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Rush – Signals (Mercury, 1982)

February 16, 2022 by A.S. Van Dorston

Canada’s greatest power trio experiments with new wave and reggae.

Rush’s ninth album was pretty divisive with longtime fans at the time, and I had no idea. After “Spirit of the Radio” from Permanent Waves (1980) blew my 11 year-old mind, my favorite band ELO released the sci-fi themed synthpop album Time (1981). My second favorite band Queen had a disco-funk hit (you know the one), then went all-in with dance pop on Hot Space (1982). The first album I ever bought was Gary Numan’s Pleasure Principle (1979), so I just figured it was inevitable that all the bands would fuck with synthesizers. If that was the sound of the future, I was all in, at least for the time being. After releasing their one truly perfect album, Moving Pictures (1981), my new favorite band Rush did just that with Signals, and it sounded amazing. The way the Oberheim and Minimoog occupied a thick pad of lush midrange frequencies had the same effect that Electric Light Orchestra did both with an actual analog orchestra and the synths on Time — they sounded full and huge, even on our crappy Montgomery Ward stereo. Not all synthpop bands achieved that sweet spot. For example, Duran Duran’s Rio sounded brittle and tinny.

Rush continued the tradition of opening their album with, if not the best songs, the most attention-grabbing. “Subdivisions” does that for sure, a bold statement of purpose with it’s thick, dark synth chords that could have come from post-punkers Magazine. The lyrics and video astutely address alienation from a teenage perspective, reinforcing that this stuff was aimed right at me and my big-ass 80s plastic framed glasses that were too big for my head. It was assumed that there was conflict over Alex Lifeson’s somewhat reduced guitar duties, given how much space Lee’s synths take up. But according to interviews in Martin Popoff’s recent book Limelight: Rush in the ’80s, the band were all in agreement over their new direction, even though it was a challenge for each of them to adjust to the new technology. Alex switched to more clear, high, chiming guitar tones along the lines of The Police’s Andy Summers, and U2’s The Edge. The use of reggae and ska-inspired rhythms in several tunes drew a lot of comparisons with The Police, which the band didn’t deny. First single “New World Man” is perhaps the biggest, poppiest departure, one that that was off-the-cuff, written and recorded in just a couple days. Yes, the opening electronic burbles could have come from an Ultravox track, and the rhythm could have fit comfortably on Ghost in the Machine (1981). Nevertheless, it still managed to sound like Rush, and lyrically felt like the oblique sequel to “Tom Sawyer.”

“The Analog Kid” gave Lifeson the opportunity to whip out enough tasty leads to keep him happy, while “Chemistry,” written by the whole band, had a colder, clinical feel that now sounds like a foreshadowing of Grace Under Pressure (1984). Okay, “Digital Man” really sounds a lot like The Police, but at least it’s better than most of Synchronicity (1983). “The Weapon” was the second part of Neil Peart’s “Fear” trilogy that started with “Witch Hunt.” The concept of using fear to control people with religion and censorship is pretty basic, but it tied together what in my mind were the three greatest Rush albums. “Losing It” is a pretty powerful ballad, assisted by Ben Mink’s heartwrenching violin solo. It’s a pretty adult theme about the fear of losing your mojo, inspired by the movie Turning Point, that gave me a distinct sense of unease, given that I didn’t even have any mojo yet. The album concludes with “Countdown,” inspired by their VIP viewing of the liftoff of the space shuttle Columbia on April 12, 1981. A song about a rocket launch with some of the heavier riffage on the album, what’s not to love?

Simultaneously more experimental but less original than both Moving Pictures and Grace Under Pressure, Signals is still peak-era Rush, and song for song, stands the test of time, unlike their later work. Even the popular Power Windows (1985) sounds more dated with the electro-pop production gone overboard with the poor choice of producer Peter Collins. These are the songs, not some bullshit from Presto (1989), that retained the loyalty of a widespread fanbase that incrementally crossed over to mainstream, leading to appearances in the movie I Love You, Man (2009), their own documentary Beyond The Lighted Stage (2010), and their induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2013. Rest in beats Neil.

They got a bit behind in the release of the 40th anniversary reissues. Moving Pictures is just coming out April 15. Rush never really left scraps lying around to be used for bonus tracks, so they focus on including a complete live show and thick booklets with art and liner notes. We’ll see if they get back on track and also reissue Signals before next year.

Martin Popoff’s Limelight: Rush in the ’80s. | MartinPopoff.com | Kindle

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