Sunday, March 31, 2024

Project 190: Update 14

Weight (2024-03-31):  214.8 lbs

Change since last week:-1.4 lbs

Change since January 1st:  -8.2 lbs

Super low (hardly ate anything after noon yesterday).  But it's nice to break the 215 barrier finally.

Friday, March 29, 2024

Rush Retrospective: Album 10- Grace Under Pressure

 






Album:  Grace Under Pressure

Year Released:   1984

Lineup:  

  • Geddy Lee – bass guitar, synthesizers, vocals, production
  • Alex Lifeson – guitars, synthesizers, production
  • Neil Peart – drums, percussion, electronic percussion, production

Overall Thoughts:

With their tenth album, Rush left (on good terms) with their longtime producer Terry Brown, as the band wanted to explore different directions musically.  The direction that started with Signals continues- the songs were shorter (every song is between 4-6 minutes), keyboards continued to take a prominent role (though not as much as Signals), and they added more world music (ska and reggae) to their overall sound.  This album also features no ballards or slow songs; even "Afterimage", a dedication to a friend who had passed in a car accident, is fast-paced.

Dystopic future is a major theme of the album- "Distant Early Warning", "Red Sector A" and "The Enemy Within" all evoke fears of a nuclear holocaust (a common theme of the early 1980's, at the height of the Cold War).  My favorite song on the album is "Between the Wheels", a song about pressure, where the synth are a dramatic setup to contrast with Lifeson's great guitar work.  

It's not an awful album- but it sounds dated (heavy synths and fears of nuclear war were major themes of the early 1980's).  And the band was still adjusting to both the change in producers and adding new styles and sounds to their repetoire.  


Ranking of Rush Albums (adding as more albums are reviewed):
  1. Moving Pictures
  2. 2112
  3. Permanent Waves
  4. Fly By Night
  5. Rush
  6. A Farewell to Kings
  7. Hemispheres
  8. Signals
  9. Caress of Steel
  10. Grace Under Pressure

Top 10 Rush Songs (adding as more albums are reviewed):

  1. "Tom Sawyer", Moving Pictures
  2. "Working Man", Rush
  3. "Closer to the Heart", A Farewell to Kings
  4. "La Villa Strangiato", Hemispheres
  5. "Freewill", Permanent Waves
  6. "2112", 2112
  7. "Fly By Night", Fly By Night
  8. "YYZ", Moving Pictures
  9. "Red Barchettta", Moving Pictures
  10. "Making Memories", Fly By Night

Sunday, March 24, 2024

Project 190: Update 13

 Weight (2024-03-24):  216.6 lbs

Change since last week:0 lbs

Change since January 1st:  -6.4 lbs

I'm good with this.  I maintained the loss of last week.  Next immediate goal is getting under 215...

Friday, March 22, 2024

Rush Retrospective: Album 09- Signals

 








Album:  Signals

Year Released:   1982

Lineup:  

  • Geddy Lee – bass guitars, synthesizers, vocals, arrangements, production
  • Alex Lifeson – electric and acoustic guitars, Moog Taurus pedals, production
  • Neil Peart – drums, percussion, arrangements, spoken vocal on “Subdivisions”, production

Overall Thoughts:

The band Rush could have their career broken down in five movements, changing every four albums (punctuated by a live album at the end of every moment).  The band was always tinkering with their sound with every album, but every movement changed in different directions.  Between Moving Pictures and Signals, the next movement again.

With Signals, the songs became more compact (the ten minute epic prog songs disappeared), and synthesizers took a much more prominent role.  The progressive and hard rock elements were diminished, and more wordly music (reggae) and pop elements stepped forward.  Signals was also the last album with Terry Brown, who had prodcued their albums since 1974.  The band's sound was changing.

The changes aren't smooth.  The keyboards are dominant throughout the album, and musically guitars and drums are thier strongest sounds.   Some of the songs fall flat (Geddy constantly shouting "ELECTRICITY!" throughout "Chemistry" might be the biggest misstep Rush performed on any of their albums).  Many of the songs aren't as memorable as their previous albums."Singals" sounds dated- it's clearly a product of the early 1980s- in a way that most of their albums avoid.

There are good spots.  "Subdivisions" is their strongest song lyrically, relatable to anyone who felt like an outcast during their high school years (which is to say, everyone). "The Weapon" is a good companion to "Witch Hunt" (part of the "Fear" trilogy of songs).  The strongest song might be "Losing It", which features Ben Mink playing an electric violin and is a powerful song about growing old.  

"Signals" is not a bad album, and is a fascinating change from their previous work.  But musically, it is not as strong as their previous work.  


Ranking of Rush Albums (adding as more albums are reviewed):
  1. Moving Pictures
  2. 2112
  3. Permanent Waves
  4. Fly By Night
  5. Rush
  6. A Farewell to Kings
  7. Hemispheres
  8. Signals
  9. Caress of Steel

Top 10 Rush Songs (adding as more albums are reviewed):

  1. "Tom Sawyer", Moving Pictures
  2. "Working Man", Rush
  3. "Closer to the Heart", A Farewell to Kings
  4. "La Villa Strangiato", Hemispheres
  5. "Freewill", Permanent Waves
  6. "2112", 2112
  7. "Fly By Night", Fly By Night
  8. "YYZ", Moving Pictures
  9. "Red Barchettta", Moving Pictures
  10. "Making Memories", Fly By Night

Sunday, March 17, 2024

Project 190: Update 12

Weight (2024-03-17):  216.6 lbs

Change since last week: -1.8 lbs

Change since January 1st:  -6.4 lbs

Artficially low- yesterday I didn't eat anything after lunch.  On the other hand, progress is progress- and I'm glad to finally get under the 218 mark.

Friday, March 15, 2024

Rush Retrospective: Album 08- Moving Pictures

 





Album:  Moving Pictures

Year Released:   1981

Lineup:  

Overall Thoughts:

The previous albums were a mixture of shorter songs for the radio and longer epic songs.  Moving Pictures is the same way- but elevated; the overall quality of the songs, musically and lyrically, reached a higher plateau with their eighth album

The album kicks off with "Tom Sawyer", one of their best known songs.  It bursts into your head from the first note and stays with you.  It is one of those songs, like Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody", that fans can remember everything even though musically it is an incredible complicated song with different movements.  

Following is "Red Barchetta", an ode to driving and the freedom of driving.  "YYZ" is a frentic and gorgeous instrumental.  "Limelight" is a great example of Rush's ability to make enjoyable rock songs out of deeper themes (in this case, out of the concerns of being famous and constantly in the spotlight).  All of the songs are excellent and among the band's biggest hits.

"The Camera Eye" is the last song Rush wrote that is over ten minutes in length as the group.  "Witch Hunt" is a haunting song that evokes a mob, while "Vital Signs" adds some reggae to the band's musc repetoire (this will grow in other songs).

Ever since 2112, the band had been changing- adding more instruments, mixing epic songs with shorter, more radio friendly songs.  With Moving Pictures, the band reached their pinnacle of this era.  There is a reason this is often cited as the best studio album by fans.



Ranking of Rush Albums (adding as more albums are reviewed):
  1. Moving Pictures
  2. 2112
  3. Permanent Waves
  4. Fly By Night
  5. Rush
  6. A Farewell to Kings
  7. Hemispheres
  8. Caress of Steel

Top 10 Rush Songs (adding as more albums are reviewed):

  1. "Tom Sawyer", Moving Pictures
  2. "Working Man", Rush
  3. "Closer to the Heart", A Farewell to Kings
  4. "La Villa Strangiato", Hemispheres
  5. "Freewill", Permanent Waves
  6. "2112", 2112
  7. "Fly By Night", Fly By Night
  8. "YYZ", Moving Pictures
  9. "Red Barchettta", Moving Pictures
  10. "Making Memories", Fly By Night

Sunday, March 10, 2024

Project 190: Update 11

 

Weight (2024-03-10)  218.4 lbs

Change since last week: -1.0 lbs

Change since January 1st:  -4.6 lbs

A marathon, not a sprint

Friday, March 8, 2024

Rush Retrospective: Album 07- Permanent Waves

 



























Album:  Permanent Waves

Year Released:   1980

Lineup:  


Overall Thoughts:

After the Tour of Hemispheres, the band took a break before working on their next album.  The previous two albums- Hemispheres and A Farewell to Kings- both had mixes of some great songs ("Closer to the Heart", "La Villa Strangiato") with long songs that often meandered, making both albums uneven.  With Permanent Waves, the hits are still there ("The Spirit of Radio", "Freewill")- but the other songs that didn't get as much airplay are much stronger, making a better overall album.  

The longer songs and prog themes are still there, but they are more streamlined and less excessive.  "Jacob's Ladder" starts off with a military march, changes into a heavy metal song, and finishes as a new age song, representing the sun breaking through the clouds.  "Different Strings" starts out as an acoustic ballard and ends with beautiful blues guitar work.  "Natural Science" jumps through a half dozen music styles and tempos at a rapid pace- the song is never boring.


Ranking of Rush Albums (adding as more albums are reviewed):
  1. 2112
  2. Permanent Waves
  3. Fly By Night
  4. Rush
  5. A Farewell to Kings
  6. Hemispheres
  7. Caress of Steel

Top 10 Rush Songs (adding as more albums are reviewed):

  1. "Working Man", Rush
  2. "Closer to the Heart", A Farewell to Kings
  3. "La Villa Strangiato", Hemispheres
  4. "Freewill", Permanent Waves
  5. "2112", 2112
  6. "Fly By Night", Fly By Night
  7. "Making Memories", Fly By Night
  8. "The Trees", Hemispheres
  9. "A Passage to Bangkok", 2112
  10. "A Farewell to Kings", A Farewell to Kings

Sunday, March 3, 2024

Project 190: Update 10

 

Weight (2024-03-03)  219.4 lbs

Change since last week: -1.2 lbs

Change since January 1st:  -3.6 lbs



Friday, March 1, 2024

Rush Retrospective: Album 06- Hemispheres

 

















Album:  Hemispheres

Year Released:   1978

Lineup:  


Overall Thoughts:

Rush's sixth studio album has only four songs on the album.  Two are epic in length, two are epic in the band's history, but only one song overlaps both.

Hemispheres starts out with the second half of the Cyngus X-1 series of songs, which started on the previous album.  Part two is over eighteen minutes, and has an epic storyline about the astronaut from Book 1 becoming the God of Balance.  
The song lacks the hooks- either musically or lyrically- of Rush's better songs.  The song is not memorable the way that 2112 is- and for a series that takes up nearly a half hour in length, the payoff is not worth the commitment.

It's followed up by "Circumstances", a short song that feels like the backdrop to an epic moment in the song that never comes.  It's short (under 4 minutes) but forgettable.

Out of four songs, the album's first two are missing something.  But in the second half, the band delivers.

"The Trees" is a powerful allegory about how misunderstanding and envy can destroy.  The music is catchy and the lyrics are memorable.  

The album finishes with "La Villa Strantiago"- a nine minute epic instrumental that goes musically all over the place from Flamenco Guitar at the start to a hard rock.  The guitars and drums are all over the place- and it works.  The individual components fit seamlessly in a way few instrumentals seem to do.




Ranking of Rush Albums (adding as more albums are reviewed):
  1. 2112
  2. Fly By Night
  3. Rush
  4. A Farewell to Kings
  5. Hemispheres
  6. Caress of Steel

Top 10 Rush Songs (adding as more albums are reviewed):

  1. "Working Man", Rush
  2. "Closer to the Heart", A Farewell to Kings
  3. "La Villa Strangiago", Hemispheres
  4. "2112", 2112
  5. "Fly By Night", Fly By Night
  6. "Making Memories", Fly By Night
  7. "The Trees", Hemispheres
  8. "A Passage to Bangkok", 2112
  9. "A Farewell to Kings", A Farewell to Kings
  10. "Here Again", Rush