use of the first atomic bomb. According to Peart, it was at the same time simple and difficult to write. "'Manhattan Project' is almost a documentary and easy enough to research and write about, but to write about it in short little lines that rhyme can be difficult. The material has to be accurate, and yet the lyrics have to be written in such a way that Geddy (Lee, Rush's bassist and vocalist) can feel comfortable delivering them. They can't be simply narration. "There's a judgement there against extremism on both ends, but there's no blanket anti-nuclear statement. For instance, in the lines that say 'the fools try to wish it away,' there's a statement against the extremism of the people who would wish for unilateral disarmament, saying: 'This is causing us a bit of trouble; let's throw it out.'" Warming to his topic, Peart added: "As a concerned environmentalist, I object to the knee-jerk reactions of some of the anti-nuclear protestors. If they saw the forests of North Carolina and Virginia or the Black Forests of Germany and witnessed how they're being defoliated by the creation of coal power, by the sulfur being thrown in the air, perhaps they wouldn't be so quick to spout out the kind of knee-jerk liberalism that prefers 19th-century solutions like coal power." It's that kind of thinking that goes into Peart's lyrics, which are fitted to the music of Lee and guitarist Alex Lifeson. Peart has been with the band since 1974, and he's seen the group become one of the most popular acts in rock 'n' roll. And in those 12 years, Peart has developed some strong opinions about what's right - and what's wrong - with his business. For example, Peart takes a dim view of corporate sponsorship of rock tours. "We've always refused to be involved in such things," he said. "It compromises you, and unless you resist it at the outset, before long, rock music will be like auto racing - where everything is tied to the sponsor - and as soon as you get out of your race car, you have to put on a hat with the sponsor's name on it. It's hopelessly demeaning and completely lacking in dignity. "What's worse is that we could be approaching a time - and it may indeed be upon us - that groups in a situation like we were 12 years ago, trying to get their careers started, won't be able to get a tour unless they can find some big corporation to sponsor them. That's a terrifying situation. Learning to say no has enabled the members of Rush to keep their sanity - and their health - despite more than a decade of touring and recording. "When you look at the cost in human lives among musicians, when you look at the drug and alcohol problems in this business, it's terrifying. And you can't just say it's because they were weak individuals; there are certainly special pressures and demands that cause people to turn into alcoholics and drug abusers, or to develop tremendous psychological problems. I've seen the pressures people put on you, the pressures inherent in trying to live the artificial life of a 'star.' You can't do what everybody wants you to do; the cost of such role-playing is the loss of yourself." So Rush takes things in moderation, Peart says. They limit the length of time they'll be on the road and the number of days in a row they'll do concerts. And they develop interests outside music; in Peart's case, those interests include reading everything he gets his hands on and participating in endurance sports. He'll happily tell you about taking 100-mile bicycle rides, for example. And that's pretty smart. But what would you expect from The Professor? -------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sun, 7 Nov 93 11:49 GMT0 From: Robert Jones <rjj@cix.compulink.co.uk> Subject: Rush Article in Raw magazine (c) 1993 Raw magazine, No 135, Oct 27-Nov 9 1993. A FARWELL TO BINGS ... and bongs, and widdles and pars, as RUSH ditch the keyboards and get ready to Rock on their fab newie, _Counterparts_. And that's not the only shock in store, as GEDDY LEE tells HOWARD JOHNSON about the fights, rows and general weirdness that enter the equation when you're a member of the worlds leading Techno Rock Trio ... It's hard to imagine that 12 years have passed since Canadian power trio Rush slotted neatly into the stndard "Heavy Rock" bracket. Nevertheless, the group still boast a hardcore fanbase, and earn healthy respect from Rock fans of every hue. But on the eve of the release of _Counterparts_, the bands eight album since '81's _Moving Pictures_, there's still a faint yearning that Rush will return to the fray armed wil bell bottoms, kimonos, word and sorcery lyrics and Alex Lifeson"s Jimmy Page hand-me-down riffs. _Counterparts_, of course, does noting of the sort. Rush have always been about progression rather than stagnation. And, secretly, I think that's how we like it. "There are moments on _Counterparts_ that are heavier than anything we have ever done in a long time," says Rush's mild-mannered vocalist/bassist/keyboardist Geddy Lee, hair cut to shoulder length and sporting blue, rounded Lennon specs. "But even if we became really heavy again it wouldn't be like the way we were on _2112_. Those records were made in a a certain time and place and the only way we'd be able to recreate it would be accidentally. If we did it on purpose it would sound like bullshit." Lee dosn't like bullshit. Fortunately, he's not at all reticent about discussing the band's past. "A lot of the early stuff I'm really proud of," he says. "Some of it sounds really goofy, but some of it stands up better than I gave it credit for. As weird as my voice sounds when I listen back, I certainly dig some of the arrangements. I can't go back beyond _2112_ really, because that starts to get a bit hairy for me, and if I hear "Lakeside Park" on the radio I cringe. What a lousy song! Still, I don't regret anything that I've done!" And why should he? Alongside guitarist Lifeson and drummer/lyricist Neil Peart, Rush have grown old gracefully. Not too many embarassing moments, a remarkable body of work, plus solid success. By steadfastly refusing to pay any attention to whims and fads, Rush have sustained a 20 year career with ease. "I don't know how to explain it", Lee offers, "I guess our fans are as weird as we are. And I think that they appreciate the emotion and creaftmanship that goes into our records. "Every time I go into the studio to start on a new album I ask myself the same question: 'Why am I doing this again?'. The only answer that I can come up with is because of the satisfaction I get from creating and producing something. "The three of us are very united in our work ethic. It's in our nature to want to improve the songwriting. Sometimes you spend ages trying to make a smooth transition from bridge to chorus in an emotional way and you'll finally achieve it, only to to find that you've already done it on a track ten years ago. You can end up chasing your own tail, so I tend not to look any further back than the last album." Because you'd get too depressed? "I donUt get depressed. I just get startled!" You won't be startled by _Counterparts_, which seamlessly continues the linear heritage started by '82's _Signals_ and continued by _Grace Under Pressure_ and '91's _Roll The Bones_. Sure "Stick It Out" nods its head a little more frantically than of late, but "Animate", "Alien Shore" and "Between Sun and Moon" sound like Rush doing what Rush do best. All the more surprising then, that Lee reveals that this was the most fractious album Rush has ever made. "The title came after the record, which isn't always the way it works. We're at that period in our lives where we're starting to question our relationahips with each other. You start to ask 'Why am I still hanging around with these guys?' To some extent _Counterparts_ is a recognition of how the three of us have grown in different ways of the past few years. "There were certainly a lot more fights during these sessions," muses Lee. "Almost every Monday morning Alex and I would have a full-blown, in-your-face argument. It was probably a good thing." Lee doesn't sound too convinced, though. "You could see it coming on the last tour," he continues. "Both Alex and I would have our moments, but our fights have always been very brotherly. When you spend more time apart you develop a stronger sense of what you like and what you don't like. Our musical vision certainly isn't as similar as it was, so we'd end up questioning each other more. When ideas come up that you're not comfortable with, it either leads to an agreement or an argument. The more confident you get as a human being, the more likely you are to stand your ground." So who won this battle? Well once you've listened to the depth of arrangement on _Counterparts_, you'll probably call it a dead heat. "Alex is very reactionary," continues Lee. "He must have said 10,000 times that he didn't want any keyboards on the album, so when I brought my keyboards into the studio there was an immediate atmosphere. He kept looking at them like they were really threatening. Now we wrote all the last album on bass, guitar and drums and added the keys at the end to embelish. That was the only reason the keys were there - or maybe to help me express myself when I was painted into a musical corner - but Alex was making assumptions that I wanted keyboards all over the place. It was a very volatile situation." Rush aren't exactly what you'd call a party band. Still, according to their latest bio, a lot of their inherent humor is cruelly overlooked. Indeed, Lee assures me that they 'had hours of hilarity' in the studio when they weren't fighting. Why, then, own up to all the turmoil on planet Rush? "It's just a way of tryng to dispel some of our myths," Lee shrugs. "We're a vert tight knit unit. I think we have the capacity to alienate people without realizing it. I've been told that coming into our dressing room isn't the most pleasant of experiences and it doesn't make me feel good to hear that. I'd like to feel that we were open and welcoming. We do have this cold, intellectual image and I can see where it stems from - we were kinda serious when we were young. It's not the whole picture, although I'm certainly not over here on a goodwill tour. I'm not working hard to be consider light-hearted, like U2, but there are a lot of preconceptions about Rush, some of which are correct and some of which are not!" One particualr preconception is that Neil Peart rarely tackles subjects to do with love and sex. "Nobodys Hero" boldly addresses homosexuality and AIDS, and there's a sneaking suspicion that some of Rush's audience might find the whole affair somewhat controversial. Lee is unrepentant: "If people think that discussing homosexuality is controversial, then they've been living under a rock. "Nobodys Hero" will probably polarise people, even though the AIDS issue is only a small part of the lyrical theme, and peple will probably jump to conclusions. That's their problem. I don't worry about it, whether it's brave or foolish or whatever. When things affet you, you talk about them and it comes out in your music. You let it fly. I never had the slightest idea that it could be interpreted as controversial until someone pointed it out to me after we'd finished the record. I guess I've always worked in the music business, which is very tolerant environment." Rush, however has worked as an island within a fast running stream, never joining the main flow and keeping a healthy distance from the back-slapping and intermingling: "We don't live in a very 'music business' environment", claims Lee. "The main reason why we aren't seen around is due to time. We keep getting offered a lot of stuff, but we made a decision seven or eight years ago that time that wasn't Rush time was our own time. It would be no holiday coming out of a Rush project and bouncing straight into another one with other people. I need time for familly, for personal travel, all kinds of interest outside of music. I don't know if that means we're less obsessed about music than most musicians or that we just get enough of our ya-yas out in Rush. But, like most things Rush, that's just the way it is." ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 09 Nov 1993 13:02:52 +0100 From: SP ENNEMA <ennema01@dns.nhl.nl> Subject: article from metal CD taken from: Metal CD, volume 2 no 1 RUSH through the years Since their inception in the Toronto bars in the early seven- ties Rush have always endeavoured to push the limits and explore the unknown. Warbler/bassist Geddy Lee reflects on the band's past chapters and talks about the new 'Counterparts' album with Mark Blake. Tracklistings of: Rush, Fly By Night, Caress Of Steel, 2112, All The World's A Stage. "I rarely listen to any of our records at home. Only if I'm in the car and one of them comes on the radio, or when I'm doing an interview at a radio station and the DJ digs out some old Rush albums. Those first three records are tough for me to listen to. They sound very old, and I do find myself cringing. We still play 'In The Mood', from the first record, live. It's fun to do, but we're really taking the piss out of it. 'Fly By Night' was a slight improvement, because by that time Neil (Peart) had joined (as a replacement for John Rutsey, who drummed on the first album), and we started to find a little more of our own direction. 'Caress Of Steel' was very indulgent, and I think we got completly lost. I can listen to '2112', and of those early albums I think that still holds up the best. I like the concept behind it, even if it does seem a little naive now, and I love the passion that's in that record. I sometimes think of that as our first real album. Altough I still can't believe my voice. How could I have sung that high? It was no wonder I had this reputation as a screecher. The first live album ('All The World's A Stage') is unlistenable to me. It just sounds painful; it's too coarse and crude. I hated it then and I hate it now. It was just a one-shot deal. We had three nights in which to do it, and there were no second chances. But maybe that really was the way it sounded; perhaps my memories of Rush back then are better than the reality!" Tracklistings of: A Farewell To Kings, Hemispheres, Permanent Waves, Moving Pictures, Exit...Stage Left "'A Farewell To Kings'? I haven't listened to that album in years. I can't remember the last time I heard it. I heard 'Cinderella Man' on the radio the other week, and I was pleasently surprised by how good it still sounded. I thought it was a very cool song. Making that album in Wales was a very pleasant experience. And we even had an almost-hit single with 'Closer To The Heart'. 'Hemispheres' greatest strength was the music rather than the lyrics. There's some great instrumental material on that record, but in retrospect I don't think the marriage of music and words really works. I think it sounds a bit pretentious. 'Prelude', 'Overture' and 'La Villa Strangiato' I still consi- der to be great pieces of music. They were such fun to write and to play live. But fitting the lyrics around some of the music proved to be a problem. 'The Trees' is probalbly the best song on the record, maybe beause it was the simplest. 'Permanent Waves' was our first record as real songwriters. I think before that we'd always been musicians first and songwriters second. 'Spirit Of Radio' was another hit single and, again, that opened us up to a much broader audience. But it's 'Moving Pictures' that I still think of as the quintessential Rush album, even now. It's passed the test of time better than anything before. It's our landmark. I love everything about it, even some of Terry's (Brown) unusual production techniques. Neil's lyrics had changed quite dramti- cally. Aside from 'Red Barchetta', the themes were much more down to earth and less fantasy orientated. It's still our biggest selling album to date. I'm not so happy with our second live album ('Exit...Stage Left'). We overadjusted. Our first live record was too raw, and this one was too slick. We seemed to have filtered out all the crowd sounds and tried to create another studio album. At the time I thought it was grate, but it didn't take that long for me to realise that we'd blown it." Tracklistings of: Signals, Grace Under Pressure, Power Wind- ows, Hold Your Fire, A Show Of Hands. "It's strange, but we never felt under any pressure to follow up 'Moving Pictures'. We really had altered the whole sound of the band by this time, with the use of keyboards. I think we decided, foolishly in retrospect, to become a four- piece band and give the keys as much space as the guitar. Which wasn't fair to Alex (Lifeson). But then again, he agreed to it, so he only has himself to blame! But song-wise I think that album has some great moments. I still consider 'Subdivisons' to be one of the best things we've ever written. The live shows did suffer with me juggling vocals, bass and keyboars. And we even considered adding a fourth member, but we just couldn't handle the idea. 'Grace Under Pressure' was a grim experience. It was our first album without Terry, and working with Peter Henderson we realised how much Terry had protected us in the past. Lyrically it was a very dark album, and I think it reflects the problems we had making it. Now that the painful memories have subsided I can look back and appreciate some of the good songs. But it was a dark time. 'Power Windows' was a better experience. Again we were using a lot of keyboards, but in a different way, We actually brought in Andy Richards, who was a friend of Peter Collins, to play the keys. And we ended up using them as aural candy - going for the headphone thrills- rather than the blanket sounds we'd had on 'Signals' and 'Grace...'. But it was still though on Alex. We added the keyboars before his guitar parts, which did put him under extraordinary pressure. I think of 'Hold Your Fire' as being more of the same. In fact it seems now to be a very introspective record, even a little dark. We worked with the Canadian lyricist Pye Dubois on 'Force Ten', which was the first time we'd written together since 'Tom Sawyer' (from 'Moving Pictures'), there were some cool songs floating around on the album, but I have a few doubts about it as a whole. I am relatively happy with 'A Show Of Hands' (Rush's third live album). As happy as I could ever be. A friend said to me, 15 years ago, that I'd never be satisfied. And, musically speaking, I think he's right." Tracklistings of: Presto, Roll The Bones "I guess 'Presto' was a back to basics album, certainly in terms of songwriting. It was actually a very satisfying album to write, because we were going for much simpler ideas. Wor- king with a new production team of Rupert Hine and Stephen Tayler was another positive move. Sometimes you have to have change for change's sake. 'Roll The Bones' was a much more diverse record than 'Presto'. I also think it was a better album. The songs were so much stronger, and we branched out a little more with our ideas. If anything, it suffers a little sonically. It was too smooth and a little subdued in parts, whereas it could have been a bit bolder, a little more aggresseive. But I still consider it to be one of our best albums ever." Tracklisting of: Counterparts "Many people have commented that this record has a greater sense of immediacy about it than some of the ablums we've made before. In one way it's a little less sophisticated, which probably makes it more accessible than some of what we've done before. The melodies on songs like 'Stick It Out' are much more direct. And sound-wise it's bolder and right there in your face. There are more riffs, more rhythms and a much stronger groove. I think some of it was a direct result of our experiences on the 'Roll The Bones' tour. Some of the songs on that album sounded much better live than they did on record. When we came to songwriting and recording for the new record, I think that all three of us were, sub-consciously or otherwise, trying to capture some of that live feel in what we were doing. Again, I think we're moving on and re-visiting old haunts. A song like 'Nobody's Hero' (which tackles homosexuality, atti- tudes to Aids and the myth surrounding modern day heroes) is the most direct thing Neil has ever written. It's like nothing he's done before. Yet we can also do somthing like 'Leave That Thing Alone' (an instrumental), which is pure fun, complete recess, and which I think has become recognisable as one of the musical trademarks on Rush albums." RUSH: still on rock's cutting edge "We've toured with some of the more "alternative" bands around (VoiVod, Primus). I guess we're lucky because we've never been in or out of fashion, and that has saved us. If we'd never progressed after 'Hemispheres' I'm sure we'd be perceived as one of these creaky old heavy rock bands. I actually think that hard rock is much more vital now than it has been for years. In the early '80s everything seemed so shallow and glammy. I like the attitude of rock bands in the '90s - groups like Soundgarden who I think are fantastic. And attitude always wins points with me RUSH factfile Rush played their first major gig as support to the New York Dolls in Toronto in 1973. Donna Halper, a disc jockey with Cleveland-based radio station WMMS, helped to get the band signed to Mercury Records in 1974. Original Rush drummer John Rutsey was replaced in July 1974. Peart's previous jobs had included selling T-shirts in Lon- don's Oxford Street. Rush won the Most Promising Group category at the annual Juno Awars in February 1975. The band's first major US tour was in March 1975 as support to Aerosmith and Kiss. In June 1976 Rush sold-out three nights at Toronto's 4,000- seater Massey Hall. Rush once insisted on having a carpet placed in the centre of the stage whenever they played live. When British hard rockers UFO supported the band on a US tour in 1976, they nailed a pair of slippers to the carpet as a pre-gig prank. The sleeve shots on '2112' are now legendary in rock circles, featuring as they did the band wearing satin kimonos and, in guitarist Alex Lifeson's case, lip gloss. The band played their debut UK gig at Manchester Free Trade Hall on June 2 1977. In January 1978, Rush's 'Closer To The Heart' single (taken from 'A Farewell To Kings') peaked in the US charts at No 77. In an interview in 1978, NME journalist Miles accused Rush of being 'crypto-fascists'. Legendary dance troupe Pan's People put in one of their most distinguished performances dancing to Rush's 1980 single 'Spirit Of Radio' on BBC's Top Of The Pops. Rumour has it that Rush drummer Neil Peart was one of the many figures pictured on the back cover of the band's 1980 album 'Moving Pictures'. Rush guested on the track 'Battlescar' by fellow Canadian hard rockers Max Webster. The song appeared on their 1980 album 'Universal Juveniles' and was later released as a single. Ben Mink, of Canadian soft rock outfit FM (no relation to the UK band of the same name), played violin on the song 'Losing it', from the Rush's 1981 album 'Signals'. 'Time Stand Still', from Rush's 1987 album 'Hold Your Fire', featured a guest vocal from singer/songwriter Aimee Mann. Rush's Wembley Arena show on their 1987 UK tour found frontman Geddy Lee changing the chorus of 'Temples Of Syrinx' from 'We are the priests of the Temples Of Syrinx' and singing 'We are the plumbers who have come to mend your sink'. Rush US 'Presto' tour featured such stage props as a gigan- tic top hat and gigantic bunny rabbits. Drummer Neil Peart's 'relaxing' hobbies include endurance cycling. The 'rap' on the title track of Rush's 1991 album 'Roll The Bones' was, in fact, by Geddy Lee, although his voice was afterwards altered beyond recognition in the studio. Neil Peart: A crazy kinda guy? "Neil Peart's image is nothing like the reality. He's actu- ally a fun guy, believe me! It's just that he's a very private person, and while he does do interviews, he won't travel great distances to do them. You have to go to him. I'm sometimes asked if he finds himself under great pressure as a drummer and lyricis, but the pressure from the rest of us is nothing compared to the pressure he puts himself under. He is the most driven human being I have ever met in my life. His ideas about wahat are expectd of him as a musician and a songwriter are higher than you could ever imagine. But he does have his lighter side. Alex and I have grown up with him, so we just view his intense side as being a little eccentricity. No more than that." (pictures: 1: - O, look a camera Group foto, with some really dumb expressions 2: - the make-up and the lip gloss years group foto, they're wearing kimonos 3: - big flares and long songs live shot, around 2112 4: - on the road again photo in tourbus (Alex is wearing Adidas shoes) 5: - kimono my house live shot, Alex playing his double-neck 6: - Geddy and UFO's Pete Way - "You got stung by a wasp andwant me to suck the poison out? You got stung Where?!" Pete Way is only wearing a shirt and his underpants. 7: - Rush on the Bar Picture of the Hammersmith Odeon, I think the same picture is also in a tourbook 8: - group foto around Power Windows 9: - Alex and Geddy 10: - Alex playing guitar (live) 11: - Geddy playing bass (live) 12: - Neil behind his drum kit (Exit...Stage Left era) 13: - Geddy with a baton (outside shot) 14: - live shot (Presto) ) album review: rush - counterparts London Listings guide Time Out once described a Rush concert at Wembley Arena as being packed with chemistry students: a cruel but fair assumption. Now the band find themselves middle-aged, gobsmackingly gifted, but faced with the problem of how to avoid being perceived as over the hill techno-bores, especially in an age when musical virtuosity comes a poor second to attitude and gut reaction. Ever since 1989's shaky 'Presto' album, Rush seem to have been keeping their more grandiose leanings in check. And while they drop their guard on occasion, 'Counterparts' (their 15th studio outing) is the band's most direct and unfussy record to date. At times it's aking to seeing Albert Einstein pretending to struggle with a CSE maths paper. For there are moments when you marvel at the simplicty of the songs and wonder exactly when drummer Neil Peart is going to launch into one of his wrist-spraining fills. Of course he does eventually; but the opening song, 'Animate', slips in with a 1-2-3-4 countdown which, while hardly Joey Ramone, is followed up with one of Alex Lifeson's most fortright guitar riffs and a Geddy Lee vocal more passionate and less grating than of old. Followed by 'Stick It Out' - all spooky bass rumble and chirpy chorus - it sets a tone for the rest of the album. 'Cut To The Chase' suggest a smattering of 'Moving Pictures'-era tension in its interplay between the three players but the tempo is more subdued. In fact there are momentary bursts of brilliance within the songs (rather than individual tracks) that muscle into the consciousness ahead of the rest, setting a high standard on Peart's lyrically scathing 'Nobody's Hero' that lasts through 'Between Sun And Moon', 'Alien Shore', and 'Double Agent'. Although the simple touch does get left in the locker room on 'Leave That Thing Alone', an instrumental flip-out (a la 'YYZ' and 'La Villa Strangiato') which lets you know that they still show of and will do if and when the next tour reaches your town. Yet the most revealing moment actual comes with 'Cold Fire', a song containing a cynical, humorous lyric of the mystery of personal relationships and the battles of the sexes. A generation weaned on the band's star trekking '70s period of their cold scientific stance in the last decade might consider such affairs of the heart unlikely subject matter for Rush. Not so. It's taken them more than 20 years, but 'Counterparts' suggests that the school swots are finally playing truant and have landed themselves girlfriends. So they were (original in italics) human after all. **** (out of *****) Mark Blake (picture: Rush's Alex Lifeson: finally playing truant and found himself a girlfriend a close up of Alex (Face only)) There's also a real cool advertisement, a 3 by 4 block with pictures: rush I don't know falling rocks the new album what this is (traffic sign) counterparts (some candy) a kind of bread whiskey glass an alarmclock with ice and some on a rock lemonade a famous guy Limited edition two black ankles (I don't know cd with with some who) special juwelry (Cary Grant?) ** Deluxe packaging another kind of wooden horse (?) CD case-front bread HOW MANY WAYS DO WE HAVE TO SAY IT? ** (Cary Grant was mentioned by: J.Screaton@sheffield.ac.uk, but I don'tknow if it is the same advert, so it could be someone else) In the same magazine there's also an interview with Peter Collins, if someone wants a electronic copy of it, email me at ennema01@hio.tem.nhl.nl SP ennema01@hio.tem.nhl.nl "Open, open, open moet het zijn", The Scene. (You all know what that means, don't you? :-) ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 9 Nov 1993 01:36:34 -0600 (CST) From: "David Bell" <dbell@merle.acns.nwu.edu> Subject: Geddy Lee Interview, Bass Player Dec. 93 "Geddy Lee: Still Going!" By Karl Coryat _Bass Player Magazine_, Dec. 1993 pp.40-48 >> How many bands have made 19 records in 19 years, have a huge following that almost ensures platinum sales for each new album, and sell out the biggest arenas whenever they come through town? Rush. That's about the only band that matches the description. But if you think Geddy Lee, guitarist Alex Lifeson, and drummer Neil Peart have merely learned to cash in on a tried-and-true multimillion-dollar formula year after year, you're dead wrong. Although they're as heavy as a locomotive, Rush changes direction like a hummingbird; each record explores new territories and redirects the band's sonic and musical focuses, without compromising the distinctive Rush style. Even though it's been a while since their envelope-pushing epics of the '70s, it's nice to see a veteran band alive and well rather than decaying into nostalgia and nothingness. Take, for example, _Counterparts_. The latest Rush record is sparser yet bigger-sounding than their last few efforts, an approach only hinted at on 1992's _Roll the Bones_. Ten years ago, the band's lyrics heralded the promises of digital information and the space shuttle; this year, they lament AIDS and homelessness. [<--Can anybody explain that one??-DB] It's clear Rush is in tune with the 90's. Yet one thing has been true all along: despite the throngs of lay listeners who've stuck with Rush throughout the years, this is a _musicians'_ band. An steady two-decades-long stream of ambitious bass-driven songs have made Geddy Lee perhaps the most admired bassist in the land. He was Bass Player's first Bassis Of The Year in 1991, and this year he won in our Reader's Poll's Rock category. (Meanwhile, Rush was voted Favorite Band and Neil Peart named Favorite Musician Who Doesn't Play Bass.) Maybe that's why, when he came to New York for a string of press interviews in support of _Counterparts_, Geddy gave Bass Player the first shot. BP: How do you account for your enduring popularity with bassists? GL: I guess because the music we do always seems to be "players' music" no matter how hard we try to make it anything else. BP: So you're always trying to expand you're audience? GL: I don't know if I'd say that. We're always trying different musical approaches, and we try to emphasize different aspects of the rhythm. But it seems no matter how hard we try, we can't leave the music uncomplicated. Somehow, the "player" sides of our personalities always sneak into the crafting of our records, and I think that's what appeals to a lot of young musicians. BP: When you're working on a new record, do you specifically try to write a hit single? GL: We never try to write a single because we don't know how to do it--and I guess our history proves that out. We;ve never had a "hit single" in conventional terms. We don't try to write anything but _songs_, and how they come out depends only on where we happen to be at, musically and lyrically, when we write them. Some songs seem to suit a more conventional approach, so we try to make those into classic tunes, both melodically and structurally. Other songs seem to require a bit more lunacy, so we don't bother with anything conventional. The key for us is to make a record with lots of variety. That could be our bane, but it's also what makes, I think, an interesting album overall--to have a bit of everything. Because of that, we sometimes get criticized for not having a cohesive record. But at the end of the day it keeps the music interesting to make, and it offers people something interesting to listen to. That's our theory, anyway, and I guess we'll live and die by it. BP: What are your feelings about _Counterparts_? GL: I'm pretty pleased with it. I think it's the best-sounding record we've done in quite some time. There was a large emphasis on getting it to sound a particular way, and I think we were successful at that. Musically, there are moments I am very happy with, while other moments could have turned out differently. I'm pleased with the melodies and the melodic structures, and I think we were successful at trying a few different things. I can't look back at our stuff and say, "I'm happy with this record," or "I'm happy with that record"--it's always a track-by-track thing. Ten years ago when we finished an album I'd love everything about it. I guess after so many years of making records, I now allow myself the luxury of being able to criticize myself. It no longer breaks my heart to wish something had turned out differently--I still appreciate that it was successful on a certain level. BP: Have you ever been unhappy with an album immediately after recording it? GL: Yes--I wasn't happy with _Grace Under Pressure_. But it was a no-win situation in that case because that album was extremely difficult to make. We went through tremendous turmoil and pressure making it, and I don't think I _could_ have liked it given the circumstances. As soon as the record was done, I wanted to get away from it--and I've rarely listened to it since, because it's attached to too many difficult memories. BP: Ten or tweleve years ago, Rush had a certain amount of mainstream visibility you don't have now--yet your fan base is still huge. GL: It's like we're a big cult band. Our mainstream visibility comes and goes, depending on the particular album and the whims and vagaries of TV and radio exposure. BP: Would you rather be in the position you're in now or be more visible? GL: I'm quite happy where I am, because I can make the music I love to make, and I have a tremendous amount of freedom with it. We're able to go on big tours, and if we want to do a big production, that's possible because our shows always do well. I'm sure a lot of bands would love to have a loyal following that's always interested in whatever they happen to be up to. I'm very appreciative of our fans--especially the Bass Player readers, who have been incredibly loyal. BP: Do you ever feel as if you're just going through the motions? GL: Not when I'm writing, and not when I'm recording. Sometimes I feel that way when we're playing, though. Halfway through a long tour, there are times when I do find myself going through the motions--and that's a dangerous position to be in. So we try to stop that from happening; we organize our tours so we don't have too many performances in a row without a day off. That helps to keep us from doing "automatic" performances--we never get too slick, where we could do it blindfolded. BP: Will there be a tour with a big production for the new record? GL: Probably. It's in our nature to do it. BP: What steps do you go through to make the album? GL: We used pretty much the same approach we've used on the last few albums: what we call "boy's camp." For about two months, we go away somewhere to write, do preproduction, and rehearse. The only thing we did differently this time was we did a lot of the writing digitally; rather than go to tape, we used a software program from Cubase Audio. We write with a drum machine, just to get the arrangements fairly together, so when Neil goes to play to a song he has something fairly organized. But we had an _enormous_ amount of technical problems, so parts of the writing process went very slowly. By the time we got to the rehearsal stage, Neil was a little short on time, and when we started to go through things with our producer, Neil was under the gun to get his parts together. He went through a massive rehearsal period; he works tremendously hard and it's incredible to witness. After two months of that, we started recording. We transferred over the demo versions onto the 24-track, and Neil played to the demos. At that point, as always, he had his parts worked out to a T--99% of his parts were worked out, and he has about a 70% success rate at getting the entire take in one try. Neil did 11 drum tracks in two-and-a-half days. We're big believers, more and more, in rehearsing before we record--especially in terms of the "bed" [basic] tracks, because it seems the more you rehearse the faster the recording goes. Rehearsing also enables you to focus more on the performance when you know exactly what you're going to play; that way the production team can concentrate on making sure the performances are spirited and not stale. Basically, all of the bed tracks were done in about a week. That left some time for Alex to do guitars and for me to play around with vocal ideas. We don't like to mess around when it comes time to record--we like to get in there and get it done. BP: Why did you go back to Peter Collins as your producer? GL: We recorded our last two records with Rupert Hines; they turned out great, and working with him was a fine experience. But this time we wanted to get away from the English sound we've had lately--a smaller, more layered sound. We listened to some of the records that have been made in America over the last few years, and they a bigger, bolder, more exciting sound, and that was the direction we wanted to take. At the same time we didn't want to work with a producer who wasn't a "song" person. It would have been easy to grab an engineer and say, "Let's make a record." But if you do that, you're cheating yourself out of the extra objectivity a non-engineer producer can bring to a project--someone who keeps his focus on the songs and the performances and who isn't caught up in the technology. We enjoyed working with Peter before [on Power Windows and Hold Your Fire], but back then he was primarily a pop producer, which was foreign to us. Since then he's been living living in the U.S., and he's been working with a large number of heavy bands whose music has more to do with ours, so we were intrigued. We;ve always kept in touch and were looking for an opportunity to work together, and we decided to try it this time. I'm glad we did. Since we had a certain sound in mind for the record, Peter helped us to go on a search for the right engineer. We listened to hundreds of tapes trying to find the right guy. And, for the first time, we used one engineer to do the recording and another to do the mixing. We wanted to bring in someone fresh--a "mixologist"--and see how it benefitted the record, just for our own education. It worked great. The recording engineer ended up being a South African named Kevin "The Caveman" Shirley. His name says it all; we were after bold and organic sounds, and he was the man for the job--he has brilliant miking technique and a great ear for natural recording. When it came time to record my bass, I had all of these amps lying around. He pulled out an Ampeg head someone had resurrected from the garbage, plugged it into some Trace Elliot cabinets I had, and went out there and insisted on EQing the amp himself. He cranked the shit out of it and miked the cabinets in a way only he knows. I also had a DI going through a Palmer speaker simulator into the console. I used a mix of the two; when we wanted a more in-your-face bass sound, with less air and distortion, I would use just the DI track. On one, "Animate," I used just the amp, which got the sound really pumping and funky. Kevin also talked us into using techniques we hadn't used in years. He had Alex play in the studio instead of the control room, to get that natural resonance happening between hus guitar and amp. He also got Alex to bypass all of his effects--just his guitar straight into Marshalls and other amps. And on every track he had me use my early-'70s Fender Jazz Bass, which I hadn't played in years. BP: Why the Jzz? GL: Peter first suggested it when we were discussing the record early on. We were talking about the sound we wanted, and he told me it might it might be a good idea to a bass without active pickups, to get a more aggressive sound. I thought it was a great suggestion--and I like changing basses every couple of years, anyway. So I started to use it when we were writing. Alex, who does all of the engineering during the writing stage, got a great sound from the bass and I was happy with the direction we were going with it. From then on, there was no turning back. We were really after _size_ when we made this record. Rather than use the SSL console to record all of the instruments, we used an old Neve console; almost all of the things that required decent bottom end went through the Neve. We always had the old technology and the new technology running simultaneously. We walked that line all the way through the record, even on the final mixes. The mixing was done by an Australian engineer named Michael Letho, who brought in a different kind of sophistication and put everything into its proper hifi perspective. All of the tracks were mixed to DAT, but one tune, "Everyday Glory," ended up being an analog-tape mix. For the last few years I've mixed only to digital, because I figured it was just a better tape recorder. But certain songs have a heavier midrange content, and on playback the analog recorder softens the midrange a bit, giving it a more likable sound. It's not as efficient-sounding in terms of the top and bottom end, but it's nicer to listen to. BP: How did you approach the bass playing? Did you write more songs on bass? GL: Many of the songs were written on bass, and a lot of them began with just bass and vocals. I tried to use a much more rhythmic approach this time. I've enjoyed listening to Primus, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, and Soundgarden--bands that have a more active rhythmic role coming from the bass. That's a direction we started going on _Roll the Bones_: trying to use a bit funkier approach to rock and trying to make it more groove-oriented. As a bass player, I wanted to push myself in that direction, also. When I try to lock into a more repetitive, groove-like thing, I've found it's not about playing fewer notes--there are still the same number of notes per bar--but there is less of a _variety_ of notes per bar. I had great fun doing the _Counterparts_ bass tracks because of it; I felt like I was learning something all over again, and I was able to use things I already knew but applied in a different way. And I got a lot of support from Neil in that direction; he got right into it as well. I'm looking forward to playing these songs live. Of our last five or six records, this one will be the most fun to play live. BP: How do you come up with a set list these days? GL: It gets harder and harder every time. Coming up with the set list for this tour is going to be a nightmare. I imagine, because we're coming up on the 20th anniversary of our first record, we'll try to include as many songs from as many albums as possible. It remains to be seen whether we'll pull it off. BP: As a bassist who plays a lot of notes, how do you make your parts fit? GL: I think the bizarre nature of our music allows for more notes. First of all, we have a hyper-active drummer, so it makes for a busier rhythm section. When you think of Rush, you don't think of a sedate rhythm section. I have to say, though, that over the last couple of years, Neil has learned more than ever how to exercise restraint. He listens a lot more to the vocals now, and he tries to stay out of the way. He also has more respect for how important it is to give freedom to the vocal line, and he understands there's a time and a place to do the things he does. We try to hold the "chops" side of our music in reserve and save it for the appropriate moment. But we always allow for that moment to exorcise those demons, and when the moment comes, we let it rip. That way, if there's a tune that's a little more reserved and we get frustrated about not being able to smoke on our instruments, we can think, Hey--there's _this_ song coming up and we can play like maniacs then. BP: You must occasionally hear tapes by young players whose bass playing really is excessive. How would you convey to a player like that the idea of taste? GL: I would tell him to figure out what's the essential thing that's selling the song--what is the _heart_ of the song? Is it the vocal performance? The guitar part? The rhythm section? The lyrical concept? In every tune, there's something that _makes_ the song, and every other part has to serve that element. If you're having trouble figuring out when to be busy or what's wrong with the arrangement, try to boil it down to the one element that makes the song potentially great and build your arrangement around that. BP: Over your career, what qualities do you think you've developed most? GL: I guess it would be knowing when to groove and bite my tongue--when to stay out of my own way. Sometimes I view my job as being the element that keeps the rhythm section smooth, that tries to make it feel groove-oriented. Early in our history, the groove wasn't so important; a lot of the stuff we wrote was intentionally herky-jerky, with shocking changes of meter and things like that. But over the last few years, we've been trying to make music that has a little soul to it, and I view my role as smoothing out any rhythmic things that are uncomfortable--to make the rhythm section sound more fluid and glued-together. BP: Do you agree with players who say the groove is sacred? GL: Yes, but it also depends on where you are--what stage of development you're at and what kind of music is turning you on at the moment. Sometimes it's not the groove you're going for; it's more _math_. At some point you have to appreciate that certain musicians get turned on by playing with the math, and that's okay. BP: There are people who'd say that kind of music isn't as valid. GL: It's perfectly valid. If _you_ think it's valid, it is, and that's all that counts. But that doesn't mean anyone else is going to like it! You may or may not make a living at it, and you may not turn on anyone else besides yourself. If you're going to play with math, do it because you love to do it--not because you expect anyone else to dig it. But if you want to make music that comes from any other part of your body than your head, you have to serve the groove. BP: What have you been listening to in recent years that's made you appreciate the groove more? GL: I think it's just happened. I've been listening to a lot of different things--like old blues records that really don't have much of a groove. I wouldn't say there's one thing that's made me want to play in the groove; it just feels like a natural place to arrive at as a musician. I like an incredible variety of stuff these days. Les Claypool's playing really turns me on; I think he's got a great sense of rhythm. I also like Dean Garcia, who plays in Curve. he's got these zooming bass parts that fly around and are very interesting melodically, and there's a lot of passion to his playing. BP: Do you find it easier, now that you're playing more groove-oriented bass lines, to sing and play at the same time? GL: Yes, to a certain degree. But I still have to go through that process of training myself separately. I first make sure I've got the bass part down, so I'm not struggling. Then I start singing, and it just takes practice--doing it over and over again. Eventually, I get locked in. BP: How do you get your voice ready for a show? GL: On our last tour, I noticed I had to spend at least 20 minutes warming it up. I don't do it in a brutal way, as I used to do when I was younger; it's more of a stretching exercise, like what you do before you play tennis or whatever. I start by singing scales, very easily. Then I sing to a tape, without vocals, of three or four of our songs with parts in different ranges. That way I warm up in a more realistic and less boring way than singing only scales. Warming up makes a tremendous difference, and when I hit the stage my voice is open. What I gain in the front end of the show I lose in the back end, because after two hours my voice is tired. But I feel a lot more comfortable going into the show, because I have much more control. I don't like to warm up for recording, though. Funny things happen to your voice when it's not warmed up, and sometimes if it's not fully open it has an appealing character you want to capture on tape. BP: Why does Neil write all of your lyrics? GL: For one thing, Alex and I are lazy. Neil has done such a good job over the years, we feel as though anything we came up with would be crummy. But if we have ideas for songs we jot them down and see if Neil can use them. BP: You used to write lyrics. GL: I wrote all of them years ago, but that was mostly out of necessity. I didn't know what the hell I was doing. It was like how you got into a band--four guys would get together and someone would say, "Okay you play bass, you play guitar...." That was what it was like for me: "You're the singer, so you write the lyrics." Our lyrics in those days, though, were meaningless--they were just teenage angst words, that sort of thing. Now, when I try writing lyrics, I find I have a lot of things I want to say, but they always come out sounding a little naive. So I turn them over to the prof and let him polish them up. BP: How much do you involve Neil in the writing of the music? GL: A lot. Alex and I do the bulk of the writing, but Neil's ear is invaluble to us. He comes in and tells us if something's wrong or if one part could be used somewhere else; he makes great suggestions. In the same way, we act as a soundingboard for his lyrics, and he and I work closely ironing out the meter of the words. As a singer, I get pleasure out of working with him because if I'm having a problem getting emotional value out of a line, he doesn't hesitate to change something. Up until the point when we're recording the final vocal, he listens to how I'm singing the lines and makes suggestions for changes. There's no ego involved; he's a consummate professional and he accommodates me as much as he can without compromising the intent of the song. BP: Some of Rush's strongest tunes are your instrumentals. Would you ever consider doing an all-instrumental record? GL: We get more and more people responding to our instrumentals, but I don't think so--we always have to be shooting off our mouths about something. The instrumentals are great fun to do, though, and they're easy; recording them is like recess for us. We always try to save one slot per album for an instrumental; the one on _Counterparts_, "Leave That Thing Alone," turned out particularly well. BP: You were taking piano lessons a while back. Did you keep up with them? GL: No I didn't. I wish I had, but I got busy and one thing led to another. With that instrument, you have to be _very_ dedicated--especiall an old dog like me. I found I had to be extremely disciplined, but my life was too busy and I started losing the ability to practice the way I wanted to. I hope it's something I can pick up again when things slow down. Also, my motivation has gotten away from keyboards and back to bass, so I can focus more on playing bass. When I was in the keyboard mode I found I was taking my bass playing for granted; I went through a period when I didn't grow that much. Now that I've narrowed my focus, I think it's helped my playing. BP: Where do you want your bass playing to go? GL: I just want to get better--to be able to groove better. My ultimate goal is to be able to have all of these abilities at my disposal--where I can fit into any musical circumstance and draw upon any necessary style. I've always liked playing aggressive music, but it would be nice to get a combination of groove and dexterity and still maintain a melodic sense. BP: In your off time do you work on your playing, or do you just want to get away from it? GL: To a large degree I walk away from music. After spending seven months touring, I can't even look at my bass. A lot of the musical development I do is in the course of a tour--that's the greatest opportunity to improve. Not only am I playing regularly, but there's a lot of dead time when I'm sitting around, and that's good time to work on my chops. BP: What do you do in your off time? GL: All kinds of stuff. I travel, I play tennis, I go to art galleries, and I go to ball games. And I spend a lot of time with my family. My wife and I have taken up cycling; we try to stay active. BP: How would you like the Rush saga to end? GL: I don't know. Hopefully it won't be because there's a million people out there saying, "Go away!" Instead, I'd like the decision to come from us. I'd like it to be a situation where the three of us look at each other and say, "You know, it's been great. See ya." I don't know how long we can go, and we don't think about it anymore--we just take it one album at a time. I have a feeling we'll know when when it's time to pack it in, but hopefully there are still a few records left in us. BP: After so many years of continued success, what's kept you from resting on your laurels? GL: It's just not interesting to keep doing the same thing from record to record. I'm always looking back on our last album and thinking, I'm not happy about this, that, and the other thing. I guess as long as you keep being unhappy in one way or another with something you've just completed, it gives you somewhere to go. We always feel as if there's a better record in us, so every time we go into the studio, we try to make that perfect record. But we haven't made it yet, so I guess we'll keep trying. << Phew. That was slightly painful, but I'm OK. Any notes of thanks will be appreciated as I nurse my aching typing fingers back to bass playing strength. Please excuse any typos, of course. Personally, I think it was a pretty good interview. I particularly enjoyed Geddy's analysis of himself and the other guys as constantly battling to keep their musicians' "demons" in check. Whole new twist on "counterparts" eh? Now I'll always imagine Geddy as he's playing through something like "Bravado", "God, this is boring. Can't wait to play YYZ next..." Anyhow, too bad there wasn't much specific Cp content. Perhaps the author didn't have access to a preview copy. Oh well. I hope you enjoyed reading it. --David Bell dbell@merle.acns.nwu.edu ----------------------------------------------------------
To submit material to The National Midnight Star, send mail to: rush@syrinx.umd.edu For administrative matters (subscription, unsubscription, changes, and questions), send mail to: rush-request@syrinx.umd.edu or rush-mgr@syrinx.umd.edu There is now anonymous ftp access available on Syrinx. The network address to ftp to is: syrinx.umd.edu or 129.2.8.114 When you've connected, userid is "anonymous", password is <your userid>. Once you've successfully logged on, change directory (cd) to 'rush'. There is also a mail server available (for those unable or unwilling to ftp). For more info, send email with the subject line of HELP to: server@ingr.com These requests are processed nightly. Use a subject line of MESSAGE to send a note to the server keeper or to deposit a file into the archive. Gopher access is now available on syrinx! Use this command to access the gopher: gopher syrinx.umd.edu 2112 The contents of The National Midnight Star are solely the opinions and comments of the individual authors, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the authors' management, or the mailing list management. Copyright (C) 1993 by The Rush Fans Mailing List Editor, The National Midnight Star (Rush Fans Mailing List) ******************************************** End of The National Midnight Star Number 812 ********************************************