A very glossy, very synth-heavy and yet laidback album that really showcases Neil's lyrics.
- Geddy is the star here as Alex and Neil's playing take a pretty big backseat. There are, of course, complexities within their simplicities, but mostly this album is all about Geddy's bass, Neil's words, and the synths.
Nevermind scores or anything like that, these two points are hard for me to wrap my head around.
Power Windows has so much energy from beginning to end I'm surprised anyone would call it "laidback". Not to mention Alex and Neil taking a backseat. Neil's drumming is huge all across this album, really utilizing his electric kit to its full capabilities. "Mystic Rhythms" is one of Neil's all-time drum tracks and "Territories" and "The Big Money" also dispel this notion.
But
Alex... to me,
Power Windows is the album where Alex's guitar, sidelined on the previous two records, comes back in a big way. His riffs are married to the synths and sound much more biting, and solo-wise this is a contender for his best ever work. "The Big Money" and "Marathon" are contenders for his best two solos, period. Are we listening to the same album?
Fly By Night (1975)
Anthem - 8/10
Best I Can - 3/10
Beneath, Between and Behind - 7/10
By-Tor and the Snow Dog - 8/10
Fly By Night - 9/10
Making Memories - 6/10
Rivendell - 4/10
In the End - 5/10
Album rating - 6.2/10
Neil's arrival certainly levels up the instrumentals and the lyrics, but overall this is not a massive improvement on the debut album. The good songs are overall better, though!
- Another Rush album that does not feature, IMO, any perfect songs. The title track, Anthem and By-Tor all get legendary status, but none are 10/10's.
- The back half of the album really yawns to the finish line. It's like after the title track this becomes a typical 70s southern rock record, but for some reason there's a boring song about elves.
- Speaking of that boring song, it's so weird to have a Rush song that features no drums or bass.
- Thank goodness they stopped allowing Ged to write lyrics.
Not an improvement? It's up by 20 points over the debut for me! The album has only continued to go up in my estimations. Here are my updated scores:
Anthem - 10/10
Best I Can - 9/10
Beneath, Between and Behind - 8/10
By-Tor and the Snow Dog - 10/10
Fly by Night - 8/10
Making Memories - 8/10
Rivendell - 8/10
In the End - 7/10
Total: 85%
The 3/10 for "Best I Can" blows my mind. Has your sense of joy died, sir? It's a simple song but it's fired up and Neil's drumming elevates it to a completely different plane. He sounds so furiously intense and it is glorious to hear. I also don't think Geddy's lyrics are lackluster enough to push it down when the music is so bangin'.
Fly by Night is leaps and bounds over the debut and for a band to craft a genuine classic on their sophomore record like that is massive.
Signals (1982)
Subdivisions - 10/10
The Analog Kid - 10/10
Chemistry - 8/10
Digital Man - 7/10
The Weapon - 6/10
New World Man - 9/10
Losing It - 10/10
Countdown - 5/10
Album rating - 8.1/10
A mixed bag of an album that veers the band fully into synth territory. I enjoy that sound, but I definitely don't love every song here.
- Neil is at the absolute top of his lyrical game here. Subdivisions and Losing It are breathtaking lyrics.
- Subdivisions, Analog Kid and Losing It are some of the best Rush songs of all time.
- The majority of the album feels very thematically linked (youth, divided society, dreams and hopes and the reality of those things) and then Countdown shits the bed with all that.
Got to
Signals today, here are the new scores:
Subdivisions - 10/10
The Analog Kid - 9/10
Chemistry - 7/10
Digital Man - 7/10
The Weapon - 7/10
New World Man - 8/10
Losing It - 7/10
Countdown - 9/10
Total: 79% (weighted)
"Countdown" is such a powerful little track. Kind of a hidden gem for me.
I find this album to basically be a foreshadowing of what Rush will become after
Power Windows. Coming off the heels of
Moving Pictures,
Signals is really tame. It's very consistent though, which makes it worth coming back to, but it doesn't thrill me nearly as much as the five albums that precede it and only "Subdivisions" hits without a doubt the peak that Rush have up to this point usually been able to crush multiple times on their albums.
I expect you and I get very different things out of Rush.
I suppose, because I also got to
Grace Under Pressure today and my score went down.