2112

Rush - 2112

2112
List Price: $5.98
Our Price: $2.58
You Save: $3.40 (57%)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Buy Used: from $1.84 (click here)
Category: Music CD
See more CD details
Listen soundtracks from this album



(Click here)
Buy this Music CD at online store in your country
Canadian Music Store

CD Details

Artist: Rush
Edition: Music CD
Audio: English (Original Language)
Format: Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered
CD Release Date: 1997-05-06
Music Label: Island / Mercury
Soundtracks:
  1. '2112': I: Overture/II: The Temples Of Syrinx/III: Discovery/IV: Presentation/V: Oracle: The Dream/VI. Soliloquy/VII. Grand Finale
  2. A Passage To Bangkok
  3. The Twilight Zone
  4. Lessons
  5. Tears
  6. Something For Nothing

Music reviews of 2112

Music Review: Heavy Metal has a brain...
Rating: 5 Stars

Though not the "breakthrough" album for Rush that it is common supposed to have been--this was actually "Hemispheres"--"2112" is a landmark in Rush's creative development and in the development of progressive rock and heavy metal. It can fairly, though arguably, claim to be the first real Heavy Metal album. The sonic mud of Black Sabbath, the instrumental incompetence of the band and the drugged-out babble of Ozzie's lyrics made "Sabbath" incapable of being anything other than something to annoy parents and neighbors with.

"2112" is the first real achievement of the second generation of hard rock and Rush is the band that made that second generation main stream.

The influence of the pseudo-Nietzchean philospher Ayn Rand on Neil Peart's lyrics--as opposed to his life--has been way over blown. Peart is a far deeper thinker than Rand ever was and far better writer than she was as well. Where as Rand spewed out gigantic books filled with one-dimensional characters embalmed in endless pages of incomprehensible polysyllabic babble, "2112"--the side long piece--presents a comprehensible dystopic future. A future where, as under the Soviet Union, artistic expression is as tightly controlled as political expression. The intelligent tyrants always understand that controlling art is as much a tool of controlling the masses as control of the police and the military. The horizons of acceptable expression must be guided through the channels of the party or the religious dogma.

"2112"'s protagonist finds a guitar in cave. Elated with his discovery, the chance to bring some color into the drab life of totalitarian existence, he presents his discovery to the head tyrant. (Much of this detail as included in the liner notes of the LP, excised from the CD). The tyrant-priest goes on a rant, smashes the guitar and banishes the intruding fool who whold have disturbed the existing social order--and endangered his power.

Musically Rush is still very much under the tutelage of Zeppelin, Cream and Yes. But they have already begun to hone the unique sound that first appeared on the brilliant--and unfairly maligned predecessor to this album--"Caress of Steel" (perhaps the coolest album title ever).

The parts that go to make up the whole of "2112" are much more co-hesive and do tell the story of our hapless protagonist. The intro blazes into a Zeppelinque bombs-away (foreshadowing the song cycle's climax by quoting the main theme from the "1812 Overture). "The Temples of Syrinx" presents the world through the eyes of the priests. Life is pretty sweet for them, as it always is for the rulers, so why should they put a seal of approval upon anything which might interrupt this cozy state of affairs. Blazing guitar work and the intricate interplay of bass and drums that would become the hallmark of Rush's sound for the next 30 years are all in place. While Lifeson's guitar would shift from Pagian/Claptonian heroics to harmonic color, and back again, the recipe for 30,000,000 US records and decades of ultra-succesful tourign were well and truly laid.

The high point of both the album and "2112" is "The Oracle." The distortion and crunch give way to a much subtler sound and when the inevitable bombs-away beings its a much more deft and agile sound. The lyrics of freedom against a soul-deadending despostim are also stirring (though perhaps less so to a generation whose grown up without the shadow of the Soviet Union).

If you can listen to Rush play "2112" live in concert and not leap to your feet, something's wrong with you. While "Hemispheres" would refine the side-long piece/concept album to the point beyond which only reptition was possible, the basics are all here on this album. "Hemispheres" reaches an orchestral pitch that "2112" does not, as its does intellectually as well, but "Hemispheres" cannot top the raw power of three musicians bound and determined to defy not only the musical conventions of the day but the pressures of the "industry" to conform to more "accessible" themes and forms.

It is this defiance, which pulses through ever note and drum-beat that separates "2112" from every other Rush album. These three Canadians from the suburbs were going their own way with a vengeance. It's a joy to listen to this clarion call to individualism and freedom (things which had little in common with Rand's incoherence, the latter being something which Peart quickly picked up on as he clearly realized that Rand was motivated not buy the beauty of freedom but solely by the hatred of the oppressor who drove her family from Russia).

The second side of the album is a decidedly mixed bag of stylistic experiments. "Something for Nothing," the album's closing number is a straight ahead rocker in the manner of "Bastille Day." Ferocious riffs, wicked fills and driving bass dominate it and deliver one of the most polished pieces of hard rock ever mined by this band.

"A Passage to Bangkok" is easily the best song on the second side. From the quirky microtones of the intro to the rugged rythym this songs celebrates, as one Rush biographer put it, "a connosier's appreciation..." of what is left for you to decided.

"The Twilight Zone" is a tongue-in-cheek tribute to Rod Serling. And like the tongue-in-cheek (or should we say "in toupee"?) "I Think I'm Going Bald" on "Caress" it doesn't accomplish what it sets out to. The music of "Twilight Zone", however, cannot be ignored, as the rambling, bumbling "Going Bald's" tune can and should be.

"Lessons" and "Tears" are forgettable stabs in the direction of the soft/folk rock of James Taylor, Peter Frampton and the Eagles who were beginning to replace Zeppelin and the other "dinosaurs" as the Seventies moved toward their terrible climax. They should be give one listen and then relegated to the CD when you the album to your iPod.

Normally the missteps on side two (one song average, two mediocrities) would merit dinging a star off an album. But this Rush and this is "2112." If all they had delivered was the nearly 20 mins of Side One (ahhh, records, anyone miss 'em? Didn't think so), this would be known as one of the most perfect EPs ever recorded. As it is, the rousing achievement of "2112" drowns out the mistakes of the Side Two and, in the memory of Rush fans, leaves only "2112" behind.

If you're looking for a place to begin your journey into the every rewarding world of Rush, 2112 is the place to start. It is the keystone by which the three albums that went before can be judged and the foundation for the 13 studio albums that were to follow.

If you can't get past hating Geddy's voice--as my wife can't--then the loss is, sadly, yours. You'll be depriving yourself of the incredible musical and lyrical talents of Canada's greatest and most succesful musical group--as well as those of the greatest living bassist and drummer and one of the greatest guitarists.

Rush is that almost extinct breed of artist in this age where marketing and packaging, focus-groups and market research take the place of talent and inspiration: they have no egomaniacal need to parade their private lives before you. They only want to deliver music. Whether anyone else likes it or not is irrelevant to them. In the "American Idol" universe this makes them a treasure indeed.
More 2112 free music reviews:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Description of 2112

Japanese only paper sleeve SHM pressing. The SHM-CD [Super High Material CD] format features enhanced audio quality through the use of a special polycarbonate plastic. Using a process developed by JVC and Universal Music Japan discovered through the joint companies' research into LCD display manufacturing SHM-CDs feature improved transparency on the data side of the disc allowing for more accurate reading of CD data by the CD player laser head. SHM-CD format CDs are fully compatible with standard CD players. Warner. 2009.
Only Rush could have pulled this off, and only in the '70s. 2112--the title suite of the band's 1976 breakthrough album--is a comically pretentious, futuristic rock opera written by a nerdy drummer and sung by a whiny-voiced geek. It also happens to be a great piece of rock & roll that lifts the listener through a variety of moods and textures from genteel acoustic ("Oracle") to thrilling metal ("The Temples of Syrinx"). Perhaps realizing that they had taken conceptualism about as far as it could go, even these guys backed off on the epic hero stuff for later releases. 2112 still stands as one of the great signposts of the prog-rock era. --Michael Ruby

Classic Rock CDs

Music Genres
Bestsellers in Classic Rock CDs
Wings at the Speed of Sound ImagePaul Mccartney, Wings - Wings at the Speed of Sound
Release date: 1996-09-24; Music CD
Best price: $269.99
Boxed ImageSmall Faces - Boxed
Release date: 1997-11-01; Music CD
Best price: $43.38
Gris Gris ImageDr John - Gris Gris
Release date: 1994-07-15; Music CD
Price in other shops: $18.98
Eric Clapton: Live in Hyde Park [VHS] ImageEric Clapton: Live in Hyde Park [VHS]
Warner Bros / Wea; Release date: 1998-02-17; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $12.75
Price in other shops: $19.98
Human Highway [VHS] ImageHuman Highway [VHS]
Warner Bros / Wea; Release date: 1995-08-08; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $120.79
The Monkees - Head [VHS] ImageThe Monkees - Head [VHS]
Rhino / Wea; Release date: 1995-01-25; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $14.42
Price in other shops: $14.98
Live & Loud [VHS] ImageOzzy Osbourne - Live & Loud [VHS]
Sony; Release date: 1993-05-25; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $3.96
Price in other shops: $14.98
Unplugged [VHS] ImageBruce Springsteen - Unplugged [VHS]
Sony; Release date: 1992-12-15; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $2.75
Price in other shops: $14.98
Peter Gabriel - P.O.V. [VHS] ImagePeter Gabriel - Peter Gabriel - P.O.V. [VHS]
Virgin Records Us; Release date: 1992-06-29; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $121.90
Past to Present [VHS] ImageToto - Past to Present [VHS]
Sony; Release date: 1991-07-01; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $72.82
Compare prices and find music notes for more than one million Music CD titles