Rush's debut album was released in Canada in March and in the United States in July 1974. It was reissued on compact disc with remastered sound in 1997. Due to the tight budget for the recording, the sessions were scheduled during times when the recording studio was usually free, which were generally late at night, resulting in lower rates. This has been quite common for many rock bands (in fact, Queen was forced to do the same for the recording of their first album). The band was not satisfied with the work of the original producer, Dave Stock, so manager Ray Daniels ended up hiring Terry Brown for an additional $9,000, whose remixing work significantly improved the sound quality. The album was originally released under the auspices of the Canadian company Moon Records in a run of only 1,000 copies. One of these songs reached Donna Halper, a DJ at radio station WMMS in Cleveland, Ohio, who selected "Working Man" for regular airplay on her show. The song was so successful that the number of calls the show received caught the attention of executives at Mercury Records, who signed Rush to a contract and reissued the album in the United States, where it was very well received, achieving gold status. After the release of their first album, John Rutsey left the group in July 1974 due to his diabetes and his reluctance to perform live. To replace him, the remaining members held a series of auditions and ultimately hired Neil Peart. Peart officially joined on July 29, 1974, two weeks before their first US tour. They played their first concert together, opening for Uriah Heep and Manfred Mann, before more than eleven thousand people at the Civic Arena in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on August 14th. In addition to becoming the drummer, Peart became the main songwriter, at the expense of Geedy Lee, who showed little interest in writing, despite having written the lyrics for the debut album. And it shows that he was the missing piece, as this album has a more basic and simple sound than what they would later demonstrate, with a rock style that includes no keyboards, a particularly screaming vocal style, and a clear influence from Led Zeppelin's music, as in "What You're Doing" and a few others. Despite everything, they left us with a couple of tracks that became classics in their repertoire; in fact, they never stopped playing them live, such as "Finding My Way", "In the Mood", and "Working Man". The track "Here Again", with an impressive guitar performance by Alex Lifeson, also stands out.
Sunday, July 31, 2011
Sunday, July 17, 2011
Queen-News Of The World (1977)
For many fans, this is perhaps Queen's best album, even surpassing "A Night at the Opera". Without getting into a debate about which is better, "News of the World" undoubtedly best combines commercial appeal with immense quality. Although the album's success was partly due to tracks like the immortal "We Will Rock You" and "We Are the Champions", the rest is a collection of glorious and haunting songs such as the hard rock anthem "Sheer Heart Attack", the jazzy "My Melancholy Blues", the funky "Get Down Make Love", and the beautiful ballad "All Dead All Dead". This would be the definitive album that marked Queen's transition from a great pop-rock band to a staple of the arena-rock scene.
Thursday, July 7, 2011
Jean-Luc Ponty-Cosmic Messenger (1978)
French violinist Jean-Luc Ponty occupies a unique place in the history of rock; he found the violin's precise place within the genre, a place that didn't exist until his arrival. The violin, the quintessential classical instrument, has a history in classical music, popular music, folk, blues, and jazz, but not in rock, which had always preferred more aggressive instruments prone to rhythmic and highly defined use. Ponty managed to introduce the electric violin to rock as a solo instrument at a pivotal moment, in the mid-1960s, when rock was undergoing a significant creative phase. His career dates back to the early 1960s when he came into contact with greats like Stéphane Grappelli and Sven Asmussen, with whom he recorded "Violin Summit". Later, he released his first solo album, "Sunday Walk", accompanied by the cream of European jazz. He then moved to the United States where he collaborated with George Duke on the albums "Electric Connection, Experience" and "Live in Los Angeles". Later, after meeting Frank Zappa, he participated in his albums "Hot Rats" and "King Kong", the latter featuring compositions by Zappa himself, performed by Ponty. In 1974 and 1975, he participated as a member of John McLaughlin's Mahavishnu Orchestra on the legendary albums "Apocalypse" and "Visions of the Emerald Beyond", Throughout these years, Jean-Luc Ponty collaborated on albums by Elton John ("Honky Chateau"), Frank Zappa ("Over-Nite Sensation"), and Chick Corea ("My Spanish Heart"), among others. However, he did not neglect his solo career and from the mid-70s onwards, Ponty would achieve a series of unbeatable albums placing himself at the forefront of jazz rock: "Mystical Adventures", "Aurora", "Imaginary Voyage", "Enigmatic Ocean" or "Cosmic Messenger", where there are fantastic exercises in superb progressive jazz rock such as "Egocentric Molecules", "Mirage", "Between You and Me" or "Once Upon a Dream", all of them of enormous compositional and instrumental complexity.
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