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The band adopted its usual working method of Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson working on music while Neil Peart worked on lyrics. News stories from the Toronto-based newspaper The Globe and Mail inspired some of the lyrics on the album, particularly "Distant Early Warning," "Red Lenses" and "Between the Wheels."
Distant Early Warning may refer to: Distant Early Warning Line , a series of radar stations in the Arctic, operated during the Cold War by the United States, Canada, Greenland and Iceland "Distant Early Warning" (song) , a song by the Canadian rock band Rush
The final lyric of "Distant Early Warning", a single released by the Canadian rock band Rush, is the word 'Absalom' repeated three times. Drummer Neil Peart , the band's lyricist, said he "loved the sound of" the title of Faulkner's novel and was inspired to look up the Biblical story of Absalom after reading the novel.
The Yardbirds cover song [126] from early Rush band reproduced for the album. [28] "Crossroads" Feedback: 2004 Robert Johnson cover song [127] from Neil Peart's early pre-Rush career and early Rush band reproduced for the album. [28] "R30 Overture" R30: 30th Anniversary World Tour: 2005 I. "Finding My Way"; II. "Anthem"; III. "Bastille Day"; IV.
Distant Early Warning (song) Double Agent (song) Dreamline; Driven (Rush song) E. ... Stick It Out (Rush song) Subdivisions (song) T. Tears (Rush song) The Temples of ...
[2] Among the bonus tracks on the third disc of the CD release is a second performance of the song featuring violinist Jonathan Dinklage, a member of the string ensemble that had backed Rush during their Clockwork Angels Tour. Best Buy sold two deluxe edition box sets of R40 Live: CD/DVD and CD/Blu-ray.
Snakes & Arrows Live is a live double CD and DVD by Canadian band Rush.The CD was released on April 14, 2008, in the UK and on April 15, 2008, around the world. It was also released on DVD and Blu-ray on November 24, 2008. [5]
With funding provided by NATOarts, Distant Early Warning was released in September 1999 through Aesthetics. Like the Rush song of the same name, the record took its name from, and was inspired by, the radar stations located at the edges of Canada and Alaska that warned NATO member states of possible Soviet nuclear strikes.