Rush - Feedback (EP)
Published July 08, 2004
So, Geddy, Alex & Neil decided to get together to record some tunes in celebration of their thirty years of music makin'. These are some of the songs that inspired them during their musically formative years.
Now, before I begin, let me say that I'm a pretty big fan of this band. Their style of interlocked triology has always rubbed my aural brain parts the right way. But...I've always been kind of embarrassed by the UberRushfan. You know the type. Knows the (multiple!) meanings of each lyric. Knows what and where all the 'special messages' are in the liner notes. Knows the name brand of Neil's road cycle. Gees, any of you guys ever kiss a real girl?! (Dang, you sure can get a lot of mileage out of old Saturday Night Live quotes.)
And speaking of card-carrying uber-fans, you can find some hilarious commentary about this record in the Amazon review section. Some guy was just beside himself because Rush sounds like a high-school garage band here. Well, duh! Isn't that the point? To have some (wait for it.....) fun?!
Summertime Blues
Part Blue Cheer...with a big dose of the Who's version from Live at Leeds. Neil channels Keith Moon beautifully. Loads of fun.
Heart Full Of Soul
Begins with strummed acoustic guitars and proceed to deliver a surprisingly faithful version.
For What It's Worth
Man, it's just plain weird to hear these words come out of Geddy's mouth. Doesn't stray too far from the Buffalo Springfield original but does, toward the end, amp up with some heavy chords and guitar solo fragments.
The Seeker
This is one of those Who songs that bring instant goosebumps when that beginning rhythm riff kicks in (others being "Substitute" and "I Can't Explain".) I got goosebumps here too.
Mr. Soul
Ah, I can just imagine the uber-fan scrunching up his face as Alex plays the trippy high school-type sloppy guitar solo. Too bad, 'cuz he'd probably miss the cool 8 Miles High quote.
Seven And Seven Is
Somehow, Love flew underneath my musical radar, so I'm only vaguely familiar with this tune. It's hella-bombastic though.
Shapes Of Things
More fun with the Yardbirds by way of Toronto
Crossroads
Hey! These guys liked Cream's Wheels Of Fire as much as I did. Who knew?! Geddy doesn't have the same blues swing in his voice that Clapton does, but he doesn't have to. Alex attempts his best Clapton imitation and manages to sound like, well, Alex.
One or two of the uber-fans brought up valid points: certainly a Led Zeppelin cover would have been fun. But maybe that would have pushed past their early teen years (around the mid-60's). I dunno. This was fun enough for me. Heck, I coulda used a little more.
Lighten up, Rushfans.
(First posted on Mark Is Cranky)
- Rush - Feedback (EP)
- Published: July 08, 2004
- Type:
- Section: Music
- Writer: Mark Saleski
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Comments
to be honest, i could have done without ALL of the Buffalo Springfield AND Yardbirds material.
also, their cover of "Bad Boy" woulda been cool.
Summertime Blues and The Seeker make the whole thing worth it (for me anyway)
As a long-time Rush fan who wasn't real excited about the Feedback project, I am stunned by how much I love this album. Rush breathes new life into some tired 60s classics and sounds looser and more alive than they ever have. The song selection is perfectly matched to Geddy's voice and Lifeson ditches his typical tasteful restraint and gets to showcase his underrated chops and complete mastery of feedback and effects. The "garage-band sound" everyone is writing about is nothing new- Rush has been playing this way live on their last two tours. Don't know if I'm the stereotypical Rush fan Mark Seleski referenced in his review, since I love this album and I have indeed kissed a real girl. In fact, I was kissing his girl while he was trademarking "UberRushFan"...
Cover albums by established acts are just lame. I am sorry to see that Rush succumbed to this trend. No doubt it was down to record company obligations.
Easy to say, Marty, and generally I agree, but this is one that happens to kick much ass. Really, a blast to listen to, aside from the critical speed bump that "For What It's Worth" is - it's just too slow, too dark, too quiet amidst all this high-energy fun.
No doubt it was down to record company obligations.
yea, well no amount of cynicism is going to stop me from enjoying the pure joy that is Summertime Blues and The Seeker.
plus, i heardly think Neil would have put together the liner note anecdotes just to lie about their intent.
According to Geddy in a Bass Player magazine interview, Rush wanted to do something fun in playing songs they had covered in the early days. I only wish they had played one or two of these songs last summer on tour.
No doubt it was down to record company obligations.
Rush doesn't have any "record company obligations" anymore. They're long past those days. They pretty much do as they please. If the label wants something new, they'll just cobble together They wanted to put something together to mark their 30th anniversary, something that said something about where they came from. This does a great job of it. Only when "Crossroads" finishes I wish there was more to it than those 8 tracks. Fun stuff.
I am pretty hacked that the album is less than half an hour long. It would have been cheaper for me just to download each song at 80 cents a pop. However, the album has a very good sound. My favorite track on this album is Mr. Soul, which is slowed down quite a bit, is not sloppy like Young's version, and has a hint of secret touch in the beginning. As for Geddy's voice on this track, it was amazing. As goofy as it may sound, the voice had me convinced that Roger Waters could sing this tune. As for the rest of the album, the songs do sound as if they had new life breathed into them. Unfortunately, "For What It's Worth" was not worth being covered. i was pretty disappointed with this one. The timing of the voice and the guitars did not fit well, sort of like Metallica's haphazard cover of lynyrd skynyrd's "Tuesday's Gone." Some songs you just can't change. In the end, I guess we will just have to wait for an album of original stuff!






I think most "real" Rushfans "get" the intended fun of this album, but we just really want to hear more of Rush playing Rush! I read somewhere, can't remember where, that they deliberately skipped covering Zep because it's just so obvious - I mean, listen to that first album, they're clearly lifting most of their style.
I could have done without "For What It's Worth," however. Never liked that song, still don't like that song even covered by my favorite band.
I had been hoping they would include a cover of the Rolling Stones' "Paint It Black," since they played a teaser of that at that big SARS festival. Next EP, I suppose. In 30 years.