Grace Under Pressure (Rush album)

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Grace Under Pressure
File:Rush Grace Under Pressure.jpg
Studio album by Rush
Released April 12, 1984
Recorded November 1983 – March 1984 at Le Studio in Morin-Heights, Quebec
Genre
Length 39:23
Label <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Producer Rush, Peter Henderson
Rush chronology
Signals
(1982)Signals1982
Grace Under Pressure
(1984)
Power Windows
(1985)Power Windows1985
Singles from Grace Under Pressure
  1. "Distant Early Warning"
    Released: 1984
  2. "The Body Electric"
    Released: 1984
  3. "Red Sector A"
    Released: 1984
  4. "Afterimage"
    Released: 1984
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3/5 stars[3]
Kerrang! (very favorable)[4]
Rolling Stone 3/5 stars[5]

Grace Under Pressure is the tenth studio album by Canadian rock band Rush, released in 1984. It reached No. 10 on the Billboard 200 chart and went platinum in the US upon its initial release. On the back cover is a band portrait by the photographer Yousuf Karsh. The original vinyl pressing also featured a photo depicting an egg being held in a C-clamp. The cover art was painted by Hugh Syme, a collaborator with Rush since he performed as a guest musician on the song "Tears" from the album 2112. Alex Lifeson once described Grace Under Pressure as the "most satisfying of all our records."[6] Also Alex Lifeson has stated it was one of the most difficult Rush albums to make.

Background and production

During the tour supporting their previous album, Signals, the members of Rush began by meeting with producer Terry Brown in Miami, informing him that they wanted to move on. Unhappy with the sound of the Signals album, they were also keen to see how they would work with someone other than Brown. Despite their decision to part ways Rush included a small tribute to him in the liner notes of Grace Under Pressure, which states, "et toujours notre bon vieil ami — Broon". The quote translates to "and always our good old friend". Following Brown's amicable departure, Rush approached producer Steve Lillywhite to record the album but he reneged to work with the Simple Minds.[7] Rush eventually produced the album themselves, with assistance from Peter Henderson, who had previously worked with Supertramp, Split Enz, Wings, Frank Zappa and King Crimson.

The album was recorded at Le Studio. The various current events found in the newspaper The Globe and Mail inspired many of the lyrics on the album, particularly those of "Distant Early Warning", "Red Lenses" and "Between the Wheels". After a few months, the mixing stage had begun, and Neil Peart discussed the details of the cover art with Hugh Syme. The band spent up to fourteen hours per day in the studio, perfecting the album's dystopian sound.

A music video produced for "The Enemy Within" would be the first played by the Canadian music television channel MuchMusic, which launched in August 1984.[8]

Meanings

Generally acknowledged as one of Rush's darkest albums, Grace Under Pressure was thematically influenced by the growing tensions in the Cold War at the time. Consequently, the album's running theme is pressure and how humans act under different kinds of pressure. In songs like "Between the Wheels" and "The Body Electric", Peart's lyrics explore the pressure put on by life as a whole. In "Afterimage", he describes the impressions left by a loved one that dies suddenly. One track, "Red Sector A", is notable for its allusions to the Holocaust and concentration camps, inspired by Geddy Lee's memories of his mother's stories about the liberation of Bergen-Belsen, where she was held prisoner. While the album's opening track "Distant Early Warning" has been interpreted as dealing with the pressure involving the aftermath of nuclear holocaust, Peart demurred in a contemporaneous interview, saying, "It's about a lot of stuff".[9] "The Enemy Within" is part of the "Fear" series of songs that also includes "Witch Hunt" from Rush's 1981 album Moving Pictures, "The Weapon" from Signals and "Freeze" from Vapor Trails.

Style

Musically, the album marks yet another development in Rush's sound; whilst continuing to make extensive use of synthesizers as on Signals, the band also experimented by incorporating elements of ska and reggae into some of the songs. As well, the guitars played a larger role than on Signals, with Lifeson stating that "I think the guitar on 'Signals' took a bit of a back seat. The keyboards were really upfront ... though in a sense that's what we were trying to achieve, we wanted to go for a different perspective on the whole sound. But, possibly, we lost direction at times on Signals."[10]

This was also the first album released by Rush to include no program music.[11][full citation needed][12] In an interview, Lee said that "It was time to stop the concept stories ... what you have to say ends up being very nebulous, because you're concerned with this big story. You try to make the story right, you try to evoke the right moods, and invariably sixteen different people come up to you and tell you sixteen different things about what you're trying to say. That's fine, because that's the way it really should be, but for us it was time to come out of the fog for a while and put down something concrete."[13]

Track listing

All lyrics written by Neil Peart, all music composed by Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson.

Side one
No. Title Length
1. "Distant Early Warning"   4:56
2. "Afterimage"   5:04
3. "Red Sector A"   5:10
4. "The Enemy Within" (Part I of "Fear") 4:33
Side two
No. Title Length
5. "The Body Electric"   5:00
6. "Kid Gloves"   4:18
7. "Red Lenses"   4:42
8. "Between the Wheels"   5:44

Personnel

Charts

Album

Year Chart Position
1984 Billboard 200 (North America)[14] 10
RPM100 Albums (Canada)[15] 4
UK Album Chart[16] 5
Swedish Album Chart[17] 18
GfK Dutch Album Chart[18] 27
German Album Chart[19] 43

Singles

Information
"The Body Electric"
  • Released:
  • Written by: Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson and Neil Peart
  • Produced by: Rush and Peter Henderson
  • Chart positions: #105 (US), #56 (UK)[20]
"Distant Early Warning"
  • Released:
  • Written by: Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson and Neil Peart
  • Produced by: Rush and Peter Henderson
  • Chart positions: #3 (US Mainstream Rock)
"Red Sector A"
  • Released:
  • Written by: Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson and Neil Peart
  • Produced by: Rush and Peter Henderson
  • Chart positions: #21 (US Mainstream Rock)
"Afterimage"
  • Released:
  • Written by: Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson and Neil Peart
  • Produced by: Rush and Peter Henderson
  • Chart positions:

Sales Certifications

Country Organization Sales
U.S. RIAA Platinum (1,000,000)[21]
Canada CRIA Platinum (100,000)[22]
UK BPI Silver (60,000)[23]

Remaster details

A remaster was issued in 1997.

  • The tray has a picture of three fingerprints, light blue, pink and lime green (left to right) with "The Rush Remasters" printed in all capital letters just to the left. All remasters from Moving Pictures through A Show of Hands feature this logo, originally found on the cover art of Retrospective II.
  • The back is a plain, off-white panel with the track titles printed as well as the production and copyright information.
  • The insert displays the cover art. The color of the cover art has been altered: it is of a richer, brown-gray color base, as opposed to the light blue base of the original LP release. The new cover is featured in nearly all of the album's modern representations. When the case is opened, the inside shows the photo of the band from the back of the LP version of the album. The insert unfolds to show the image of the egg in the C-clamp, which has a thin red border around it and credits the image to Deborah Samuel.
  • Also in the insert are the lyrics, similar to those included with the LP. Like the LP, the title and lyrics of "Red Lenses" are printed completely in lowercase.
    • Some consider the title in all lower case ("red lenses") to be the proper and accepted writing.

Grace Under Pressure was remastered again in 2011 by Andy VanDette for the "Sector" box sets, which re-released all of Rush's Mercury-era albums. Grace Under Pressure is included in the Sector 3 set. Unlike the other albums in the "Sector" series, the remaster for Grace Under Pressure was based on the 1997 digital masters, as opposed to the original master tapes, which were sonically degraded by 2011.[24]

Grace Under Pressure was remastered for vinyl in 2015 by Sean Magee at Abbey Road Studios as a part of the official "12 Months of Rush" promotion.[25] The high definition master prepared for this release was also made available for purchase in a 24-bit/48 kHz digital format at several high-resolution audio online music stores. These remasters have significantly less dynamic range compression than the 1997 remasters and the "Sector" remasters by Andy VanDette. Sean Magee remastered the audio from an analog copy of the original digital master, using a 192 kHz sample rate. But since Grace Under Pressure was originally mixed on digital equipment at 16-bit/44.1 kHz, no audio above 22 kHz exists in the original digital master or any of the remasters, which is why many digital music stores are only selling the album at a maximum sample rate of 48 kHz.[26]

References

  1. http://spectrumculture.com/2016/02/15/revisit-rush-grace-under-pressure/
  2. http://www.stereogum.com/1685666/rush-albums-from-worst-to-best/franchises/counting-down/attachment/graceunderpressure/
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  6. http://www.2112.net/powerwindows/transcripts/19840800guitarplayer.htm
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  9. Rush: Off The Record
  10. http://www.2112.net/powerwindows/transcripts/19840503kerrang.htm#afterimages
  11. Grace Under Pressure Tour Book
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  13. http://www.2112.net/powerwindows/transcripts/19840500guitarworld.htm
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  24. http://www.themasterdiskrecord.com/2011/11/andy-vandette-on-remastering-14-rush-albums
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