The big highlight of the week for me was taking my son to
see RUSH at the 1st Mariner Arena in Baltimore on Tuesday. He’s 15 and I was 15 when I saw them back in
1985 for their Power Windows Tour. They
played a lot of songs from that album as well as a good majority from their new
one, Clockwork Angels and of course
some all-time classic favorites.
RUSH is
one of those bands that sounds just as good live as they do on their
albums. The fact that they remain as
they always have (just the three of them) is phenomenal and they have a blast
doing the show. They also ROCK HARD for
THREE HOURS!!! If you’re only familiar
with their synthesizer era songs, you only know a portion of their catalog. They still have that hard edge too. I wish they had displayed their lyrics for the
new songs, because I couldn’t decipher them well, hearing them for the first
time. It still sounded great
though. Their lyrics (all written by
best-drummer-in-the-world Neal Peart) are literaturely beautiful and are much
more deep than the fluff sex-pop stuff that counts as new music today (I find a
lot of that to be pretty catchy, if not shallow).
In this one of many
possible worlds, all for the best, or some bizarre test?
It is what it is — and
whatever
Time is still the
infinite jest
The arrow flies when
you dream, the hours tick away — the cells tick away
The Watchmaker keeps
to his schemes
The hours tick away —
they tick away
The measure of a life
is a measure of love and respect
So hard to earn, so
easily burned
In the fullness of
time
A garden to nurture
and protect
In the rise and the
set of the sun
’Til the stars go
spinning — spinning ’round the night
It is what it is — and
forever
Each moment a memory
in flight
The arrow flies while
you breathe, the hours tick away—the cells tick away
The Watchmaker has
time up his sleeve
The hours tick away —
they tick away
The treasure of a life is a measure of love and respect
The way you live, the gifts that you give
In the fullness of time
It’s the only return that you expect
The future disappears
into memory
With only a moment
between
Forever dwells in that
moment
Hope is what remains
to be seen
There’s even a novelization of the album story by Kevin J.
Anderson, which I’m eager to start reading.
This
excellent site will give you the playlist.
Be sure to check them out if they’re coming nearby. They’ll be in Europe soon, before returning
to Canada and the US.
I’ve also
been DIGGING INTO THE BOTTOM of my comic book stack lately. You know the ones you’re not that excited
about reading when they come out, so you put them aside for weeks at a
time. Well, I caught up on three titles
that I hadn’t read in THREE MONTHS!
Life with Archie: The Married Life # 27, 28
& 29
I don’t have
time to give you a play by play of what’s been happening, but after reading #27
and #28 (with its awesome variant cover), I actually read #29 this week prior
to any Marvel NOW series sans Avenging
Spider-Man (which was good, but too tied to the Marvel Movification
Universe of characters). Pat and Tim
Kennedy have taken over the art chores for both the Veronica and Betty stories
and I couldn’t be happier. It’s not
quite the classic Archie house-style, but it’s really smooth. I like it a lot. Even though Paul Kupperberg handles the
writing for both universes, I like the Betty one better. My biggest complaint with the series is the
over-focus on Kevin Keller and the obvious liberal sensibilities of EVERY
character. But when they’re not
preaching on various issues, it’s actually nice to see the characters
deal with “real-life” situations. Like
any good soap-opera, it gets to be addicting.
I suppose the modern “voice” of the gang is just a sign of the times. Back in the 70’s Archie was actually
preaching the Gospel for Spire Comics.
Smallville #11, 12 & 13
Our cohort,
Shawn, has been singing the praises of this title for a while now and he’s
totally right. It’s better than any
other Superman title and better than the Smallville TV show too. We get guest-stars a plenty (like Batman,
Impulse, Booster Gold & the Legion) and they’re even in a CRISIS with
Ultra-Man due to tackle Clark soon.
Dark Shadows #14, 15 & 16
I had about
given up on this title. It had a slow
start and the art serves the story, but it doesn’t make you want to scream and
shout about it. Right now they’ve gone from
1971 (the end of the original series) to 1984, where things are really bad and
Barnabas is too. We’ve got time jumping
and it’s really getting interesting.
Like Archie and Smallville, I read this one (#16) near
the top of my stack this week too. I couldn’t
wait to find out what was going to happen next!
It does a good job capturing the vibe of the series with a little faster
pacing and a lot more blood.
Even better
than the main title is the new spin-off Dark
Shadows Year One that came out a few weeks ago. The art by Guiu Vilanova IS excellent and
very faithful to the character’s likeness.
This is a retelling of the 1795 storyline where Barnabas first becomes a
vampire. It’s slightly different than
the show’s version, but that’s okay – there are a lot of different Dark Shadow universes
out there (some better than others).
That’s all I've got this week! Come back next week for
some self-indulgence (or I may skip it entirely) – you’ll understand why when
you see it.
Just a tip. Don't see Gatsby! My fault for thinking it would have music like Moulin Rouge. I can deal with depressing stories sometimes, but YUCK! Glad I never had to read the book. Read John Hershey's The Wall instead. Makes me want to see Iron Man 3 again! At least Star Trek is less than a week away.
ReplyDeleteMatthew-
ReplyDeleteWho's writing the Dark Shadows books? Are they closer to a true vampire story or Twilight emo-sparkly things?
Regular series is by Mike Raicht. Year One by Marc Andreyko. It's Dark Shadows -- unrequited love, possesion, time travel, parallel time, etc.
ReplyDelete