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Cesar Inca
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Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator
In my humble opinion (which is coincident with that of many Rush loyal
followers), "Hemispheres" establishes the finest hour of Lee, Lifeson and Peart as both
performers and portrayers. Keeping their strong step on the road of hard rock driven
symphonic prog that had been started in "A Farewell to Kings", "Hemispheres" finds this
power trio exhibiting an air of finesse fluidly combined with their habitual metallic rock
conviction. The namesake suite, which occupied the whole A-side in the vinyl format, is
a perfect example of the maturity that by now Rush has achieved: it is more cohesive
and its successive sections are more cleverly arranged in an integral way than
the '2112' or 'Fountain of Lamneth' suites. The link between the 'Prelude' and the main
motifs of 'Apollo' and 'Dionysus' arrives to an awesome climax in the martial-like tout-de-
force of 'Armageddon'; the inscrutable spatial ambience in the first part of 'Cygnus'
creates a dramatic ethereal intermission between the epic fire of the previous sections
and the one that burns even more intensely in the climax that signals the last part
of 'Cygnus'. A bang on the gong announces the closure of 'Cygnus' with powerful
majesty, but there's still something left: a beautiful 1-minute acoustic ballad in which
Lee gently proclaims the dream of a unity of both sides of the human soul (the rational
and the emotional). Hard as it seems to be, the remaining repertoire is not to be
overshadowed by this explosive epic. Well, 'Circumstances' actually is just a moderately
complex rocky number, whose melodic lines are based on catchy guitar riffs: but what a
good rock song it is, indeed. 'The Trees' is an attractive fable that still nowadays is part
of the band's usual tracklist on stage. Its storyline, centered on the subject of unfair
inequity being eventually replaced by forced equity, is conveniently reflected by the
varied instrumentation, handled with a sense of fine musical vision: a classical guitar
intro, the rockier sequences switching from 4/4 to 6/4 with total fluidity, a brief
introspective interlude in which the Moog solo and the cowbells portray a forest in a
state of "calm before the storm". each and every element in this song shouts out the
greatness conveyed in it as a whole. And the same happens in the case of 'La Villa
Strangiato', a powerful instrumental "exercise in self-indulgence" that is among the
most emblematic pieces in Rush's entire career. All along its 12 sections displayed in a
time span of 9 and a half minutes, the threesome expose their technical abilities and
their combined versatility in order to create a multi-faceted journey through the realms
of symph prog, hard rock, jazz rock, Arabic-like eerie ambiences (even a memorable
although brief Flamenco intro!!). The guys seem to be at ease fulfilling such a
demanding task, having fun while challenging the listener with all the overwhelming
complexity that is contained in 'La Villa'. What a way to close down an album! In fact,
what an album! Just like its predecessor, "Hemispheres" is a 5-star masterpiece.
Cesar Inca |5/5 |
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