I've often said that Rush is the perfect band for high school-age males. Discovering them at age 12 when Moving Pictures was all over the radio, me and my friends devoured every album, every song lyric, every drum fill, and treated it like precious nuggets of wisdom that no one else quite understood like we did. "Subdivisions" was a real eye opener, as I gave a lot of thought to Peart's lyrics about the ennui of free young thinkers in Suburbia, USA, and quietly decided to myself that I wasn't going to play the game of "conform or be cast out". The strange feelings of alienation I'd been feeling were suddenly validated, as I realized I wasn't the only one who felt this way (remember, there were no online forums then, where disaffected youth could cry on each others' shoulders...we were all alone).
I narrowly missed seeing the band in concert on the "Signals" tour, because, yes, it was a School Night (collective groan). As the 80s wore on, I became progressively (ha) less interested with each new release, but I dutifully bought them all, up through "Roll the Bones", where I finally got to see them live. By then, though, the teenage thrills I got from the band had died down, and I was hell bent on expanding into other areas of progressive music, so I kind of forgot about Rush for a while.
Fast forward 20 years, and suddenly there's a bigger buzz about Rush than there'd been in years. While the band never really went away, and many would argue that they never put out a subpar album, there was something about Clockwork Angels which intrigued me enough to bring them back into my life. And while the album still hasn't blown me away, I'm still as excited about Rush as I've been in decades. And on November 1st, I found myself back in that audience, 20 years older (and looking it), as Rush did the same thing they've been doing for close to 40 years -- pushing themselves physically and mentally to play their complex music, and delivering an experience that only a consummate group of professionals could pull off.
Set List
Subdivisions (my favorite song)
The Big Money
Force Ten
Grand Designs
Limelight
Territories
The Analog Kid
The Pass
Where's My Thing? (w/ drum solo)
Far Cry
(set break)
Caravan
Clockwork Angels
The Anarchist
Carnies
The Wreckers
Headlong Flight
(another Clockwork song or two I couldn't place)
The Garden
Dreamline (took me the whole song to remember this one)
Electronic Drum feature thingy, leading into:
Red Sector A (yess!)
YYZ
The Spirit of Radio
encore:
Tom Sawyer
2112 Overture/Temples/Finale
The Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
was a lovely venue, though the corporate vendors all over the place plugging products was a wee bit tacky. Been over 10 years since I was at a "big show" like this, so I guess this may be the new norm, as the CONCERT HALL (drrn drrrn drrn da derrrrn) echoed with the sound of Salesmen... oofffffff SAAAALESMEN!!!
Oh, and it was pretty cold too. Geddy even remarked on it.
I should point out too that I was in good company, with my friend Mark and three of his former co-workers, all die-hard Rush fans. We met in a parking lot a few miles from the venue, gathered our stuff all in one car, and rode to the show together, enjoying a little tailgating action in the parking lot, with cheeseburgers, potato chips and pasta salad. Like many do nowadays, I mentioned the Rush show in a "status update" I posted on Facebook, and immediately a whole motley crew of present and past friends (including a guy who I played in a band with in high school, when we once attempted to play Xanadu) joined in the fun.
And the last word concerning Rush. It feels good to be serviced by professionals now and then. For all my affinity for underground bands playing in dark caves, Rush are and always have been top flight musicians at the top of their game, putting on shows where no expense is spared to make everyone in a huge Amphitheater audience feel like they're a part of the action. Great show, great experience.
Edited by HolyMoly - November 02 2012 at 08:34