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Rush
Tickets
Rush
Concert Tickets
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Rush |
| One of
the most misunderstood bands in rock, Rush are still associated
largely with the screechy vocals and excessive concept-rock
of their early days. In fact, the Canadian trio began outgrowing
that approach after their first half-dozen albums, and have
slowly progressed to a song-based format that combines dazzling
playing with an ever-increasing grasp of melody and nuance.
Instead of clinging to their musical adolescence, Rush is
one of the very few '70s bands who've gotten consistently
better over the years.
This isn't to say that Rush's early albums
weren't period pieces at best. On its 1973 debut Rush was
a truly unspectacular Led Zeppelin soundalike; the weighty,
mythological lyrics provided by drummer Neil Peart (who
joined for the second album, Fly By Night, in Rush's only
personnel change) didn't help. The Zeppelinesque approach
reached its peak on 1976's 2112, a concept album beloved
by deep-thinking high-schoolers everywhere. But Rush were
one of the few old-guard bands who took a hint from new
wave and sounded better for it; their 1979 album Permanent
Waves showed the Police's influence, and the following year's
Moving Pictures--which included the hit "Tom Sawyer"--showed
a willingness to strip things down, for Peart to write on
a more down-to-earth level, and for Geddy Lee to stop screeching
and start singing. Tellingly, they'd never record another
song longer than six minutes.
It's been uphill from there, and Rush can
now call itself a thinker's hard-rock band without embarrassment.
The songwriting took a quantum leap on 1984's Grace Under
Pressure, which introduced electronics to their formerly
guitar-based sound; its lead-off track, "Distant Early
Warning," showed they'd gotten familiar with depth
and subtlety. By the time of 1989's Presto, they'd taken
on a textured pop sound in the same general territory as
Adrian Belew's work outside King Crimson. They've stayed
there ever since, with Peart's lyrics expressing a convincingly
humanist point of view (especially after the tragic deaths
of his wife and daughter, which led to a six-year recording
hiatus between 1996's Test For Echo and 2002's Vapor Trails),
and Lee's vocals having a regular-guy appeal that would
have been unthinkable in the old days. And by the way, guitarist
Alex Lifeson is a powerhouse.
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