Album Reviews
Most of the material on A Show of Hands is from Power Windows (1985) and Hold Your Fire (1987). Many of the performances stick closely to the studio versions, even down to having 'til Tuesday's Aimee Mann repeat her backing-vocal stint for "Time Stand Still." The sensation of a studio recording is heightened by the remarkable sound quality of the recording (even the crowd recorded well).
Rush's prodigious chops are proven crowd pleasers, but this collection is a morass of muscle-bound technique, quasi-profound lyrics and bassist-key-boardist Geddy Lee's shrill screech. Even the drum solo by the awe-inspiring Neil Peart ("The Rhythm Method"), complete with obligatory gong crash, is not nearly as good as what he throws into the regular songs. In spite of (or perhaps because of) all the pyrotechnics, the music has the emotional emptiness of bad jazz fusion. "Nothing can survive in a vacuum," as Lee squeals in "Turn the Page."
The last four numbers begin to redeem the album, but it's too little too late for this seventy-five minute, double-LP endurance test.
(Posted: Apr 20, 1989)
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- Intro
- The Big Money
- Subdivisions
- Marathon
- Turn The Page
- Manhattan Project
- Mission
- Distant Early Warning
- Mystic Rhythms
- Witch Hunt (Part III of "Fear")
- The Rhythm Method (Drum Solo)
- Force Ten
- Time Stand Still
- Red Sector A
- Closer To The Heart
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