The National Midnight Star #198

Errors-To: rush-request@syrinx.umd.edu Reply-To: rush@syrinx.umd.edu Sender: rush-request@syrinx.umd.edu Precedence: bulk From: rush@syrinx.umd.edu To: rush_mailing_list Subject: 03/22/91 - The National Midnight Star #198
** ____ __ ___ ____ ___ ___ ** ** / /_/ /_ /\ / /__/ / / / / /\ / /__/ / ** ** / / / /__ / \/ / / / / /__/ / \/ / / /___ ** ** ** ** __ ___ ____ ** ** /\ /\ / / \ /\ / / / _ /__/ / ** ** / \/ \ / /___/ / \/ / /___/ / / / ** ** ** ** ____ ____ ___ ___ ** ** /__ / /__/ /__/ ** ** ____/ / / / / \ ** The National Midnight Star, Number 198 Friday, 22 March 1991 Today's Topics: Broon's Bane, Neil's lyrics Other music lists. Re: DDD vs AAD vs ADD Red barchetta and so on... DEW interpretation (long) Aphrodite vs. that other god nobody can spell eggs... digital recording Cassette Poll Update Textbooks and Rush ---------------------------------------------------------- From: Editor, The National Midnight Star <rush-mgr@syrinx.umd.edu> Subject: Administrivia Well, it's the time of year for many of you in the academic areas to be thinking of your favorite warm spot to take a week or so off in... That's right, Spring Break is close at hand for many of you on the list, meaning you won't be around for a week or more to read mail. To make thinks smooth in general, if you are anticipating not being around to read mail for several days, you might send mail to be removed from the list, then re-subscribe when you get back. Some systems have problems with large unread mail files; yours might be one of them. Thank you for your support. rush-mgr P.S. Things should be back to normal by the time you get this... ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 21 Mar 91 23:29:21 hst From: Hinano Akaka <bigtuna!hinano@uhccux.uhcc.Hawaii.Edu> Subject: Broon's Bane, Neil's lyrics Hello, Good day, and Greetings -- Hey, how come I'm always last in the posts...? Alright -- Well, surprise! surprise! I heard "Working Man" on the radio Tuesday night!!! Let me see, that makes approx. 7 years since I've heard it on the radio. One question: how often do the rest of you hear "Working Man" when the stations (finally) decide to play Rush songs? Hmmm, this conjurs up another story...(NO!!!). No, I won't say it... About the Broon's Bane thing, one way we could find out is to ask Neil about it via the Backstage Club. I'm sure if Alex himself doesn't answer, and he probably won't because Neil's usually the one who answers the questions, Neil would probably ask him about it. Or he could already know. Anyway, I would really be interested myself in knowing what the story is behind that. It really is a beautiful piece. I would volunteer in writing and asking, but I've already sent in about 3 questions as it is! But if anyone does, let us know if you've written in, and if Neil ever gets around to answering all the questions we can all look for it in the next newsletter. Just an idea. Neil's lyrics: I've always liked Neil's lyrics. There are times he gets a little too literal or whatever, but my feeling is that he's exploring and feeling his way around as a lyricist ("so give it your best shot, give it some thought, and put it in the mail slot" or something to that effect...). I think, unlike his drumming, he hasn't reached that plateau -- probably won't for some time. As a writer myself, I know how hard it is to simply write something that's good; even worse, something that _I_ think is good -- and that's a lot to ask for!!! But as a lyricist, and as someone pointed out yesterday, there are a lot of things to take into consideration when writing lyrics (I'm not implying that I write lyrics, here). And I think Neil does an excellent job. There are other people whose lyrics I love as well -- Sting, Peter Gabriel, Iron Maiden, Queensryche, Enya, the list goes on. But each of them say what they mean in different ways, they each have their own style. And Neil has his. For him, and for the level he's reached, I think he's doing o.k. He has a reason for saying things the way he does -- perhaps the point he's trying to make is so important to him that he wants to make it obvious. To me, the lyrics are his and whatever way he feels he needs to express himself is fine by me. I don't mean to make it sound like he's god or something, but I sure as hell couldn't do what he does -- I just like to sit back, let him grow the way he wants, and see where it goes. It's kinda fun, that way. When I was growing up, and subsequently falling head-over-heels in love with "Tom Sawyer" (the song, not the character or the book...), I thought the first line was "A Monday warrior..." I thought a Monday warrior was this major literary symbol or something and I kept thinking that it was such a profound line and everything. Then I realized Geddy was singing, "A modern day warrior...". Oh well. What can I say, I was only 11...?! Puanani Akaka WORQ: "...I probably would've replied with something witty and unprintable." -- Neil Peart P.S. Brad, I wouldn't have the faintest idea if this was Spring, yet. It has been raining here, non-stop, for 12 days straight! I have only seen the sun (it still exists!!!) for the first time in eons just yesterday. If it is Spring, let me know... ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 22 Mar 91 09:53:15 -0500 From: dchao@ecn.purdue.edu (David H Chao) Subject: Other music lists. Hi everybody! Just thought I would pass on some more info about some of the other music mailing lists posted a few issues back. The Alan Parsons Project list is pretty small... the editor told me there are usually only 5 submissions per week but I haven't gotten one in a while. There was not too much interesting in the submissions I did get. The Pink Floyd list is either a mail deflector or a digest (your choice). It is pretty interesting and is similar to the NMS. The Yes address is incorrect, has been changed, or was removed. On the subject of the Backstage Club - does anybody know a ballpark figure for any of the old tour books and the old tour shirts? Are they limited in number? Thanks in advance. -Dave ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 22 Mar 91 09:12:12 EST From: Ronnie Peugh <rocker@eve.WRIGHT.edu> Subject: Re: DDD vs AAD vs ADD > Also, if you like old(er) rock like Zep, Floyd > such, you will have to have AAD or ADD for their older works as Digital > recording is an environment of the late 80's. Not true. Digital recording started to be widely used in the late 80's, but was available as early as 1980. I thought it was an error, but SAGA's first two or three albums have recently been released domestically (YES! YES!!) and they are DDD. I haven't got them, yet, I'm waiting to see if Noteworthy will have them, if not I'll go thru Compact Disc Exchange. rock hard ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 22 Mar 91 13:01 EST From: GEORGE PAPADOPOULOS <GU090GIP%ITHACA.BITNET@CORNELLC.cit.cornell.edu> Subject: Red barchetta and so on... Hey fellow Rush Fans! This is my first submittion to the digest, so it may be a bit long... 1) As far as the recent question as to the time space in which Red barchetta is set, I think its in the present. As to the mention of the turbine freight, I think he's referring to diesel locamotives (FREIGHT TRAIN) and further he makes it clear when he "Jumps to the Ground...As the turbo's slow to cross the border line" (as in border of another country, or county for that matter). Furthermore, I think the 'Motor Law' refers to laws passed to organize highways across the country... As for the "gleaming alloy air car... two lanes wide" I think this is just a reference to the fact that newer cars would have a very wide body, relative to say, a Ferrari barchetta. (Remember, new cars started to appear with alloys, rather than just plain steel in the 70's). The one-lane bridge may be like a small passenger bridge, that a small car might be able to roll over. Thats what I think about this one.... 2) I came across a couple of vinyl bootlegs in NYC when I was last at home in NYC, and both of em had a song called 'Bad Boy', (I think). I was wondering if anyone has heard this one... [ You must have gotten "Stellar Dynamics", and/or "Electric Lady". Both of these have the song "Bad Boy". It's a Beatles tune, as Geddy says on E.L. S.D. also has a song called "Fancy Dancer". Does ANYbody know ANYthing about "Fancy Dancer"? :rush-mgr ] Also, I picked up Larry Gowan's CD for $3 (yes 3!) and I was just wondering if anyone noticed that Alex's guitar tracks sound rather glazed over and low-key (I guess since it was Gowan's record, they were trying to feature him). 3) Can anyone describe Hugh Syme's relationship for the band (other than as the album cover artist, and guest keyboardist). In RUSH_Profiled_ Geddy mentions that they had a keyboardist at first...Is he referring to Jeff Jones (from the original lineup, as I understand) or could it be Hugh? Just wonderin... 4) I just wnated to tell some of you guys out there to take a pill. What I'm reffering to is Rush worship. Don't get me wrong...I'm a BIG fan, but I don't worship these guys. I think if you really understand Rush's (Neil's) lyrics and message you'll take them seriously, but don't be upset if other people don't see things your way. I'm sure Neil wouldn't want you to take this all like a religious message. Remember, Neil is not saying anything new, he's just echoing his feelings based on philosophies drawn from people he's studied... So what I'm really saying is, you musn't be so stiff about the whole idea of the band. Its obvious that they just want to play their music and put out their message, and they don't want to be worshipped. Read digest #5. Neil says "get a life". If there's anything that Rush wants to do, its to get you to use their ideas constructively... ORQ: 'It takes a little more persistence to get up and go the distance' George Papadopoulos ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 22 Mar 91 10:03:36 PST From: ronz@imager3.llnl.gov (Ron Zasadzinski) Subject: DEW interpretation (long) I have recently tried to understand the lyrics to Distant Early Warning and have a few ideas... So this is partially in response to Gregg Brown, and also to see what other people out there think about the meaning of DEW. As the title suggests, I think that overall the lyrics describe several examples that can be interpreted as early warning signs of problems with our society/way of life, or possibly even early warning signs of the collapse of our way of life (the latter interpretation is no doubt a result of my own slightly fatalistic outlook on the future of our way of life). The title itself literally comes from (as far as I know) the DEW-line, which is a string of Distant Early Warning radars near the 70th parallel in North America that watch for incoming missiles/aircraft from the direction of the USSR. With that in mind I think the song is saying that we should be interpreting the situations described by the lyrics as warning signs. An Ill wind comes arising Across the cities of the plain There's no swimming in the heavy water- No singing in the acid rain Red Alert I interpret that verse as a warning about the state of our environment. An "Ill wind" may refer to polluted air, "Heavy water" is water in which some of the Hydrogen atoms have been replaced by radioactive duterium and/or tritium (as least I think that is right), and "acid rain" is not something to be happy about either. It's so hard to stay together Passing through revolving doors We need someone to talk to And someone to sweep the floors- Incomplete I interpret this verse as describing how easlily people get mentally and emotionally messed up in our world. Our way of life is fast paced, and we are always on the go ("Passing through revolving doors"). Living that way we become emotionally and mentally unbalanced, perhaps even losing some sanity; we start falling apart "It's so hard to stay together". As a result we feel a need to talk about our problems with others, many going to therapists, etc. "We need someone to talk to". The line "And someone to sweep the floors" may refer to the therapist, or whoever, just someone to clean up our mental and emotional mess. All this is indicating that as individuals and as a society we are "Incomplete". The world wieghs on my shoulders But what am I to do? You sometimes dive me crazy- But I worry about you I know it makes no difference To what you're going through But I see the tip of the iceberg- And I worry about you... The first part of the chorus seems to summarize the first to verses: There are problems in the world and I have personal problems too (emotional imbalance?: you drive me crazy and yet I still worry about you). It's not clear to me if the second half of the chorus has any additional meaning beyond that. Cruising under your radar Watching from satellites Take a page from the red book- Keep them in your sights Red Alert Besides relating to the DEW-line as related directly to the title of the song, I think this could be pointing out that all of our military spying on one another and being almost paranoid about an enemy attack is unhealthy and unbalanced. We are worried about an enemy sending in missiles and planes that would "cruise under our radar" so we "watch from satellites". (I don't know what the "red book" refers to.) We do what we can to "Keep them (the potential enemy) in our sights". Left and rights of passage Black and whites of youth Who can face the knowledge That the truth is not the truth Obsolete Absolute I'm not as certain about interpreting this verse, but I think it is generally speaking about problems with youth. "Left and rights of passage" is talking about rights of passage, things that we all go through when growing up, that some of the things that happen to us are pretty screwed up. "left and rights" indicating opposites, i.e., "wrongs and rights" but "rights" is part of "rights of passage", so one meaning could be "The wrongs of rights_of_passage"; we aren't growing up in a whole or balanced way. "Black and whites of youth" could again be emphasizing opposites experienced when growing up - the lack of a stable and coherent model to follow, it could be emphasizing just the different extremes experienced while growing up, and it most certainly is hinting at racial differences (another unfortunate problem in our world which really doesn't need to be a problem, IMHO). I interpret the lines "Who can face the knowledge that the truth is not the truth" to mean that the surface veneer of our of world- the way that we were *taught* that it is, all the situations described in the preceeding verses -is not really the truth. There is another reality beneath the ugly and probematic veneer. "Obsolete" could refer to the present way of life, the veneer of it anyway, as being obsolete. It doesn't work anymore. "Absolute" has many relevent meanings: An indication of the urgency (absoluteness) that we change the way we operate, An indication that our way is absolutely obsolete, a plea that we "absolve" ourselves by changing our way of life. The final words in the song are Absalom Absalom. I remember reading/hearing in some interview that Neil always liked the way the word "Absalom" felt, even before he knew what it meant, and just put it in because of it's sound. In the interview I think it was also said that Neil felt that the meaning of the word fit in also. Unfortunately I don't remember where/when I read that, but I think it was in the NMS within the last 4 or 6 months. Anyone remember this? My dictionary says that in hebrew the word literally means "the father is peace". It also says that Absalom was a biblical figure: "David's favorite son who was killed after rebelling against his father." I'm no hebrew or biblical scholar, so I can't comment further other than that I do feel a calming effect when the words are sung in the song. I do like the song quite a bit. The above is all my own opinion and interpretation. I would love to hear how others have interpreted the song too. -Ron ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 21 Mar 91 22:31:04 EST From: vanth!jms@amix.commodore.com (Jim Shaffer) Subject: Aphrodite vs. that other god nobody can spell linus@ritcsh.rit.edu (Linus VanPelt) writes: >ALSO.. does anyone know why in _Hemispheres_ that Dyonisis was used for >the argument for the heart and not Aphrodite? I thought Dyonisis was the >Bringer of wine? maybe my mythology is going bad.. No, your mythology isn't going bad. Bacchus (I can't spell the D-word either right now!) is indeed the god of wine, and revelry. Aphrodite/Venus is the goddess of love and is associated with the heart. But it's the title that's wrong, not the lyrics, IMHO. I interpret the second god to show up as Bacchus/D. The song as I interpret it is meant to show the need for balance between intellectual and sensual pursuits. Love is obviously a sensual rather than an intellectual thing, so that's probably why the title of the section was "D., Bringer of Love." But it's not *just* love, it's everything they were abstaining from in their quest for wisdom. Thus Bacchus/D. rather than Aphrodite/Venus. (Somebody please e-mail me and tell me who the equivalent of Apollo is in the other pantheon. Now *my* mind is going, I can't even remember which pantheon is which!) * From the disk of: | jms@vanth.uucp | "You know I never knew Jim Shaffer, Jr. | amix.commodore.com!vanth!jms | that it could be so 37 Brook Street | uunet!cbmvax!amix!vanth!jms | strange..." Montgomery, PA 17752 | 72750.2335@compuserve.com | (R.E.M.) ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 21 Mar 91 09:15:39 EST From: cameron_bd@lrc.edu Subject: eggs... My second posting in two days.... I am not sure about the symbolic meaning of the egg. But if you take an egg an hold it between youre palms in the exact fashion illustrated on the slip cover of P/G, no matter how hard you squeeze, you can't braek the egg. Hard boiled or not. If you try this trick at home though remember two things first pick an uncracked egg (of course) and hold as close to perpendicular to your palms as possible, otherwise it might break. Second, don't try this in moms kitchen. I learned about this a long while ago in Mr. Wizard. You can kind of see how the egg represents a natural sort of grace and the C-clamp is possibly the pressure of the human world. any way Id like to say hi to a certain girl from the big isla in the pacific before i graduate... so Hi hope you are doing well... touch the sun... Brad Cameron ---------------------------------------------------------- From: Robert B Simmon <presto@rpi.edu> Date: Fri, 22 Mar 91 13:33:44 EST Subject: digital recording Firsty (oops) let's try this again - first I'd like to apologize for discuusing (at length) somethign that's only marginally rush - related. Just to put eveything in perspective I'll give eveyone a technical ovewrview of digital recording technolody. It was developed in the late 70's by sony & phillips to avoid the siganal degredation found in Analog recordings. The amplitude of a waveform (sound) is recorded a a number of discreet values (numbers) the current standard uses 16 bits of information per sample (a little over 64,000) CD's (and most other digital stuff) sampled 44,100 times a seciond. To acurrately rpepresent a sound you have to sample at at least twice the frequency being recorded, otherwise somethign called aliasing occurs, therefore a filter is applied to any signal to be recorded digitally, at 22,000 Hz in the case of CD's. I think this is what Marino was referring to when he mentioned that DDD recordings take the edge off the highs. Unfortunatley for that thoeory, 22,000 hz is above both hearing & the capability of your stereo. also, the same filters apply to any recording that was EVER transferred into the digital domain. DDD recordings allow the sound to be processed entirely in digital, never suffering the trauma of being converted to ANalog, bounced from one track to anbtother or anything. Thereofore, no distortion. (or so the theory goes.) The primary complaint about digital recording is that there's no noise floor (minimum level of noise on the recording) to hide errors and ambient noises. Some people even claim that harmonics and stuff get screwed up, but they're probably wrong. Hopefully that was pretty clear, if you have any questions you can write to presto@rpi.edu "when we lift the covers from our feelings ..." -rob simmon ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 22 Mar 91 11:23:45 -0500 From: "Douglas G Schwabe" <cschwabe@unix.cis.pitt.edu> Subject: Cassette Poll Update Hi folks, Just want to let you know that the cassette poll is doing quite nicely, thank you. The responses have been quite interesting up to this point, lets get more of them, please. For those who came in late I am conduct a poll of the all-time favorite Rush songs. I gave a list of themes (See 3/19 TNMS for details) for each Rush fan to use and I gave each fan the opportunity to suggest their own ideas. EX: Neil Stories Fountain of Lamemth (forgive my spelling, please) 2112 Cygnus X-1 (Both books) The list should consist of your all-time favorite Rush songs (10 min 20 max) with a particular theme (or not). This does include live stuff. UPDATE: You can use live songs from videos (Through the Camera Eye, Grace under Pressure Tour, etc). The results should be posted around the begining of May. These results are based on the most popular all-time favorites plus the themes of each tape. Have fun making your list. Here are the addresses to send your lists: Vax: dgsst4@vms.cis.pitt.edu Unix: dgsst4@unix.cis.pitt.edu cschwabe@unix.cis.pitt.edu The teams who be in the Stanley Cup will be playing tommorrow night: Chicago vs Pittsburgh "She wants to sell my Monkey" - Mike Lange (Voice of the Penguins) ---------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 22 Mar 91 12:31:23 CST From: JEFF FAUNCE <S71239FJ%ETSUACAD.BITNET@ricevm1.rice.edu> Subject: Textbooks and Rush Today we were going over some problems in the accounting textbook. Right now we are in chapter 21. Usually I don't bring my book to class, but today I did. One of the assigned problems was E21-12. The 2112 did not hit me right off...... first, I read through the problem..... part seven states "cost of compact discs for newly recorded releases of Rush......" This of course caught my attention..... then I noticed the Problem number..... ORQ "You have entered the Twilight Zone" Has anyone ever run into something similar to this? "Coincidence......I think not" ---- The Todd Jeff Faunce ----------------------------------------------------------
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