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Showing posts with label Rush. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rush. Show all posts

Thursday, 3 October 2019

Albums That Have Been Gathering Dust : Rush - Power Windows




The biggest question that I used to get as a Rush fan was but how do you stand his voice? Then into the 80's, it was don't they do those side long Prog things? There was also those who accused the band of selling out from Permanent Waves onward. Well you get used to the voice, it's been rarely mentioned since the 90's, they were Prog, but haven't been since Hemispheres. It was also the complexity of that album, particularly playing it Live, that led to shorter less complex songs.

The structure of the songs wasn't any less enjoyable, indeed the side long affairs were made up of individual shorter parts. More of a problem in the 80's for some listeners, particularly those of a Rawk persuasion, was the embrace of technology which fought with the guitar. Permanent Waves and Moving Pictures were when Rush hit pay dirt, the songs would never be throwaway. Peart's lyrics wouldn't carry less meaning, it eventually became about those bloody synths.

Signals hinted at what was to come and Grace Under Pressure provided more evidence. Grace Under Pressure is a fantastic album, dated by that keyboard sound. Geddy Lee bought every synth in the shop and wanted to play them all. I had been asked to write a big piece on Rush in the 80's and the only album that I couldn't defend was Presto, it remains unloved, but it's still better than the mediocre Test For Echo. At least Presto was trying to do something different, Test For Echo was phoned in.








In between T4E and Presto were two albums that I used to play regularly, but hadn't for some time. Hold Your Fire was initially hard to get in the UK, but is a fantastic album, Rush at their most poptastic. I'd love to do a piece on that and may do for something like the next Big Stir Magazine. But 1985's Power Windows it is and it still sounds as great as it ever did. Yes there are still keyboards, but not quite as many and Alex Lifeson had finally decided that he wasn't Andy Summers.

The stand out song is Marathon with a Riff that hooks you, but that's a Bass Riff and one of the band's biggest ever choruses, although this was outdone by Mission on Hold Your Fire. The whole thing is so damn melodic and catchy. You still air drum to Peart, but the biggest plus is Lifeson's playing, oh how we missed you Alex and what about that solo on Marathon? Not forgetting Anne Dudley's String arrangement.









Power Windows isn't just about the arrangements, it's all about those choruses. Grand Designs and Manhattan Project are great examples, the latter's Jangling riff that leads up to the first line of the chorus, "A Big Bang Took And Shook The World".There's a slightly gentler approach to the old Side 2. There is an almost Chinese feel in Intros. Territories has a killer Peart Drum Beat on the chorus. Middletown Dreams is moodier and more straight ahead, but has another Big Chorus.

Emotion Detector, tinkles and jangles until a paint stripping Lifeson solo and yes there's a big chorus. Mystic Rhythms hits that Rhythm and it carries you home. Rush have usually opened up albums with simpler, more throwaway songs, a sort of Loosener. This time it's Big Money, next time it would be Force Ten.







So Power Windows may not be as talked about in Rush circles as it should be. It is probably the band's most commercial album, despite the lyrical depth. It is all about the choruses, but more importantly, it marked Alex's Lifeson's return to being the guitar extraordinaire that he is. You can pick the CD up for buttons, you really should. Over and Out!



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Saturday, 10 December 2016

Rush - Time Stand Still



It's as though you don't choose Rush as your band, they choose you. For all my music collection and love of all different bands, my connection with Rush is unbreakable and I suspect most fans feel the same way, It's not a cult following, the audience is bigger and for most cult bands, you cannot understand why everyone doesn't like them, you know why everyone doesn't get Rush.

There's Geddy Lee's voice, the side long Prog epics that continually get mentioned, when they accounted for just 6 years of a 40 odd year career. It may also be that Rush fans don't do air guitar solos, they do air drum solos, such is Neil Peart's domination of the band.

So this commercial release of the Rush R40 Farewell Tour is a fan thing. It isn't a history, the 2010 documentary, Beyond The Lighted Stage does that and is acknowledged as one of the finest documentaries in the genre. It's about the band's relationship with the fans. There are some tour tales, particularly about supporting Kiss in the 70's, but this is largely about and for the fans.




It isn't faultless, some sections over do the fawning and although Geddy Lee acknowledges that Rush would not have been able to keep to their beliefs without the fan support, this hasn't always rung true commercially. They ignored the UK for a good while as they chased the buck and my biggest horror was when they started to do VIP Packages.

VIP Packages are everything that irritates me about live touring. They are akin to paying more at Theme Parks to jump the ride queue. Meeting the fans shouldn't be based on who pays the most. But the band have never compromised musically. They remain a progressive group who can write choruses and the quality, album wise, is exceptional.

The 80's, sound wise, are dated by Geddy Lee buying six new keyboards for every album, Lifeson wanting to be Andy Summers for too long and Neal Peart's Electronic Drum fascination, but the songs from those times remain stellar.




There haven't been too many turkeys either. Presto divides fans, but for me, the only album that I can't abide is Test For Echo, the one album that is Rush by numbers. With Neil Peart's personal tragedy after that album, I hoped it wouldn't end with that, fortunately it didn't.

So the touring has ended and there's no indication that the band will continue to record. But what is left is a fine body of work and the admiration of all Rush fans. The Rush albums take pride of place in my collection, vinyl and CD and although it can be heresy to criticise them, I reckon I've paid my dues and am qualified enough to put across a point of view.

This release won't garner any new fans, but it's just the ticket for those who have been on the journey and it'll make those fans cry, it certainly reduced me to tears, an emotion I'm unused to.




Others have looked to take on the Rush mantle, few have achieved this. Dream Theater wanted to show how technically proficient they were, if you can play, you don't need to demonstrate this, Coheed And Cambria are too comic book, Mew too twee. Perhaps the nearest were Porcupine Tree.

We won't see their like again because bands are not nurtured by record companies as they were in the 70's and album sales are killed by piracy and streaming. But I'm thankful that I was born at at a time to appreciate what a band can bring to your life.