The National Midnight Star #20

Errors-To: rush@syrinx.umd.edu Reply-To: rush@syrinx.umd.edu Sender: rush@syrinx.umd.edu Precedence: bulk From: rush@syrinx.umd.edu To: rush-list-all Subject: RUSH Fans Digest of 07/31/90 (#20)
RUSH Fans Digest, Number 20 Tuesday, 31 July 1990 Today's Topics: Re: RUSH Fans Digest of 07/30/90 (#19) The Pass Re: RUSH Fans Digest of 07/30/90 (#19) Everything Under the Sun digital man Re: RUSH Fans Digest of 07/30/90 (#19) Re: RUSH Fans Digest of 07/30/90 (#19) "$" and The Pass The Pass, etc. ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 30 Jul 90 14:26:10 PDT From: barish@gauss.llnl.gov (Greg Barish) Subject: Re: RUSH Fans Digest of 07/30/90 (#19) rstark@cogsci.edinburgh.ac.uk writes: >>Here's another Canadian Band: Voivod. A wonderful progressive metal band. >>Kinda weird, but cool. They remind me of a cross between RUSH, Pink Floyd, >>and Metallica. >Sounds interesting. In another forum, I heard this bad also described as >"Rush meets Pink Floyd". Any other comments on this band? Yes. Voivod is a band that's actually been around for quite awhile. Their latest release, "Nothingface", is something like their 6th album. I'm not sure if they were ever on the SST label, but I know that they are now on Mechanic Records. As for the comparisons between Voivod and Pink Floyd, I would have to say that the two bands are quite different except for the song Astronomy Domine which Voivod covered on "Nothingface." I read that the band was asked by their new record company to play a song that could recieve some airplay for the sake of band exposure. The band agreed and covered the afore mentioned Pink Floyd song. That, to me, is the only real comparison one can make between the two groups. As for the album Nothingface, it's is an intense work. If you want a good sample of what that album is like without listening to the whole thing, try the song "Missing Sequences". Excellent. The whole album, like their previous ones, is about a mythical creature (called the Voivod) that makes observations of the galaxy around it. The "Nothingface" album is (as explained by the band) set in the scenario of self-introspection. If this sounds all too complicated, just wait until you buy the album and look at the lyrics. I've had it for over 4 months now and still can't figure out what they're saying in many parts. The lyrics contain a surprising number of references to chemical principles and the field of alchemy itself. The music is a cross between Rush and thrash metal. Its tone is dark and heavy. Great to play on a rainy day whilst your eyes are glued to the CRT. I have them on a tape that contains Soundgarden on the other side (in fact, the two bands toured together). If you like music that creates a definite atmosphere (gloomy as it may be), put those two bands together. So, do yourself a favor and buy Nothingface. It's a remarkable find to add to your collection (esp if you're a CD owner -- the CD is recorded in DDD). greg barish@gauss.llnl.gov "paranoia will destroy ya." ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 30 Jul 90 18:09:23 edt From: rochester!cci632!ccird5!vcp@harvard.harvard.edu (Vitas Povilaitis - co-op) Subject: The Pass In response, to Ron Chrisley who believes that "the Pass" is an anti-Christ song... First of all, it seems to me that you'd have to be pretty pessimistic in order to interpret a song in such a way to disagree with its contents. It's certainly an interesting interpretation. However, I tend to agree that the song is directed to the person who committed suicide. As Gary Long said previously, his roommate committed suicide and everyone hated him for it. I think this relates to the line "Someone set a bad example...Made surrender seem all right." A better example would be the string of suicides of high school kids that follow the suicide of their friend. This is something I've read in the newspaper. I think the song talks about the situation in which a popular person commits suicide and makes the people close to him (or her) question their own existance - I mean here's a popular person who didn't feel good enough to keep on living; how do the people close to that person feel since they weren't as popular? I think the other line that was quoted was also mis-interpreted... I think it was "Christ! What have you done?" rather than "Christ, what have you done?" In other words, "Christ" is being used as an exclamation rather that a direction toward a particular person. I like this song because it puts down suicide. I certainly wouldn't like it if it was anti-Christ. I wonder how other people interpret this song? -Vitas P.- ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 30 Jul 90 23:31:41 EDT From: warsaw@cme.nist.gov (Barry A. Warsaw) Subject: Re: RUSH Fans Digest of 07/30/90 (#19) Just some random blatherings... Jeff> - Chronicles was prepared from the original master tapes Now, if they re-mixed the early stuff for digital, then it might be *really* worth it (ADD as opposed to AAD). Chuck> For people who got into Rush BEFORE _Exit,_Stage_Left_ came Chuck> out, what is your favorite album to come out SINCE ESL? And Chuck> why? Well, Hemispheres being their first album released after I got into them, I guess I qualify. I think my lasting post-ESL fave is Power Windows, because of the effect it had on me at the time. At the place I was in my life, I felt this album really had a message for me, and I've never really gotten over that feeling. Not to mention that I think PoW has some of the best musicianship of that period (certain some of the toughest and most fun Geddy bass parts since then, tho' the other albums have their moments). I tend to agree with much of what Randall Stark said about PoW in the previous digest. David> On another topic, John Fourkas (spike@d31mf0.stanford.edu) David> mentions that ASCII 1001001 is "I" and ASCII 100100 is "$", David> as a possible explanation of the chorus of "The Body David> Electric". I tend to think the former ("I") is indeed the David> intended reference. Reason: Neil was as we all know quite David> influenced by Ayn Rand, and in her works Rand held the word David> "I" to be of enormous significance, the key to David> self-realization in fact. True enough, but the dollar sign ("$") also played a very significant and important part in at least one of Rand's novels: Atlas Shrugged, though I tend to agree that... David> As far as the "100100" at the end of the chorus, it's my David> guess that was merely a musical decision to trim off the David> last syllable, in order to cut off the chorus cleanly. Now, does any know if the boyz are computer-geeky enough (in the nicest sense, of course :-) to know the ASCII character set and their binary representations? -Barry ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 30 Jul 90 23:36:51 hst From: Hinano Akaka <bigtuna!hinano@uhccux.uhcc.Hawaii.Edu> Subject: Everything Under the Sun Well, about that post-ESL thing...hmmm, I guess my favourite would be P/G. I think when the album came out, I was so overjoyed by the fact that it was a new Rush album (this being just after i had "rediscovered" them) that I never got depressed by the songs, even after 6 years. To this day, P/G just really lifts my spirits. Can't really explain why. NEIL'S LAST NAME: Oh boy, why does this sound familiar? Ha! what can I say I asked this same question not too long ago! As I have asked, so shall I answer--it's pronounced like "ear", "fear", etc. For the longest time, I kept hearing it said like "hurt", but when I saw his name written, I was shocked. I thought, "That ain't like 'hurt', that's pronounced like 'fear'!" But i figured everyone knew better (ha!)...Oh, for the source--a dj in San Diego, everyone who answered in the forum, and just by the way it's spelled... ALEX SOLOS: Some of my favourite (and this from someone who can't play two chords) solos are Xanadu, DEW (don't ask!), Between the wheels, Subdivisions, Red Barchetta, oh heck, I can't think of any more, there are a whole bunch (allright, Every song!!!), but one that COMPLETELY blows me away, is his solo on "Witch Hunt" off of ASOH. I end up playing that part 5 times at least at every listening. Damn, that thing sounds good... THE PASS: I think I missed some earlier posting, the computer system over here (or there since I'm at home doing this via modem) blacks out once in a while, so I tend to miss a few. At the risk of putting my foot in my mouth, I just wanted to say a few things about "The Pass" and Neil's writing in general. I disagree with the idea that Neil is discussing Jesus anywhere in the song. Obviously I don't know him personally, but I don't think he's the type to dismiss religion altogether. For _himself_, maybe (altho I don't think he's exactly an aetheist, not that it's any of our business anyway), but I don't think he would condemn either a religion or Jesus himself. Then again, everyone's entitled to their opinion. However, that's not exactly my point. My point is, I don't think he's referring to Jesus or his life anywhere in the song--I don't believe that's the point he's trying to make. Neil strikes me as the kind of person who would, on the contrary _agree_ with what Jesus was trying to get across, much less call his life, teachings, and subsequent death a failure. I stick to the earlier assessment that the song is about suicide, which brings me to my other point. Neil writes in such a way that you can take what's written and apply to any applicable situation. He writes about the very _root_ of the emotion, and of the emotion itself, THAT is what the song/s are about, he tends to use the situations as an outline. Because of that, you can put almost any interpretation into the song and come out with your own meaning. I like that, and that's the way HE thinks personally--he likes songs that are universal, which is why he writes universal songs. Anyway, I'm not attacking your interpretation that The Pass has references to religion--it's great, it's one more way of looking at the song. I'm just throwing in my 2 cents (or at the rate this thing is going, more like $5.00!). Anyway, I've taken up enough space. Ho-Hoo! (Ray, this computer has been acting up, which is why I haven't been able to get back to you. It's behaving now, so I'll send you something tomorrow. Until then, a hui hou!) "Suddenly ahead of me, across the mountainside..." Puanani Akaka ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 31 Jul 90 05:54:15 PDT From: antonyc%coil.caltech.edu@Tybalt.Caltech.Edu (Bill T. Cat) Subject: digital man ok. now that someone's mentioned it, why doesn't the digital man need a bed? antony chan "Science, like Nature, must also be tamed with a view towards its preservation..." ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 31 Jul 90 08:33:19 MST From: Jeff Jonsson <DATACTL%UTAHLIB.BITNET@CORNELLC.cit.cornell.edu> Subject: Re: RUSH Fans Digest of 07/30/90 (#19) Yes, Chronicles is coming out October 3rd, but what label is it on? I assume it's on Mercury/Polygram, but I am not sure, can anyone confirm or refute this? Danke. ======================================================================== Come! See the violence | Jeff Jonsson ___ inherent in the system! | <DATACTL@UTAHLIB.BITNET> | |__ Help! Help! I'm being | | UofU | repressed! | |______| ======================================================================= ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 31 Jul 90 08:56:02 MST From: Jeff Jonsson <DATACTL%UTAHLIB.BITNET@CORNELLC.cit.cornell.edu> Subject: Re: RUSH Fans Digest of 07/30/90 (#19) Yeah, it's me again. I have Voivod's latest album, "Nothingface", and it is very good. The reason people say that they are a cross between Pink Floyd and RUSH is because they are a very hard-edged band, that just happened to make one of the best covers of a Pink Floyd song I have ever heard. The cover is "Astronomy Domine" and it compares very favorably to the original. Voivod played Salt Lake City recently with Soundgarden as an opening act. No one stayed to hear Voivod because Soundgarden was very hot at the time, and Voivod was relatively unknown. They missed a good performance. I'm not sure whether Voivod is Canadian or not, I'll just take your word for it. They don't sound a heck of a lot like RUSH in anything except volume. Their main emphasis is a sort of demented psychedelia, nothing at all like the controlled fury of RUSH. Another reason that RUSH and Voivod are compared is they both use Sci-fi themes in their lyrics. Voivod's album is covered with computer graphic paintings which convey a sort of Cyberpunk feel. Anyway, if anyone knows any more about Voivod tell us all. ======================================================================== Come! See the violence | Jeff Jonsson ___ inherent in the system! | <DATACTL@UTAHLIB.BITNET> | |__ Help! Help! I'm being | | UofU | repressed! | |______| ======================================================================= ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 31 Jul 90 10:12:24 EDT From: bsb2u@prime.acc.virginia.edu Subject: "$" and The Pass Hello All, I haven't posted in a long time because I was away earlier in the summer and it has taken quite a while to catch up on all the old digests. There is truly an enormous amount of great information in our backlogs! Concerning the ASCII values of 1001001 and 100100, I think that both the "I" and the "$" are intended. It is true that "I" is of enormous importance in the philosophy and writings on Ayn Rand, but the dollar sign is just as important. Rand was the consummate capitalist. At the end of one of her more well known works (Atlas Shrugged, I think) the main character traces a dollar sign over the earth with his hand. It is possible that these ASCII equivalences are are coincidences, but the fact that the two numbers correspond to the two most appropriate symbols for the song makes this seem unlikely to me. I had never noticed before it was pointed out on the list, but it makes a lot of sense. My thanks to whoever brought it up. Concerning the recent discussion of The Pass, I have to disagree with the assessment of that song as a statement of religious doctrine (anti-Christian or otherwise). From what I have heard (and read) Neil say about the song in interviews and from my own understanding of it, It seems to be much more personal than that. It's about the tremendous cost of suicide both to the one in despair and to the ones left behind. "Someone set a bad example, made surrender seem alright..." I suppose the line conceivably could be a reference to Christ, but I think of it more as a condemnation of the popular attitude that suicide is somehow romantic or spectacular. "Christ, what have you done?" Maybe it's just me, but I think "Christ" is to be understood as an expletive here, not a noun of address. I think of that line as the panic that a suicide must feel in the moments between the pill swallowing or the wrist slitting and the loss of consciousness; the ultimate realization: "Oh my God, I'm going to die!" In second person because it's from the singer's point of view. (excuse my fragment) I didn't mean to ramble on about this for so long, but The Pass is a very powerful song. I don't mean to discredit a religious interpretation out of hand, but I think that is reading too much into a fairly straightforward song. I'd like to hear other personal thoughts on The Pass, though I know there have already been some from a while back. I'll close with a question. Does anyone know if there is some strong PERSONAL motivation behind The Pass, like with Afterimage? bsb2u@prime.acc.virginia.edu Brian Bevins "And now you're trembling on a rocky ledge...." -ORQ ---------------------------------------------------------- Subject: The Pass Date: Tue, 31 Jul 90 11:44:41 EDT From: David Arnold <davida@umd5.UMD.EDU> In Digest #19, ?? wrote: > What is the proper pronunciation of "Peart"? Is it: >1.) rhymes with "art", "part", "heart" etc.; >2.) rhymes with "beer", "ear", "near", etc. (with a 't' on the end); >3.) rhymes with "air", "bare", "fair", etc. (with a 't' on the end); [ etc., etc. ] It's pronounced "Peert", as in #2 above. Geddy pronounces it this way on the Electric Lady tape ("... our new drummer, Neil Peart ..."), and I believe Neil has also clarified this in at least one interview. Any other interview collectors out there to back me up? In the same Digest, Ron Chrisley wrote: >When hearing the lyrics to this song for the first time, I felt that same >feeling again: Peart sees Christ's death as not only a personal defeat, but >also as a defeat for all those who believe in him. "Someone set a bad >example... made surrender seem all right". I think Peart is speaking of >Christ's self-sacrifice. No, "The Pass" is written about teenage suicide, not anything Christian, or anti-Christian. Apparently the band (and Neil in particular) have been touched by death deeply, as "Afterimage" also deals with death (not neces- serily suicide, tho). The line "Christ, what have you done?" is aimed at the person who commits the suicide; "Christ" being an exclamative statement, not directed at Jesus. Also, thespot!root@uunet.UU.NET (Postmaster) wrote: >I have of couple of questions about the album _Caress_of_Steel_... >2) Under the titles of some songs there is the name of a city. I noticed > South Bend was on a couple. I'm from South Bend, and wondered why it > was there... Wasn't this on _Fly By Night_, not _Caress of Steel_? (Or do I need to get a copy of the original liner notes from somebody??) Anyway, I was under the impression that this was the city (on their never-ending touring of the early days) where the song was written. Corroborate? Refute? By the way, if you have actual liner notes from COS, and if you're willing to X-rox them for me, PLEASE send me mail to: davida@umd5.umd.edu or uunet!umd5.umd.edu!davida Then, from cygnus@wpi.wpi.edu (Marshall Robin): >Well, as far as I can remember, the previewed songs were Fly By Night and >Best I Can on Stellar Dynamics, Also, "In The End". David Arnold Keywords: Rush, Neville Brothers, Squeeze, Crack the Sky, Peter Gabriel, ELP, Jethro Tull, Pink Floyd, Inet: davida@umd5.umd.edu Talking Heads, Arc Of Ones (RIP), Stones, BOC, UUCP: uunet!umd5.umd.edu!davida King Crimson, Police, Grass Roots, Hollies ----------------------------------------------------------
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