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The opening song of Rush's 2004 tour dates featured an instrumental combining sections of one song from each of the band's first six studio albums. The songs featured in the medley were: "Finding My Way" "Anthem" (Fly by Night) "Bastille Day" (Caress of Steel) "A Passage to Bangkok"
Rush in Rio is a three-disc live album by the Canadian band Rush, released on October 21, 2003. The album is also available as a two-DVD set. With the exception of the last two tracks on the third disc, the album was recorded at Maracanã Stadium in Rio de Janeiro on the final night of the Vapor Trails Tour. The other two tracks were taken from ...
"Hope" is one of the three instrumentals on the Rush album Snakes & Arrows. According to Neil Peart, the title of the instrumental was inspired by the chorus of the ninth Snakes & Arrows track "Faithless", which contains the word "Hope". [1] It is the band's second shortest studio-album-song, clocking in at 2 minutes 2 seconds.
Rush in Rio is a live DVD by Canadian band Rush, released in 2003. It is also available as a three CD set . It was the first concert DVD ever released by the band, consisting of 29 songs, and is available in both one-disc and two-disc sets.
The song has not been released in any format since the initial 1973 Moon Records release. Allegedly only 500 copies of the single were pressed. [7] [8] [10] "Finding My Way" Rush: 1974 Drummer: John Rutsey "Need Some Love" Rush: 1974 Drummer: John Rutsey "Take a Friend" Rush: 1974 Drummer: John Rutsey "Here Again" Rush: 1974
R30: 30th Anniversary World Tour is a live DVD by the Canadian rock band Rush, released on November 22, 2005 in Canada and the US, and November 28, 2005 in Europe.The DVD documents the band's R30: 30th Anniversary Tour, and was recorded on September 24, 2004 at the Festhalle Frankfurt, Germany.
The song's lyrics tell a story set in a future in which many classes of vehicles have been banned by a "Motor Law." The narrator's uncle has kept one of these now-illegal vehicles (the titular red Barchetta sports car) in pristine condition for roughly 50 years and is hiding it at his secret country home, which had been a farm before the Motor Law was enacted.
He later described the song as a parable about Collectivism, an idea addressed by novelist Ayn Rand. The nine-minute "La Villa Strangiato" (subtitled "An Exercise in Self-Indulgence") is the first instrumental that Rush recorded, and has 12 distinct sections. The piece is what Lifeson described as a "musical re-creation" of the various ...