Rush on tour

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Twoback

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Those of you who are Rush fans might already know, but it was news to me when I got an e-mail to this ticket-selling link.
Anyway, makes me feel good to know one of the first events at the new Consol Energy Center will be a Rush concert.
That's getting it started right.
They're promising a show featuring their greatest hits and a full performance of the Moving Pictures album.

http://www.ticketsnow.com/rush-tickets/?partnercode=Regional-General
 
dooley_womack1 said:
If the members of Rush are Pittsburgh Steelers fans, the board will implode

Disclosure: I went with some friends to a Rush show in 2002 at the Post Gazette Pavilion.

(I'm a casual fan. Own the band's two Retrospective best of CDs. That's it. And, yeah, they're an incredible live act)

nuclear-explosion.jpg
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Damn. I've got a game to cover at Robert Morris on the 18th of September ... I might sneak up a day early and try to catch that show on the 16th.
 
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My son doesn't know it yet, but his 13th birthday present is tickets to see the second Rush show in Chicago. He got into the band after hearing "Tom Sawyer" on Futurama, in the "Anthology of Interest II" episode where Fry imagines if life were like a video game. He precedes this segment by saying, "All right. It's Saturday night. I have no date, a two-liter bottle of Shasta, and my all-Rush mixtape. Let's rock!"



I figure we can completely nerd out together that day. Watch some Monty Python. Play my old Dark Tower game sitting in the closet of my mom's house. Let's rock!

(By the way, the first show I took my son to was a Zero Boys (hardcore punk) reunion show in a converted church in Indianapolis. Disparate experiences, to say the least.)

EDIT: As if going to a concert with your old man wasn't nerding out enough.
 
Bob Cook said:
I figure we can completely nerd out together that day. Watch some Monty Python. Play my old Dark Tower game sitting in the closet of my mom's house. Let's rock!

(By the way, the first show I took my son to was a Zero Boys (hardcore punk) reunion show in a converted church in Indianapolis. Disparate experiences, to say the least.)

EDIT: As if going to a concert with your old man wasn't nerding out enough.

Dark Tower rules. And so does Rush!

They still sound great live -- saw them in 2008, and it was a great time. Maybe I'll be "finding my way" to the Seattle area in August to see this tour.
 
Thought about linking this a couple of weeks back.

Weird Al got top billing in the Strib:

The Minnesota State Fair has announced its first entertainment acts for 2010.

Pop-music wise guy "Weird Al" Yankovic and the hard rock band Rush will be part of the Grandstand Concert Series.


I thought that was a little unfair. Also, we'll need a nerd ruling on the genre label ;)

The Grandstand is a good venue. I like outside shows.

I saw Steve Miller there a couple of years ago. Aaron Carter, way back. Hey, you do things for your kids.

The comments play out like a SportsJournalists.com Rush love/hate thread:

http://www.startribune.com/entertainment/music/90210437.html?elr=KArksUUUoDEy3LGDiO7aiU
 
In related news, Ed Greenwood will be discussing the life and times of Gary Gygax at the next Comic-Con.
 
Look, Buck, go back to licking Chris' taint and stay the **** out of our thread. :D
 
Weird Al Yankovic on the same bill as Rush?
Throw in a Magic the Gathering tournament and you've got the ultimate geek trifecta.
 
Bob Cook said:
My son doesn't know it yet, but his 13th birthday present is tickets to see the second Rush show in Chicago. He got into the band after hearing "Tom Sawyer" on Futurama, in the "Anthology of Interest II" episode where Fry imagines if life were like a video game. He precedes this segment by saying, "All right. It's Saturday night. I have no date, a two-liter bottle of Shasta, and my all-Rush mixtape. Let's rock!"



I figure we can completely nerd out together that day. Watch some Monty Python. Play my old Dark Tower game sitting in the closet of my mom's house. Let's rock!

(By the way, the first show I took my son to was a Zero Boys (hardcore punk) reunion show in a converted church in Indianapolis. Disparate experiences, to say the least.)

EDIT: As if going to a concert with your old man wasn't nerding out enough.


Good plan, Bob.

By encouraging these interests, you won't have to worry about him attracting a girl till he's in college. ;)
 
mousepad-p144607597424911488trak_400.jpg


And:

Rolling Stone again deems Rush as worthy of attention. Oh, thank you, oh masters of music.

The whole interview, since the link isn't correct:

This summer, Rush will be hitting the U.S. and Canadian concert trail on their Time Machine Tour, which will see the trio perform their 1981 classic Moving Pictures in its entirety. They'll also be road-testing new material they're working up for their 19th studio effort. Frontman Geddy Lee tells Rolling Stone the fresh tracks are "upbeat, hard rocking songs" with a Rush trademark: "typically absurdist arrangements."



Will you release some new songs to coincide with the tour?

I'd imagine — because we don't have time to do more than two at the moment — we'll probably release one as soon as it's ready, before the tour starts, and then probably release the second one as the tour starts. But our hope was to really get something down on tape, so we could play these songs live and road test them in a way. We're still kind of throwing titles back in forth, but one is called "Caravan."

Why tour in the middle of recording an album?

Everybody was kind of itching to get on the road and try and get in "peak playing form" before we recorded the bulk of the record, just to see what that effect is. In a way, we have this tendency to take a long period of time off, and then we kind of get our chops together and then go record. We thought it's kind of ass-backwards really, because when you finish a long tour, you're in such amazing playing shape that really, that's the time you should go in and start laying down tracks. But of course, you're exhausted by then, so we're trying to figure out if there's another way of attacking it.

We thought it would be fun to put together a tour that was sort of "future/past," because those are some of the themes that are floating around the lyrical content and visual content that we're using for these new songs. So we thought, "Let's go out and do this Time Machine tour, where we can go mine our past, and at the same time, point to the future, try some new songs, and get us in shape.

Do you think playing Moving Pictures in its entirety may influence the new material?

It's hard to say, I think it's going to be an interesting challenge to play some of those songs, especially "The Camera Eye," a song we haven't played in years and years. Obviously, we'll probably do a slightly newer take on it. You never know what effect bringing older songs back has on you. There are times in the past that we thought, "There is no way we can make this song work," and then you get into rehearsal, you start playing it, and you're really pleasantly surprised how much you're enjoying it. And sometimes it takes on a whole new life.I think we've stopped being kind of cynical about our past in a way, and sometimes having a second look at an older song gives it a whole new story.

Would you consider Moving Pictures Rush's best album?

It's certainly our most universally accepted, most popular album. If that means best, then I guess so. But obviously, Rush fans and different members of the band have different favorites. It's certainly our most popular record, and it's also the one that I think has aged very well.

What are some memories of the Moving Pictures sessions?

It was wintertime, and we were holed up in a small studio in Quebec. Really, that studio became our home for a few years, Le Studio, just outside of Montreal. A beautiful environment, and a great working relationship that we had with people at the studio, and our producer, Terry Brown. Got a lot of fond memories of making that record.

What about recording the song “Tom Sawyer”?

“Tom Sawyer” was in many ways the most difficult song to record on that record. I remember even though the writing of the song came together pretty quickly, putting it down on tape was a little difficult. We were trying different sounds, and going with a whole different approach to lyrics — the kind of spoken word thing, getting the right sound for Alex's guitar, and so on. It was kind of a dark horse. And then in the mixing, it all came together. When we finished it, we were so pleased with what happened, because we kind of had the least expectations of it, because of the difficulty we had.I think a lot of musicians probably go through a similar thing, where they have this one song that they beat themselves up over, and then the next thing you know, it's their biggest song.

How has the forthcoming Rush documentary, Beyond the Lighted Stage, turned out?

It's hard for me to watch myself up on the screen, talking for two hours. It's really kind of funny to look at a lot of the old stuff — they found some amazing, really obscure photographs and movies. It's kind of nice to see other people talking about us in a kind of objective sense. I was pretty amazed that certain people were Rush fans, like Billy Corgan, for example. He was very well-spoken in the film, and seems to really understand where we're coming from. That was quite a surprise for me.

Lastly, who would win in a battle, By-Tor or the Snow Dog?

Well, always By-Tor, if you ask me.

Why?

Because I'm By-Tor! [Laughs]
 
Ace said:
Bob Cook said:
My son doesn't know it yet, but his 13th birthday present is tickets to see the second Rush show in Chicago. He got into the band after hearing "Tom Sawyer" on Futurama, in the "Anthology of Interest II" episode where Fry imagines if life were like a video game. He precedes this segment by saying, "All right. It's Saturday night. I have no date, a two-liter bottle of Shasta, and my all-Rush mixtape. Let's rock!"



I figure we can completely nerd out together that day. Watch some Monty Python. Play my old Dark Tower game sitting in the closet of my mom's house. Let's rock!

(By the way, the first show I took my son to was a Zero Boys (hardcore punk) reunion show in a converted church in Indianapolis. Disparate experiences, to say the least.)

EDIT: As if going to a concert with your old man wasn't nerding out enough.


Good plan, Bob.

By encouraging these interests, you won't have to worry about him attracting a girl till he's in college.


I'm raising my kid to stay home until he's 35!
 
Buck said:
Weird Al Yankovic on the same bill as Rush?
Throw in a Magic the Gathering tournament and you've got the ultimate geek trifecta.

Not the same bill, just top billing in the announcement of acts booked in the concert series.

Piotr, that link isn't firing. What does Jann have to say?
 
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