In putting together a "mixtape" for a guys trip to Vegas I came across some old favorites and some of them stuck. I was amused by the stuff we thought was cool when we were young and I felt nostalgic listening to "The Cure", "The Jam", "Echo & The Bunnymen", "The Smiths". How we thought one band was "gay" when another one that sounded similar was cool struck me funny but we were kids after all. Kids don't know crap.
One thing that really stuck with me was my CD's of Genesis's "Duke" & "Abacab".
When the tune "Keep it Dark", the story of a man trapped by his fear who dreams of the world outside but is too scared to open the shades, came on the stereo one of my friends said "what is this?". I guess we didn't all listen to the same stuff back then.
As my Genesis CD's are now converted to MP3 and thrown together in a single folder the two became a mixtape of their own sorted by cut number and song title instead of by album. Call it "Abacuke" or "Dukacab". Whatever it is it takes two thematic masterpieces and creates a melange of messages that question issues of socioeconomic differences through a battle of good vs. evil intermixed with an examination of the insecurity we all possess inside.
Phil Collins, yes kids he had a career before going solo, belts out a series of emotionally wrenching hymns about those whose value is in their possessions and who ignore the damage caused to nature that surrounds us. The end result making him "feel like an alien, a stranger in an alien place". Followed by the lonely man who "is just waiting for someone to show" and deliver him from the purgatory that is his life.
Is life a battle of good versus evil or is it merely finding the balance in all of us the makes living OK?
15 comments:
Genesis rawks, dude, but SPOCK'S BEARD RULEZ!
- me
Don't you think Pink Floyd sux?
What was that bit about good vs. evil?
Bytor, the centurion of evil, squared for battle against his nemesis the Snow Dog.
Snow Dog was victorious! Bytor, in defeat, retreated to hell. The land of the overworld was saved again.
So, you see, Neil Peart wrote some really bad lyrics.
Yes, in one episode:
http://i75.photobucket.com/albums/i318/Kill-Raven/SpockBeard.jpg
And now we dance!
Maybe so, but Rush still kicks butt. Snakes & Arrows is easily their best since Signals, which may not sound like a grand statement as they had a lot of clunkers in between, but I'd go so far as to say it's actually on par with Signals and Hemispheres musically. In the words of Bananarama that's really saying somthing.
What's really amazing is that Rush's new music sounds fresh and unique, unlike say the Stones who are just a parody of themselves, or Tom Petty who hasn't had an interesting song since The Waiting.
Some days I feel I'm ahead of the wheel, and the next it's rolling over me.
Peart's lyrics are better now than ever before.
Excuuuuuse me!
If you search google images for "James Mossman" you get this very cool newspaper-reporter-looking dude:
http://i.thisislondon.co.uk/i/pix/2007/02/reporter_243x244.jpg
WTF?
Who was your favorite Beatle?
-john
-paul
-george
-ringo
-george martin
-pete best
-stu sutcliffe
-the walrus
Beetles and cockroaches: the ultimate survivors of global warming.
Bermuda!
It's a cuckoo kind of place,
A nutty, nutty kind of space.
Bermuda!
Dude, I look like Ewan Mcgregor in that pic. But that was back when I had a full head of hair and a large how-do-you-do. Everything has fallen out and shrunk since then.
That's why they call me ...
call me the Working MAAAAAN!
That's what I am!
Our first stop is in Bogota
To check Colombian fields
The natives smile and pass along
A sample of their yield
Sweet Jamaican pipe dreams
Golden Acapulco nights
Then Morocco, and the East,
Fly by morning light
Wreathed in smoke in Lebanon
We burn the midnight oil
The fragrance of Afghanistan
Rewards a long day's toil
Pulling into Katmandu
Smoke rings fill the air
Perfumed by a Nepal night
The Express gets you there
We're on the train to Bangkok
Aboard the Thailand Express
We'll hit the stops along the way
We only stop for the best
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