Showing posts with label Rush. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rush. Show all posts
Rush - Sector Two (2 CD, 2013) [FLAC-HD + FLAC]
Limited six disc (five CDs + DVD) box set from the Canadian Rock trio. Contains the albums A Farewell To Kings, Hemispheres, Permanent Waves, Moving Pictures and Exit...Stage
Rush - Sector One (5 CD, 2013) [FLAC-HD + FLAC]
Limited six disc (five CDs + DVD) box set from the Canadian Rock trio. Contains the albums Rush, Fly By Night, Caress Of Steel, 2112 and All The World's A Stage plus the DVD-Audio mix of Fly By Night.
Rush - Transmission Impossible (3 CD, 2017/FLAC)
Having formed in 1968, it was not until 1974 that the band proper
with Neal Peart joining Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson to create the line-up
that has remained in place ever since came to be. And just two weeks
after Peart joined the group, Rush began their first US tour. On 26th
August 74 the group played at the Agora Ballroom in Cleveland , Ohio, a
show recorded and broadcast by WMMS radio, which made it Rush s very
first radio broadcast. It is this now legendary gig which forms the
first disc of this set, alongside some bonus tracks which were recorded
at the same venue a year later. The second disc here is home to an FM
broadcast recorded at Holland s Pinkpop Festival in June 1979. Perfomed
while the group were promoting their 1978 album Hemispheres, this rarely
heard recording is included here on CD for the first time. The final
disc in this collection featured the classic 1980 broadcast from the
group, recorded at the Kiel Auditorium in St Louis, Missouri, on 13th
February as part of their Permanent Waves Tour, and this recording
remains arguably one of Rush s very finest live performances.
- August 26th, 1974 - Agora Ballroom, Cleveland, Ohio
- June 4th, 1979 - Burgemeester Damen Sportpark, Geleen, Netherlands
- February 13th, 1980 - Kiel Auditorium, St. Louis, Missouri
Rush - Moving Pictures (40th Anniversary Deluxe 2 CD , 2022) [FLAC]
Celebrating 40 years of Moving Pictures with a Super Deluxe box
set fully loaded for fans! Includes the 2015 album
remaster and the complete, unreleased Toronto concert from March 25,
1981.
Geddy Lee - bass guitars, keyboards, bass pedals, vocals
Alex Lifeson - 6- and 12-string electric and acoustic guitars, Moog Taurus pedals
Neil Peart - drums, timbales, gong, orchestra bells, glockenspiel, wind chimes, bell tree, crotales, cowbell, plywood
Additional musician:
Hugh Syme - synthesizer (on "Witch Hunt")
Rush - Transmission Impossible (Deluxe 4 CD, 2018)
Excellent Radio Broadcasts
- August 26th, 1974 - Agora Ballroom, Cleveland, Ohio
- June 4th, 1979 - Burgemeester Damen Sportpark, Geleen, Netherlands
- February 13th, 1980 - Kiel Auditorium, St. Louis, Missouri
- 1986 Maple Leaf Gardens Toronto
- Geddy Lee - bass, vocals, keyboards
- Neil Peart - drums, percussion
- Alex Lifeson - guitar
Rush - 2112 (40th Anniversary Edition, 2 CD, 2016/FLAC)
2112 (pronounced "twenty-one twelve") is the fourth studio album by Canadian rock band Rush, released on 1 April 1976 (or March 1976, according to some sources) by Anthem Records. Rush finished touring for its unsuccessful previous album Caress of Steel, in early 1976. The band was in financial hardship due to the album's disappointing sales, unfavorable critical reception, and a decline in attendance at its shows. The band's international label, Mercury Records, considered dropping Rush but granted the band one more album following negotiations with manager Ray Danniels. Though the label demanded more commercial material, the band decided to continue developing its progressive rock sound. 2112 was recorded in February 1976 in Toronto with longtime producer Terry Brown. Its centerpiece is a 20-minute title track, a futuristic science-fiction song that takes up the entire first side of the album. There are five individual tracks on side two.
2112 has been reissued several times; a 40th Anniversary Edition was released in 2016 with previously unreleased material, including the album performed by artists including Dave Grohl, Taylor Hawkins, Steven Wilson, and Alice in Chains.
Rush - Hemispheres (40th Anniversary edition, 2 CD, 2018/FLAC)
Hemispheres is the sixth studio album by Canadian rock band Rush, released in October 1978 by Anthem Records. After touring to support the band's previous release, A Farewell to Kings, during which the group gained popularity in the UK, Rush started work on their next album. As with the band's previous studio album, Hemispheres was recorded at Rockfield Studios in Monmouthshire and Trident Studios in London with longtime engineer and arranger, Terry Brown. Rush continued its progressive rock sound with the side-long "Cygnus X-1 Book II: Hemispheres" and the nine-minute instrumental "La Villa Strangiato".
The album was re-released in various expanded formats on November 16, 2018 as part of the band's ongoing 40th Anniversary editions, including the previously unreleased live set by the band at the Pinkpop Festival from June 1979.
Rush- A Farewell To Kings (40th Ann. Deluxe,3 CD, 2017/FLAC)
Expanded edition of the landmark Rush album A Farewell to Kings —
the fifth studio album originally released in 1977, which introduced
the radio hit “Closer To The Heart,” album tracks “A Farewell To Kings,”
“Madrigal,” “Cinderella Man,” as well as enduring fan favorites with
“Xanadu” and “Cygnus X-1.”
A Farewell to Kings—40th Anniversary is a three-CD Deluxe Edition, with the newly reasserted A Farewell to Kings album, the Hammersmith Odeon show, the four new cover songs, “Cygnus X-2 Eh” outtake, Hugh Syme’s song-specific artwork and Rob Bowman’s liner notes.
A Farewell to Kings—40th Anniversary is a three-CD Deluxe Edition, with the newly reasserted A Farewell to Kings album, the Hammersmith Odeon show, the four new cover songs, “Cygnus X-2 Eh” outtake, Hugh Syme’s song-specific artwork and Rob Bowman’s liner notes.
Rush - Permanent Waves (40th Anniversary Remaster 2020/FLAC)
Permanent Waves is the band’s seventh studio album, released on New Year’s Day, 1980. It was recorded at Le Studio, Morin Heights, Quebec, and mixed at Trident Studios in London. The tracks were laid down just shy of four weeks, in part attributed to the idyllic working conditions of Morin Heights.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)