Rush Marathon Time Machine Live in Cleveland HD 1080p CC 2011











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Click on CC icon for Closed Captioning (Lyrics on Screen) • Marathon is the the fourth track from Rush's eleventh studio album titled Power Windows . It was recorded in five different recording studios from April–August 1985, and released on October 29, 1985 with Peter Collins as co-producer and Andy Richards on additional keyboards. After touring in support of their previous album, Grace Under Pressure (1984), the band took a break and reconvened in early 1985 to work on a follow-up. The material continued to display the band's exploration of synthesizer-oriented music, this time with the addition of sampling, electronic drums, a string section, and choir, with power being a running lyrical theme. Marathon was anticipated by Lifeson to be difficult to arrange and record, but it turned out to be one of the easiest songs on the album to complete. It contains various samples, the fewest recorded overdubs, and incorporates the string section and choir recorded in London. Collins had the idea of using a choir and the band, upon witnessing the recording, saw the humor in having pregnant women and old men sing our song . Lifeson considered the song to be close to Peart as he had taken up cycling during days off on the Grace Under Pressure tour, riding 100 miles each time. • The lyrics depict how one would feel while running in an actual marathon, but the meaning of the song is meant to use a marathon (an extreme challenge) as a metaphor for life, and say that life is full of obstacles and is all about achieving one's personal goals. In a 1986 interview, Peart said (Marathon) is about the triumph of time and a kind of message to myself (because I think life is too short for all the things that I want to do), there's a self-admonition saying that life is long enough. You can do a lot -- just don't burn yourself out too fast trying to do everything at once. Marathon is a song about individual goals and trying to achieve them. And it's also about the old Chinese proverb: 'The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step. • Lee's dexterous repeating bass line along with the steady pace of Peart's bass drum do a fine job of creating the image of a long distance runner's incessant strides. Lifeson's colorful chord voicings build and release tension, giving texture to this musical image. A measured retort to the hope I die before I get old and Live fast, die young clichés, Marathon is a song that suggests it is possible to do the things that we want to do, if we are persistent and pace ourselves with intelligence: You can do a lot in a lifetime/If you don't burn out too fast . A life well-lived, according to this song, is a triumph of both sense and persistence. • With the line The heartbreak climb uphill , Peart is referring to the runner's term Heartbreak Hill . This term is used to describe numerous uphill ascents during long-distance footraces. Whether it is nuclear weaponry or running, it is clear that care has been taken to research the lyrical subjects. • This song is another piece of Rush music that includes outside musicians. A transcendent musical lift is provided by a choir towards the end of the song. The string section that was recorded at Abbey Road also makes an appearance in Marathon . • One of Ernest Hemingway's favorite mottos was First, one must last . Peart paraphrased this simple line and included it as the final line of the song, which sums the piece up neatly: First you've got to last . • In the April 1986 issue of Guitar Player magazine, Alex Lifeson was asked if any tracks on the album were specially difficult to cut. He replied: It's funny. There's always one song that you're terrified of doing. You think it's going to be really tough, and Marathon was the one. We wrote it and thought, 'This song is going to be like pulling teeth once we get in the studio.' Of course, we get into the studio and it's a breeze. The Marathon solo was probably the easiest of all the solos to do. • The album reached No. 2 in Canada, No. 9 in the United Kingdom, and No. 10 in the United States. In January 1986, the album reached platinum certification by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for one million copies sold in the United States. Rush released five singles from the album between 1985 and 1986: The Big Money , Territories , Manhattan Project , Mystic Rhythms , and Marathon . The band supported the album with their 1985–1986 tour. • • Geddy Lee - Vocals, Bass, Synthesizers • Neil Peart - Drums, Percussion • Alex Lifeson - Guitar • • #MysticRhythmsLive

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