Rush In Rio - Page 3

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  • Rush in Rio Rush in Rio

    Japanese edition of 2003 release includes an exclusive leaflet, a reprint of 'Weiber Trails Tour I'. Features 31 tracks including 2 Board Bootlegs, 'Between Sun & Moon' & 'Vital Signs'. ...

  • Rush - Rush in Rio Rush - Rush in Rio
  • Different Stages: Live Different Stages: Live
  • Moving Pictures Moving Pictures
  • All the World's a Stage All the World's a Stage

Article comments

  • 1 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 28, 2003 at 3:40 pm

    great review Tom.

    i've gotta get the DVD.

    does the second set opening include the video of the dragon?

    man, when that dragon pounded his foot on the floor the rumble scared the heck outa me!

    looking forward to the documentary as well.

  • 2 - Tom Johnson

    Oct 28, 2003 at 4:01 pm

    The intermission video isn't included. That's unfortunately because I was out getting the tourbook and drinks during intermission and entirely missed the video. There's about 30 seconds of video prior to "One Little Victory" and that's it, unfortunately. I saw other fans complaining about not getting the footage too, so you're not alone in missing it.

    I wanted to put in the review somewhere but felt it was simply too "personal" sounding: this is the best concert video I've ever seen. Being a Rush die-hard may skew my opinion, and that's why it's left out, and as big a fan of live-material as I am, I actually have no other concert videos that I'm certain I'll watch many, many times. This one is a keeper, for certain.

  • 3 - TDavid

    Oct 28, 2003 at 6:11 pm

    Saw this CD in the store on Friday and it was $23.99 and I almost bought it. Instead, I'm tracking actually how long it takes to make its way to iTunes / Rhapsody / buymusic, etc. I really enjoyed Exit Stage Left. This is a band I would really like to see live someday if possible.

    And I don't know about others, Tom, but I enjoy some "personal" stuff in reviews. I can read wooden, structured, professional reviews at lots of places online (rotten tomatoes for movies, for example). Hopefully here, blogcritics will share more personal reviews.

    Very cool cover artwork!

  • 4 - Tom Johnson

    Oct 28, 2003 at 6:17 pm

    I include personal stuff in some reviews, but in this one it just didn't lend any strength to what I was already saying. I opted to leave it out just because I felt like it would stick out like a sore thumb. I actually plan on writing up "my life with Rush" someday because if it weren't for their music, my wife and I would never have met. Needless to say, the band and their music form a pretty important part of my life. :-)

    At 31 tracks, the Rio set is going to be might expensive at $0.99 a track, isn't it? And besides, they're still crappy mp3s. I friggin' hate those things. Plus no artwork. That's a ripoff in my book. Get 'em down to about $0.10 each and that's fair.

  • 5 - TDavid

    Oct 28, 2003 at 6:26 pm

    Personally, I'm not planning on buying this online, Tom. I was just saying that I was tracking the time it takes to get to these services (namely Rhapsody) so I can listen to it and decide whether I want to buy it.

    I'm just curious what the delay is from store release to making it to the online venues.

    On the strength of including vital signs live alone, I probably will get the CD.

    Thank you for the excellent review!

  • 6 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 28, 2003 at 6:46 pm

    ya, no artwork.

    you miss out on the cool picture of neil with sponge bob in the foreground.

    ;-)

  • 7 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 28, 2003 at 6:51 pm

    by the way, anybody ever seen Neil's Work in Progress video?

    cool stuff, even if you're not a drummer.

  • 8 - Tom Johnson

    Oct 28, 2003 at 7:09 pm

    I haven't seen that, actually. I really want to, but haven't found a reason to justify the cost given the fact I'm not a drummer. However, Christmas IS coming up . . . might be time to add that to the list!

  • 9 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 28, 2003 at 7:17 pm

    i do play a little drums (in addition to guitar) but one of the things i really love to watch are documentary type things where how the music is constructed is discussed.

    A Work in Progress is full of that stuff. totally worth it.

  • 10 - Tom Johnson

    Oct 28, 2003 at 10:45 pm

    I just looked it up on Amazon - $59 is a bit pricey! Of course, it's got only a niche audience it'll sell to anyway. I'm still intrigued enough that I'll probably have to get this at some point. Just to see how he plays normal song parts should be interesting. He does stuff in his solo on the DVD that is mind-boggling. I know he's maybe not quite up to par with the jazz greats, but for a rock drummer he's incredibly fluid while hitting very, very hard. Especially intriguing is being able to see him triggering things. It really explains how he's able to pull off some of what he does. I remember seeing discussions saying that he wasn't really playing everything you hear in his solos, but people were getting triggered sounds confused with not really playing them. His solo makes clear that he plays ALL of what you hear in his solos.

  • 11 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 29, 2003 at 10:18 am

    the fluidity comes from his complete change in technique. he talks about it a lot on the video. he took a break from Rush to retrain himself...taking a bunch of lessons from jazz drumming guru Freddie Gruber.

  • 12 - Eric Olsen

    Oct 29, 2003 at 10:29 am

    I am not sure how to respond to Rush. There are plenty of people whose taste I really respect who love Rush. I like "Working Man."

  • 13 - Tom Johnson

    Oct 29, 2003 at 11:46 am

    I don't know exactly what it is about Rush that grabs some people completely and entirely turns others off. There aren't many in-between fans. What grabbed me as a teenager was the mature melodies I heard in their music paired with unusually literate lyrics (1989's Presto being the album whose songs I first identified with.) Nothing seemed "excessive" - even in the midst of the hair-band movement, even being a fan of that kind of music, I was already realizing its limitations. It's clear on any Rush song that you're hearing three great musicians (two of them up there with the best in the business) but nothing they did was overly show-offy. Peart's drumming was "busy" but never to the point where it overshadowed the song.

    Finding Rush was the first really mature decision I made with music. It was the first time I feel like I truly made a decision for myself and not based on what was playing on MTV or what everyone else thought was cool. This was meaningful music in a sea of turgid, stupid crap, but it wasn't trying to push an agenda. Peart's lyrics might address issues, but it did so in a way that didn't make the issue more important than the songs. Nor did he tend to tell you what was right or wrong - something I tire of very quickly - he just wrote about the issue and tried to show you everything. Like their song says, "Show, don't tell." (That's probably the greatest lesson I picked up in college creative writing classes. I wish more writers (here at Blogcritics and in general) understood what that really meant - and used it.)

    That probably doesn't answer anything for you, does it Eric? :-) I think Rush is a "you either get it or don't" type of thing. I wish I knew what it was that caused people to be so turned off by them. I sure can't see it.

  • 14 - Eric Olsen

    Oct 29, 2003 at 12:47 pm

    T, Haha - tricked you into getting personal!

    That was very nice and descriptive, thanks. I was never a hater, but not a lover either - guess I'm a rare 'tweener.

  • 15 - Tom Johnson

    Oct 29, 2003 at 3:00 pm

    Rude, Eric, rude. Nah, actually, this just gives me more drive to actually start working on the chronicles of me and Rush throughout my life. :-)

  • 16 - TDavid

    Nov 14, 2003 at 8:49 pm

    RE #3: Update! Both Rush in Rio and Vapor Trails are now available at Rhapsody -- fully available for streaming and burn ($purchase$).

    So it took from Oct 21, 2003 until Nov 14, 2003 to get to Rhapsody which is not too bad. Neither of these CDs are available at Napster 2.0. Vapor Trails is available at iTunes, but not Rush in Rio. Didn't check out AOL or Musicmatch for availability.

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