Album Reviews
Now that Yes have been shaken up. Genesis have gotten hep and even Kansas are in limbo, Rush have the underground-FM. "oh, wow"-profound market to themselves. True, Rush are a comedown from the early Yes they ravage, but at least they never mush out like Genesis. Their power-trio lineup keeps them hard-edged, despite the occasional synthesizer whoosh. And they're more single-mindedly propulsive than their forebears. Rush's ingenuity is channeled into complicated riffs below triumphant major chords, with Alex Lifeson's guitar serving largely as reinforcement for Geddy Lee's mammoth bass tones. Both live and in the studio. Rush's mixes make everything above the midrange sound like an afterthoughtand that's just as well. Though Lee's falsetto isn't a shriek anymore, drummer Neil Peart's lyrics can still irritate. Taking individualism to Avn Rand-inspired extremes, Peart's most pessimistic screeds suggest that in the upcoming apocalypse, every-man-for-himself will turn into stomp-the-other-guy.
There's not much propaganda on Exit ...Stage Leftonly "The Trees" (the maples unionize and, in the name of equality, destroy the taller oaks), "Free Will" (the group is for it) and "Tom Sawyer" (hardly the fun-loving guy Mark Twain invented). The rest of the record includes pessimistic fables ("Red Barchetta"), travelogues ("A Passage to Bangkok"), hippieisms ("The Spirit of Radio") and instrumentals ("YYZ" and "La Villa Strangiato," minus its original subtitle). Except for a singalong in "Closer to the Heart" and a jokey intro to "Jacob's Ladder," the versions here are virtually identical to the studio renditions, so Rush fans may find the set redundant. Others might get a kick out of the big, surging E chords the band keeps pumping out and perhaps appreciate Peart's fine-tuned percussion, but one Rush album (preferably Moving Pictures) should be enough for almost anybody.
Just about everything Rush do can be found, more compactly, in Yes' "Roundabout," with the remainder in Genesis' "Watcher of the Skies." Everything except the philosophyand stage left is, of course, to the audience's far right.
(Posted: Feb 4, 1982)
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- The Spirit Of Radio
- Red Barchetta
- YYZ
- A Passage To Bangkok
- Closer To The Heart
- Beneath, Between, And Behind
- Jacob's Ladder
- Broon's Bane
- The Trees
- Xanadu
- Freewill
- Tom Sawyer
- La Villa Strangiato
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