Many years ago…I think I was still living with my parents…there was an amazing website with mp3s of just about everything Rush that you could imagine. The site went down soon after, and I was unable to download any full concerts. What I did get was all the singles and bonus tracks they had available.
I burned these tracks to a double CD and called it Rare Rush. I printed the tracklist on brown paper so it would somewhat match with Chronicles.
Most of these tracks are alternate versions, some from promo releases. The website had all the details, so they are now lost. However I know some of these are very special versions. “The Weapon” is the famous single version featuring Count Floyd (Joe Flaherty).
The quality varies from track to track depending on the original source (some are from cassette). All are interesting to obsessive Rush fans.
OZZY OSBOURNE – The Ozzman Cometh (1997 Sony Japan 2 CD set)
By 1997, Ozzy had reclaimed his crown as the prince of darkness. The successful Ozzfest, including a partial Black Sabbath reunion (Mike Bordin instead of Bill Ward) had introduced Ozzy to a wave of nu-metal youngesters. Why not cap the year off with a greatest hits album? It wasn’t Ozzy’s first (1989’s Best of Ozz preceding it) but it was his first for most of the world. Incredibly, given the Ozzy camp’s ability to muck up important releases from time to time, it was a particularly good package.
The Ozzman Cometh has had a number of issues over the years, but we won’t get into the ones that came after Sharon meddled around with re-recorded tracks. Initially there was a limited edition 2 CD set and a standard single disc. The lucky fans in Japan got an expanded 2 CD set with two bonus tracks. That’s the one you see pictured here. It comes in a non-standard extra thick jewel case due to the extra Japanese booklet inside.
The big deal of this new compilation was the inclusion of recently discovered early Black Sabbath tapes — “Ozzy’s 1970 basement tapes”. Wikipedia tells us that these are actually BBC recordings: “The John Peel Sessions” of 26 April 1970. These have yet to be included on any Sabbath deluxe, so you have to be sure to get The Ozzman Cometh to complete your Sabbath collections. “Black Sabbath” and “War Pigs” commence the set right out of the gate. These tapes are raw but clean, and Geezer Butler has remarkable presence. It’s a very sharp picture of what young Black Sabbath sounded like. The lyrics are still a work in progress for those who love such differences, but Ozzy sounds even more like a man possessed. “War Pigs” is still in its “Walpurgis” form, the “Satanic” version, and this is the clearest you will likely hear it.
Onto the hits: Ozzy’s grudge against The Ultimate Sin was apparently already in play. On the US CD, only one track from the Jake E. Lee era was included and it’s “Bark at the Moon”. In Japan, “Shot in the Dark” is substituted in replacing Zakk Wylde’s “Miracle Man”, bringing the Lee content to two. However the Randy Rhoads era is the star of the disc, with his version of “Paranoid” lifted from the Tribute album. Included are, for the most part, the expected usual Rhoads songs: “Crazy Train”, “Goodbye to Romance”, and “Mr. Crowley”, but no “I Don’t Know”. Instead it’s the more interesting “Over the Mountain”.
As for Zakk Wylde’s legacy, it’s hobbled by the missing “Miracle Man”, since “Crazy Babies” doesn’t adequately capture his madness. “No More Tears” is present as a single edit, and “Mama, I’m Coming Home” is necessary for any hits CD catering to people who just want some Ozzy songs they like. It’s unfortunate that “I Don’t Want to Change the World” from Live & Loud takes up space. The Zakk era ends with two good songs: “I Just Want You”, the excellent dark ballad from Ozzmosis, and “new” song “Back on Earth”. You had to have a new song, and according to the liner notes this was an unreleased one from the Ozzmosis era featuring Geezer Butler on bass. Fortunately it doesn’t sound like an inferior song, just one too many ballads for the album. (It’s written by Taylor Rhodes and Richie Supa.)
The second CD contains more treasure. “Fairies Wear Boots” and “Behind the Wall of Sleep” are bonus Sabbath songs from the same Peel session. Like the first two, they are crisp and probably essential to any serious fan of the original lineup.
Japan got two extra songs from movie soundtracks, enabling you to get them on an Ozzy CD. The first is the excellent “Walk on Water”, Ozzy’s only studio recording with Zakk Wylde’s replacement Joe Holmes. If you wanted to know what an Ozzy album with Holmes would have sounded like, here’s a good indication. It would have been not too dissimilar from Ozzmosis but with some really different guitar playing. Sure sounds like Mike Bordin on drums! The other soundtrack song is “Pictures of Matchstick Men” featuring Type O Negative as the backing band. It’s pretty forgettable.
The Ozzy interview from 1988 is 17 minutes of nothing special. Here’s an interesting fact for you. When stores were solicited for this album in 1997, I can distinctly remember the papers saying the interview would be a new one conducted by Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers. I no longer have that piece of paper, and memory is what it is these days, but that’s what it said. For whatever reason the 1988 one was used instead. Go ahead and let me know how often you play it. You can tell it was taped in the UK, at a rehearsal or soundcheck, because you can hear Zakk wailing away in the background.
The Japanese CD also comes with a neat sticker sheet with all of Ozzy’s album artwork on it. I think the US CD has some screen savers. I’d rather have the stickers.
Ozzy and company did the greatest hits thing right and have never actually done it this well since. May as well track down a 2 CD Ozzman Cometh and get those Black Sabbath tracks you’re missing.
Enjoy music just a little different from the norm? Here are Kathryn Ladano and opening act, combining members of Harp+ and Seagram Synth Ensemble at the TWH Social After Dark Space January 11 2020. My Samsung couldn’t get a good image in the dark, but the audio is decent in full stereo. Enjoy the track “Flow” from the new album Masked and clips from other tracks on the disc!
The synthscape of the opening act was quite awesome. Now, I don’t normally drink, but I was with Max the Axe. Before long I had a rum and Coke in me and I was taken on this wild synthesizer trip through the cosmos! For roughly 30 minutes, a stream of music emanated through the room, like a slideshow of NASA photos from the 1960s. Can’t wait to hear the Seagram Synth Ensemble’s album which was for sale and now in my collection.
Kathryn Ladano played interpretations of music from her album Masked. “Interpretations” because the music is improvised and never the same twice, they just follow the same rough blueprints. “It’s better live” whispered Max (you can hear this in the video), and Dr. Ladano agreed.
Forever I’ll be grateful for Neil Peart. If there was ever one shining example of a rock star you’d want to emulate, it was Neil Peart. He was a giant. Musically he was untouchable. Considering Rush have 19 studio albums and other odds and ends in their discography, it’s a daunting task to make a list of the best.
Probably half the list fell together immediately. The other half was agonizing. Focusing on songs, not necessarily solos, made it a simpler task. Any one of Neil’s big live solos are essential listening anyway. “The Rhythm Method” on Different Stages comes highly recommended.
At one point I had nine tracks and needed one more. I asked Facebook for help. Facebook responded with so many great runners-up that I have to list them.
A good showing for Presto tunes there, notably. T-Rev always loved that album. Ultimately I used none of these suggestions and completed the list below. A list that I believe are the 10 best songs to represent Neil Peart.
All of these songs (above and below) will enrich your lives. Enjoy. And rest in peace, Neil Peart OC (Order of Canada), one of our proudest native sons.
I use the term “novelty” with a caveat: really, only because the song is 70 seconds long. Neil’s arrangement of the classic Hockey Night in Canada theme written by Dolores Claman deserves note as one of very few tracks credited to him as a solo artist. This track shows off his roots and his ability to make anything sound heavy! Yet dig in and listen to his meticulously arranged drum part. He put just as much creativity into this as he did any of Rush’s originals.
#10:
“One Little Victory”
A victory indeed! Neil suffered immeasurable tragedy in the late 1990s when he lost both his wife and daughter. He disappeared on a motorcycle, remaining out of sight for five years, the wind on his back as he sought healing. His return was “One Little Victory” from Vapor Trails with a crescendo of power drumming. It’s Rush saying, “He’s back, baby. The Professor is back!”
#9:
“Bravado”
This track from Roll the Bones is a personal favourite. Well, they all are, but this one is for just one moment in time. At 3:50 of the song, Peart performs a drum roll that I can only describe as pure ecstasy.
And if the music stops, there’s only the sound of the rain.
#8:
“Red Sector A”
80s Rush rules! Neil was using more and more electronic percussion, but to no less lethal effect. Give this number from Grace Under Pressure a spin. The programmed pulse of synth topped by the crashing clank of Neil’s electronic drums give this track a digital, otherworldly feeling. By this time, Peart’s cymbal work was just as interesting as what he was doing elsewhere on the kit. Listen to him ride that beat and accent it with the perfect touch.
#7:
“The Spirit of Radio”
This enduring track from Permanent Waves is a lyrical and rhythmic triumph. It’s easy for cynics to mock descriptive phrases like “Invisible airwaves crackle with life, bright antennae bristle with the energy.” But there is no denying the truth that is “Emotional feedback on a timeless wavelength, bearing a gift beyond price, almost free.” Music.
#6:
“Cygnus X-1”
A Farewell to Kings was Rush during their progressive peak, a stream of albums with side-long concepts. “Cygnus X-1” utilises such Peart favourites as bells. And it’s 11 minutes about a black hole.
#5:
“Cotton Tail”
In 1994, Neil Peart organized the Buddy Rich tribute album Burning For Buddy, uniting the Buddy Rich Big Band with drummers such as Dave Weckl, Steve Smith, Matt Sorum, Simon Phillips, and of course Neil with his debut in the jazz section. His groove on “Cotton Tail” is unlike anything he’s done in Rush. It’s unreal that he could master both rock and jazz like this.
#4:
“Vital Signs”
80s Rush rules! Introducing reggae vibes seems natural in hindsight given Neil’s willingness to explore new rhythms. Peart’s creativity knew no bounds. His delicate touch on the Police-like “Vital Signs” (from Moving Pictures) is so good that it should probably be higher on this list. But there are some key tracks still to come.
#3:
“YYZ”
Rush’s most famous instrumental. This number showcases all three of Rush’s members. Of course Neil Peart’s drums are in integral part of it all. And there’s a reason they call him “The Professor”. According to minds more musical than mine, “The piece’s introduction, played in a time signature of 10/8, repeatedly renders “Y-Y-Z” in Morse Code using various musical arrangements.”
#2:
“Subdivisions”
This track from Signals exemplifies Neil’s philosophy of drums as an active part of the composition of a song. Every beat matters; everything the stick hits is a hook. Never before have the drums been so integral a part of what makes a song truly great.
#1:
“Tom Sawyer”
The quintessential Neil Peart song. Iconic, untouchable. Barenaked Ladies even quoted his famous drum part in their song “Grade Nine”. When people think of Rush 100 years from now, it’ll be the image of them jamming “Tom Sawyer” at Le Studio, with Neil framed by that big window and snowy landscape behind.
Epilogue: Meanwhile, in England…
Sarge from the piercing shop Metal Fatigue in Bournemouth tells us “I have been listening to Rush…ALL DAY. Really loud. He added, “I did 40-odd piercings today with that soundtrack!!” Absolutely brilliant.
I found this old VHS tape in the stockroom at work a long time ago, and forgot about it. Fortunately, Facebook remembers! You gotta admit, the cover is hilarious.
Join us for the release of MASKED! Get the new album on vinyl, or CD with two bonus tracks. Admission is free!
Please note that the venue has changed slightly. Instead of being in the Oak Room lobby in the 2nd floor of the Walper, it will now be in the TWH Social After Dark Space.
This afternoon I was in the mood for some Rush music. It had been a while. Maybe a month since I last played Rush. Signals, I chose. A personal favourite. Still craving more, I picked the followup album Grace Under Pressure. That complete, I finally, and strangely, went for Vapor Trails. I say “strangely” because Vapor Trails was a special album for Neil Peart. After suffering the terrible twin tragedies of losing his daughter and his wife, Neil Peart took a step back from music to take care of himself. There was a time in the late 90s and early 2000s when the reality was that there wasn’t a Rush. And we weren’t sure if there ever would be one again. But then Neil made a pretty epic comeback on Vapor Trails and I like to think of it as “his” album in my mind.
The fortitude of the man, to come back after such loss, was inspiring. What strength.
Halfway through Vapor Trails, during the track “Secret Touch”, this happened.
The greatest rock drummer of all time…
Is gone.
Like a vapor trail.
I say “greatest of all time” because I can, confidently. There will be those who disagree, and there will be others to put them back in their places. He might also be the greatest lyricist in rock history, though that’s a far more wide open field. Some of his lyrics hit home in emotional ways.
We are young, Wandering the face of the earth, Wondering what our dreams might be worth, Learning that we’re only immortal, For a limited time.
Neil Peart was a star I always identified with: an introvert with his nose in a book. Yet on stage he was a dynamo. He did things with two sticks that most drummers cannot. He paved the way for the Portnoys and all the greats that followed. His lyrics of alienation resonated within the subdivisions. And he was reportedly also one of the nicest, most down to earth human beings to those whom would he would let in.
Personally speaking, it was “Subdivisions” that hooked me. The singer kind of weirded me out, with the glasses, nose and high-pitch. It took me a while to accept Rush into my life. I was 21 years old when it finally happened. It had so much to do with the drums, and the percussive mini-compositions within every song. Seeing Neil Peart interview Jean Chrétien on MuchMusic solidified my belief that this was an intelligent rocker, far different from all the others. By this time, he was also writing articles in Macleans magazine. His travel book The Masked Rider became an immediate favourite, as Neil painted verbal pictures of African savannas from the seat of a bicycle.
Brain cancer is an evil bitch. It’s the same monster that took down our beloved Gordon Downey, and now it has taken from us someone deeply dear. Neil accompanied me on many of my most impactful life moments. My first relationship & accompanying breakup, my job at the Record Store, finishing school, all of it. Neil was there with beats and words to raise the spirits higher. I tended to take the words my own way. Which is how Neil would have wanted it.
Rush are one of the few bands, unlike Kiss or Motley Crue, that went out with class. They simply played their final shows and retired without making a big fuss. We all knew it was a big deal, and they did too — but they didn’t act like it. Neil Peart went back home to spend time with his new family, something everybody was happy for him to do. After all that tragedy, it was a delight to see that Neil has picked up the pieces and made a new clan. And now that family is shattered, in incomprehensible pain.
The song that got me into Rush was “Subdivisions”, but instead of posting that track here, I have chosen “Dreamline” from Roll the Bones. Rest in peace Neil, and thank you for albums that will always be close to my heart.
Fuck cancer.
Uncle Meat has a few words to add.
One likes to believe in the freedom of music, but glittering prizes and endless compromises shatter the illusion of integrity.
His lyrics were as good as his drumming. And that is saying alot. Neil Peart was the opposite of a rock star. He wanted nothing to do with any of that bullshit. When Neil Peart joined Rush after their first album he turned Rush from just another rock band, into the greatest rock band of all time. Many life long friendships have been founded and cemented within the musical and lyrical gifts he gave us. A big long hug to all of you (and you know who you are)…
SVEN GALI – In My Garden (1992 BMG promo cassette)
One of the great perks to a M.E.A.T Magazine subscription was getting free promo tapes in the mail. One of the bands that M.E.A.T had been hyping was Sven Gali, who had a major label debut on deck with BMG for release. We were all curious what Sven Gali sounded like…and then this promo tape arrived, previewing three of the tracks!
The lead singer can make or break a band, and Sven Gali had Dave Wanless. Mr. Wanless had the power reminiscent of another successful Canadian, a certain Sebastian Something who was out there ruling the concert stages. Wanless also had the right look, and of course a pretty good band! From the ranks of Billy Idol came veteran drummer Gregg Gerson, joining with Dee Cernile (guitars, R.I.P.), Andy Frank (guitars), and “T.T.” (bass). They could rock. They had soloists arguably more interesting than the guys in Skid Row. And, as evident in this tape, they could write hooks.
“Freakz” wasn’t the lead single, but it could have been. Rebellious rock attitude, tires smoking down a dark alley, guns blazing…and just a pinch of funk. “When you gonna learn, baybay!” screams Dave Wanless, and just know he’s got at least one fist raised when he’s singing it.
Up second is a track that did become a single, the dark ballad “In My Garden” (an edit version). This world-class ballad has all the right ingredients including chorus hooks, a place to shout along, and perfect guitars. In the early 1990s, if grunge had not derailed the rock n’ roll train, bands like Sven Gali (more aggressive than the 80s groups but not abandoning solos and choruses, and with an ear for musicianship) would have been the next wave.
The last track on the tape is the borderline thrash of “Here Today, Gone Tomorrow”, ironic in hindsight since Sven Gali only managed two albums before being submerged by the flotsam of the mid 90s rock scene. Skid Row comparisons are easy to make (in a positive way), but there’s one major difference between Skid Row and Sven Gali. That is Sven Gali still have their original singer where Skid Row do not. (They have a new track out called “You Won’t Break Me” to be followed by a CD in 2020.) They might not have exceeded the fame of Skid Row, but they might just end up having more material with their original singer….
This cassette whet the appetite for the eventual album, which maybe suffered from too much material, but on tape these songs sound ace!
4/5 stars
Check out the credits. Photos by famed photographer Floria Sigismondi, who took just about every memorable photo of every 90s band you can think of. Today she’s a movie director! She’s the reason this tape looks so cool.
WHITESNAKE – The Purple Tour (2017 Rhino CD/Blu-ray set)
David Coverdale releases so much Whitesnake product (most of it worthwhile) that it is easy for the odd live album to slip between the cracks. After he felt recharged by 2015’s The Purple Album, Coverdale released a live album and video from that tour. This is not long after the four live CDs that make up Made in Britain and Made in Japan, so what does The Purple Tour offer that is different?
More Purple, obviously. Of the 13 tracks on CD, five are Deep Purple covers. There are an additional three more in 5.1 surround sound on the Blu-ray.
They open with “Burn” which leather-lunged David struggles with a bit right out of the box. Fortunately his capable backing band can handle the supporting vocals, though it sounds sweetened after the fact.
This lineup of Whitesnake, which is still the current one featuring guitarists Reb Beach and Joel Hoekstra, bassist Michael Devin, drummer Tommy Aldridge, and keyboardist Michele Luppi, is particularly good. Whitesnake can never simply revert back to being a blues band. John Sykes and Steve Vai made certain that Whitesnake would always have to have a couple shredders on hand. When Beach and Hoestra get their hands on a Purple (or Whitesnake) oldie, they generally heavy it up by a few notches.
You could consider the setlist to be a surface-level “the classics of David Coverdale” concert. No new material, nothing later than 1987. It’s cool that some standby’s like “Slow An’ Easy” were jettisoned in favourite of even older tracks like “Ain’t No Love in the Heart of the City”. It’s fun to hear “The Gypsy” instead of something better known. Another Purple classic, a heavy version of “You Fool No One” from Burn goes down a treat, with plenty of tight interplay.
The Blu-ray disc includes some more obscure treasures. “You Keep On Moving”, “Stormbringer” and “Lay Down Stay Down” fill in some of the Deep Purple blanks. A dual solo with Reb and Joel called “Lotsanotes” is also the fun kind of addition that usually gets axed from a live album. You’ll also find a music video for “Burn” and a fun interview with Joel and Reb conducted by Michael Devin. These guys love their jobs.
But just who is this album for? Don’t Whitesnake have enough live stuff by now? Yes — they certainly do. So this album is for two groups of people. 1) Those of us who have to have “everything.” 2) Somone who hasn’t bought a Whitesnake in a long time, but is curious what they sound like these days. For those folks, they won’t be “bogged down” by anything new. They will only get David and his crack band tackling the oldies. Pull the trigger if that sounds like something you’re into.
Due to popular vote here’s David Lee Roth in the first VHS Archive of 2020! This interview — jeez louise! — goes back 32 years. DLR was promoting Skyscraper and was lobbed a few softball questions by rookie Steve Anthony of MuchMusic (at least in comparison to his 1991 interview with Denise Donlon, link below).
Enjoy a little live footage from the Skyscraper tour and Roth’s thoughts on success and his history.