Rush 2112 R30 Tour Hd 1080P September 24 2004 At The Festhalle Frankfurt Germany, youtube mp3 indir

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Rush ~ 2112 ~ R30 Tour ~ [HD 1080p] ~ September 24, 2004 at the Festhalle Frankfurt, Germany

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Recorded live on September 24, 2004 at the Festhalle Frankfurt, Germany from Rush's R30: 30th Anniversary Tour. This is from the Blu-ray version of R30, containing the complete concert, which was released on December 8, 2009 in the US, and in late 2013 in Europe. "2112" is the first track from the band's fourth studio album also titled 2112. The 20-minute title track is a futuristic science-fiction song that takes up the entire first side of the album. The seven-part track is based on a story by Peart, the band's primary lyricist, who credits "the genius of Ayn Rand" in the album's liner notes. The album was written in approximately six months, with "Overture" being the final piece developed, with longtime associate Terry Brown assuming his role as producer. The studio was fitted with a 24-track machine manufactured by Studer. Lifeson plays a 1968 Gibson ES-335 for the majority of the electric guitar parts on 2112, with some lead parts played on a Gibson Les Paul Standard. For the acoustic sections, he plays a 12-string Gibson B-45 and a six-string Gibson Dove. His amplifiers were the Fender Super Reverb and a Twin Reverb. A section of "Discovery" features Lifeson playing a Fender Stratocaster that he borrowed from a friend. At the time of recording 2112, Lee was using a Rickenbacker 4001 bass with stereo output; Brown fed one channel directly into the mixing board and then into a compressor, and the other was channeled into Lee's Electro-Voice speakers turned up to the maximum. Musically speaking, 2112 was the first album that Lifeson said "really sounded like Rush". It was recorded in at Toronto Sound Studios in Toronto, February 1976 & released on April 1, 1976. "2112" remains the band's second-highest-selling album (behind Moving Pictures) with more than 3 million copies sold in the United States.

The seven-part track is based on a story by Peart, the band's primary lyricist, who credits "the genius of Ayn Rand" in the album's liner notes. Rand, a Russian-born, Jewish-American novelist, and inventor of the philosophy of Objectivism, wrote the 1937 dystopian fictional novella Anthem, the plot of which bears several similarities to 2112, and all members read the book. The first and last sections, "Overture" and "Grand Finale", respectively, are instrumental and borrow a short sequence from 1812 Overture by Pyotr Tchaikovsky. The "Overture" features an introduction from graphic designer and musician Hugh Syme performed on an ARP Odyssey synthesizer with an Echoplex Delay pedal. Music writer and professor Rob Bowman calculated that in the entire piece, 2:34 of the song contains improvised guitar solos. "Overture" contains the lyric "And the meek shall inherit the earth", a reference to the Biblical passages Book of Psalms 37:11 and Matthew 5:5.

"2112" tells a story set in the city of Megadon in the year 2112, "where individualism and creativity are outlawed with the population controlled by a cabal of malevolent Priests who reside in the Temples of Syrinx". A galaxy-wide war resulted in the planets forcefully joining the Solar Federation (symbolized by the "Red Star"). By 2112, the world is controlled by the priests who take orders from giant banks of computers inside the temple. Music is unknown in this world absent of creativity and individuality, but in "Discovery", a nameless man finds a beaten guitar inside a cave and rediscovers the lost art of music. In "Presentation", the man takes the guitar to the priests at the temple, who say, "Yes, we know, it's nothing new; it's just a waste of time", and then proceed angrily to destroy it and banish him. Next, in "Oracle: The Dream", the man dreams of a new planet, established at the same time as the Solar Federation, where creative people live. He awakens, depressed that music is part of such a civilization and that he can never be part of it, and kills himself, in "Soliloquy". Another planetary war begins in "Grand Finale", originally named "Denouement". Peart states that his intent was that the Elder Race successfully deposed the Solar Federation resulting in the ambiguous spoken ending: "Attention all planets of the Solar Federation: We have assumed control". Peart described the ending as a "double surprise ... a real Hitchcock killer".

The original studio piece is divided as follows:
"2112"

I. "Overture"
II. "The Temples of Syrinx"
III. "Discovery"
IV. "Presentation"
V. "Oracle: The Dream"
VI. "Soliloquy"
VII. "Grand Finale

* There was no complete live recording of this song until the release of the 1998 Different Stages: Live three disc set recorded during the "Test For Echo" tour.

* In this live version of the song, only "Overture", "The Temples of Syrinx", and "Grand Finale" are played.

* 21:12 is military time for 9:12. 9/12 is September 12, Neil Peart's birthday.

* 21/12 is the date of the winter solstice.

Alex Lifeson - Guitar
Geddy Lee - Bass
Neil Peart - Drums, Percussion

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