Drum Teacher Reacts: NEIL PEART | Rush | 'The Weapon' - Live In Toronto 1984 (2021 HD Remaster)

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  • čas přidán 20. 04. 2021
  • #Reaction #Drum Teacher #Drums #Rush #Song #NeilPeart
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Komentáře • 475

  • @trailchasing5081
    @trailchasing5081 Před 3 lety +43

    Rush have more mind-bending moments in one six and a half minute song than most bands have on an entire album

  • @warren_r
    @warren_r Před 3 lety +99

    Here's what Neil himself said in Modern Drummer in 1984 about the headphones:
    "The headphones are basically for when we use programmed sequencers or the synthesizers that are driven by arpeggiators. They're triggered by a drum machine with a click-track pulse. Then the arpeggiator picks that up. The song on Signals called The Weapon is based around an arpeggiator. Ironically, usually drummers are used to a band that follows them. If I feel something should be pulled back a bit or anticipated a bit, the band follows me. When you use something that's as mathematical as a sequencer or arpeggiator, there's no way those machines are going to follow you. You have to follow them."
    "With headphones on, drums do not sound like drums. Period. That's certainly a fact. But the essense of it is that I know what my drums sound like, and I know that if I play a certain pattern, it has such and such an effect on people -- a certain excitement, drama, or whatver. And when I have the headphones on, yes, I have to use my imagination. It is, in a sense, a limitation, that in order to be able to follow those things effectively, I have to be able to hear them well. And the most sensible way to do that is through headphones. I just decided that it's not going to make me play worse. It's just going to make me have to work harder, because when I have those headphones on, I'm going to have to think about what my playing really sounds like. I can't be lazy and just hear it. I have to think about it and imagine it. It's a hard thing."

    • @AndrewRooneyDrums
      @AndrewRooneyDrums  Před 3 lety +20

      Wow! Thanks Warren!!!

    • @Steve_Blackwood
      @Steve_Blackwood Před 3 lety +20

      Ahh… the 80s. Weekends at the mall, where if the new issue of MD had Neil on the cover, it was an instant buy. 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @lawrencehaley9351
      @lawrencehaley9351 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Steve_Blackwood That was me too!

    • @warren_r
      @warren_r Před 3 lety +16

      Modern Drummer recently put out an anthology containing every one of the Neil Peart interviews, as well as a long, long list of tributes from famous drummers across the world.

    • @heronpachecocrego7735
      @heronpachecocrego7735 Před 3 lety +2

      Nice, Warren! Long live RUSH!!!!🤘♥️🇧🇷

  • @nodrush80
    @nodrush80 Před 3 lety +64

    The more you listen, see them live, you'll start to realize what a unique band they are. Some of us got it the very first time we heard them😉

    • @AndrewRooneyDrums
      @AndrewRooneyDrums  Před 3 lety +6

      Yeah this is nuts!

    • @marleycolin954
      @marleycolin954 Před 3 lety

      a tip : you can watch movies on KaldroStream. Me and my gf have been using them for watching a lot of movies these days.

    • @anakinvalentin1269
      @anakinvalentin1269 Před 3 lety

      @Marley Colin Yup, have been using kaldroStream for since november myself :D

    • @odineli6207
      @odineli6207 Před 3 lety

      @Marley Colin Definitely, been watching on kaldrostream for since november myself :)

    • @thiagovance6393
      @thiagovance6393 Před 3 lety

      @Marley Colin Yea, have been watching on Kaldrostream for years myself =)

  • @davibrass
    @davibrass Před rokem +19

    Not only is Geddy playing pedals, synth and singing... not only is he the best bass player in rock history, but he's not even the best player in the band!
    Love you Neil 🥁

  • @dooglo9346
    @dooglo9346 Před 3 lety +39

    The show is SCTV. very funny from the 80's A lot of great Canadian comedians started on it. Love Rush. R.I.P. Neil

  • @tylerbailey9329
    @tylerbailey9329 Před 3 lety +31

    Hands-down one of my favorite Rush tracks. That beat, coupled with one of Alex's best solos.... 😌

  • @crominion6045
    @crominion6045 Před 3 lety +4

    I don't care what anyone says...that Steinberger bass Geddy is playing here sounds phenomenal. 👍

  • @sbondoc564
    @sbondoc564 Před 3 lety +25

    When you hear about a band being "tight", this is a good example of what they mean. So much going on live and yet it's still perfection.

  • @FreeBeat
    @FreeBeat Před 3 lety +86

    I'm sure people have mentioned it before, but even back in these years Geddy and Alex had multiple Moog Taurus Pedals for playing a lot of synth sounds. Rush also had a technology developed for them (pre MIDI) to use those pedals to control the sequencers and arpeggiators you hear as well. In later years they both switched to sets of Korg MIDI pedals to trigger all backing vocals, keyboard parts, sound effects, etc. As far as Neil's headphones go, I'm fairly certain there was no click, but just a more direct way to monitor those keyboard parts to ensure tempo consistency.

    • @pitpride1220
      @pitpride1220 Před 3 lety +8

      You're 100% correct.

    • @mightyV444
      @mightyV444 Před 3 lety +3

      Yes, very well explained! 😀👍

    • @porcelainthunder2213
      @porcelainthunder2213 Před 3 lety +5

      Headphones were also to hear the start cues for the video screen since they couldn't see or really hear the front of house audio. But yes, mostly it was to keep in time with the synth arpeggiators.

    • @martianshoes
      @martianshoes Před 3 lety +4

      @Free Beat - indeed; watching this and remembering Grace Under Pressure era Rush, they did get a great deal more synthesizer heavy for the next few recordings.
      I remember an interview with Neal from 1984 where he said they were want to experiment more with textures than with chops and that he had been listening to bands like the Police, Thompson Twins and Flock of Seagulls.
      At the same window of time, Neal’s lyrics began displaying more first-person stories and mentioning temporal issues with greater frequency.

    • @mzmadmike
      @mzmadmike Před 3 lety +3

      They had sequencers for the Moogs and Oberheims. The technology existed, just wasn't used much outside of composers like Jarre.

  • @jcsman4244
    @jcsman4244 Před 3 lety +12

    “And the things that we fear are a weapon to be held against us.”
    Utterly profound lyric. Utterly profound truth.

    • @Janny_Gurrrl
      @Janny_Gurrrl Před rokem +1

      Dude was a g*****n poet. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼😊

    • @GregTheRushFan
      @GregTheRushFan Před rokem

      And still more relevant than ever!

  • @joeday4293
    @joeday4293 Před 3 lety +61

    Neil Peart, the one and only human to ever look cool with a rat tail. 👍You simply must react to "Subdivisions" from the same album, "Signals." The song, the arrangement, the drum track, and especially the lyrics are some of the finest work Rush ever did. It is an anthem for weird kids who don't fit in. And the entire album, released 1982, is full of songs which are some of the best commentaries on the digital age you will ever hear, written years before anyone had the internet in their lives.

    • @mightyV444
      @mightyV444 Před 3 lety +4

      I totally agree! There's no way to get past 'Subdivisions'! 🙂 Alternatively maybe also 'Free Will' in the 'Exit... Stage Left' version. 'Jacob's Ladder' from the same live album is also great, however there are only audio clips of it on YT.

    • @jimmymac63
      @jimmymac63 Před 3 lety +3

      @AndrewRooneyDrums You really should consider Subdivisions...

    • @michaelrichey8516
      @michaelrichey8516 Před 3 lety +3

      If I want to listen to Rush but can't decide on the song, I listen to Subdivisions while I make up my mind. That song is amazing.....the whole Signals album is amazing, but what a powerful first track!

    • @rushfanjames2112
      @rushfanjames2112 Před rokem +1

      Neil is my drum hero and inspiration. I even grew a rat tail. But I looked like a dork 😅 RIP Neil 🙏🏼

  • @patcandelora8496
    @patcandelora8496 Před rokem +2

    Geddy is an absolute freak musically speaking! Rock’s ultimate multi tasker

  • @LeviRamsey
    @LeviRamsey Před 3 lety +38

    Neil has written that the main reason Rush stayed together for a lifetime was that they never added a dedicated lead singer or keyboardist (which positions tended to be the most prone to ego trips in his experience), they just had an overworked bassist.

    • @mzmadmike
      @mzmadmike Před 3 lety +2

      And they agreed early on to just split everything three ways. It avoided arguments.

  • @miguelbotelho2613
    @miguelbotelho2613 Před 3 lety +17

    I was at this concert on Geddy's stage side. My first Rush concert 1984 Grace under Pressure tour.

    • @AndrewRooneyDrums
      @AndrewRooneyDrums  Před 3 lety +3

      Oh wow!!! Tell me more

    • @miguelbotelho2613
      @miguelbotelho2613 Před 3 lety +4

      I was given a ticket to see this concert from a friend who was a huge Rush fan, it was at the maple leaf gardens in Toronto,during their Grace under Pressure tour. Fun fact they played 3 sold out shows, and donated the sales for the 3 Rd show to the United way.first time Neil showcased his cherry red Simmons electronic kit on his rotating hydrolic drum riser

  • @rdgurule
    @rdgurule Před 6 měsíci +3

    Rush was a band that didn’t believe that they had any following of fans in many places. Though they were told they did. Since Rush didn’t release music in Cantrell or South America they never believed there was a fan base. So they never thought to tour there. Till after Vapor trails. They were skeptical till they did. Those people shocked the guys. Those people knew every word to all their songs.

  • @neilwalton8128
    @neilwalton8128 Před 3 lety +22

    Beware falling down the Rush rabbit hole Andrew. I went down there in 1980 when I was 12 years old and still haven't reappeared!

    • @Steve_Blackwood
      @Steve_Blackwood Před 3 lety +2

      Ditto. I’m still there, too. I forget who told me to buy Moving Pictures when it was released, but I owe them 40 years of thanks! 😂

    • @mightyV444
      @mightyV444 Před 3 lety +1

      For me, it had happened in '89, when a friend (who wasn't actually a Rush fan!) gave me a bag with some of his LP records to check out, and one of them was 'Grace Under Pressure' - and I was instantly hooked! Thank you, dear friend Martin! 😁🙏

    • @travis8404
      @travis8404 Před 3 lety +1

      im with you we were so blessed with the music we had back then

  • @FUBAR1986
    @FUBAR1986 Před rokem +2

    In 2013, when Rush was inducted into the rock ‘n’ roll Hall of Fame, they played first Tom Sawyer &
    Then Spirit of Radio…..

  • @ThatandCo
    @ThatandCo Před 2 lety +2

    I was 10 and my mom took me to a free concert put on by a local radio station in 1975. it was Charlie Daniel's band with a unknown act from Canada RUSH . I became a lifelong fan instantly, thanks mom for having such good taste in music .

  • @TragicallySchapp
    @TragicallySchapp Před 3 lety +18

    Count Floyd from a tv programme called SCTV. Classic. Also, hearing “Rush in the wild” is now a phrase I will use forever.

    • @MarcoBosma
      @MarcoBosma Před 3 lety +1

      hahahaha indeed

    • @dtcaslick
      @dtcaslick Před 3 lety +3

      The image I get is a moose roaming about Algonquin Park, with a ghetto blaster between its antlers playing "Moving Pictures"....

  • @dianaa9826
    @dianaa9826 Před 3 lety +6

    RUSH my all time favourite band !!! They are soooo talented its overwhelming..

  • @CHRISTISLORD77
    @CHRISTISLORD77 Před 2 lety +3

    Nothing like a Rush concert. I was privileged to see them play 2112 in its entirety in concert the last time they did. 🥰

  • @Efferri
    @Efferri Před 3 lety +11

    I see Rush, I click. Super deep cut, but I love the synth backing during the end of Alex's solo. Sooooo good.

  • @dwoehrma
    @dwoehrma Před 3 lety +12

    Been waiting for someone to react to this song. Excellent choice. Atmospheric but so much going on beneath the surface.

  • @JungleScene
    @JungleScene Před 3 lety +13

    This is Part 2 of their fear series. If you were to listen to "Fear" in order, it would be "the Enemy Within", "The Weapon", "Witch Hunt", and "Freeze"

    • @toddashton9696
      @toddashton9696 Před rokem +1

      Glad you remembered to add Freeze. Some people think that Fear had 3 parts.

  • @MycontentisgoldJerryGold

    The primary thing that comes to mind is how incredibly dense they sound.

  • @cessakiessa270
    @cessakiessa270 Před 3 lety +10

    RUSH - Leave That Thing Alone & Neil Peart Drum Solo - 1997/06/30 - Molson Amphitheatre, Toronto

  • @Einstein1777
    @Einstein1777 Před rokem

    You can't wipe this smile of your face. The were awesome and still are for me now.

  • @ConstantineIsslamow
    @ConstantineIsslamow Před 3 lety +16

    I remember being at this concert like it was yesterday. Best Rush performance I've been to.

  • @LV426CX1
    @LV426CX1 Před 3 lety +2

    Alex’s sublime guitar. Very under rated. So creative.

    • @davecole2561
      @davecole2561 Před 9 měsíci

      Always. Alex is a guitar hero of mine. People often say or write that Rush reproduced studio songs note for note, but not every time they didn't. This is superior to the album and sonically more interesting to me, as is Digital Man live. Oh my, what a band they were, and will be judged as. I'll be listening to them until my dying day.

  • @lauriivey7801
    @lauriivey7801 Před 3 lety +1

    This is my favorite video for The Weapon ... Neil just playing with the sticks waiting for the rhythm to increase .... Beautiful!!!

  • @lindapryor3747
    @lindapryor3747 Před 3 lety +3

    It’s amazing they knew where to end all instruments on this song. I’ve watched it many times and just can’t figure how they each knew it was the last note.

  • @springy-2112
    @springy-2112 Před 3 lety +12

    You 've got the rush radar now !
    Neil has the sequenced part in his cans ..
    They don't use tracks as such they have sequences that are triggered by hand (or foot) live . Geddy didn t want to have backing tracks , he still wanted an element of risk even when setting off a sequence .. I also know Neil set sequences going too which may be the case on this track ?
    Peace and love brother and we'll done for passing the first rush test ! ..... subconscious recognition . Welcome to the Rush rabbit hole.
    👍🏻☮❤

  • @ericvonsteuben7898
    @ericvonsteuben7898 Před 3 lety +11

    Technically, Neil did not use a click track. In the early days when he wore headphones (and later the in ear monitors), he did so to hear the sequencers to keep in time with them. But when the sequencers stopped at various points within each song, it was up to him to keep the same tempo so everything was in sync when the sequencers inevitably kicked back in at various points throughout the song. People can argue about whether he's the best or not, but his timing was great. At some point early on he helped Alex with his timing (on the songs that started with guitar), by telling him to start playing the song with the second verse in his head. As a musician myself, I get this, because more often then not live I tent to start playing songs faster than they should be.
    And the only isolated I could find for this song (which I'm sure you did), is with the bass and synth. I'm guessing the drums alone have to exist though, because this album is available in 5.1.

  • @gregcampwriter
    @gregcampwriter Před 3 lety +2

    Watching them live was always astonishing--the three of them produced so much music without backup. And yes, Lee sang, played bass, keyboards, and pedals.

  • @orange70383
    @orange70383 Před 3 lety +1

    They were really really good right here.

  • @ronniefarnsworth6465
    @ronniefarnsworth6465 Před 2 lety +2

    HHHHhhhaa The Great Rush Humor during Shows, they do it like 4-5 times per show for years since the 2000s !!! Lol : D

  • @bobinchainz
    @bobinchainz Před 8 měsíci

    I got goosebumps on my shoulders …..on my shoulders wtf . This is the 4th time watching them play this live this morning . Love this band

  • @mightyV444
    @mightyV444 Před 3 lety +1

    I believe Neil was wearing headphones in order to be able to hear the arpeggiated synth bass lines better and thus to be able to play along to them with perfect timing. He also wore them when playing 'Red Sector A' from the 'Grace Under Pressure' album live, which also had such synth bass lines in it. That was the next album after 'Signals' and my very first Rush impression 🙂

  • @progressiverush7463
    @progressiverush7463 Před 3 lety

    Yes! It in your DNA now. For life. Full patch member of the Rush army!

  • @jamesplanche5352
    @jamesplanche5352 Před 3 lety

    A Rush Concert. Amazing and what a Good Time

  • @robchehowski4281
    @robchehowski4281 Před 3 lety +4

    Hey Andrew. Canadian dude here & Rush fan since 1975. Count Floyd was from SCTV, he was the host of "Monster Chiller Horror Theatre", which constantly promised scary movies, but always failed to deliver. Other people from SCTV you might recognize: John Candy, Harold Ramis, Eugene Levy, Martin Short, Catherine O'Hara, Rick Moranis. Btw, NZ will always get love from me for the show "The Almighty Johnsons", one of my all time favourites. I even like Gin Wigmore's theme song. Cheers!

  • @TheDrummerkat
    @TheDrummerkat Před rokem

    Just came across this reaction video and it put a smile on my face watching you appreciate all the elements that were going on in The Weapon. Phenomenal band and Neil was amazing at how he carefully crafted and orchestrated his drum and percussion parts. ❤

  • @eagee9253
    @eagee9253 Před 3 lety +1

    Geddy Lee also used sequencers for keyboards that he controlled with foot pedals .....while singing and playing bass .....it was an incredible thing to see live .....I couldnt imagine trying to play an instrument, sing and time foot pedals all at once ...these guys were unreal......

  • @susannebass5503
    @susannebass5503 Před 3 lety +6

    That sounded FABULOUS 🔥 not a big Rush fan but that got my total attention 😜

  • @steverosenberger8671
    @steverosenberger8671 Před 3 lety +1

    Neil used headphones in the early days. In the latter days he still used headphones but they were the kind thatfit in his ears like a hearing aide.

  • @danreed5171
    @danreed5171 Před rokem +1

    How fuckin smooth that 1sr drum toss

  • @JavaTheKat
    @JavaTheKat Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you to Andrew, and to whoever recommended it! What a gem!

  • @Jerkbeefrow
    @Jerkbeefrow Před 4 měsíci +1

    Great Song, Great Reaction 😮😮😮Thanks Man😮😮😮😮😮😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅

  • @davecole2561
    @davecole2561 Před 2 lety +3

    An unbelievable performance from an unbelievable band. Greatness is used a lot, but it's no hyperbole for these three gents!

  • @zakneutron
    @zakneutron Před 3 lety +5

    If you like horror - "Witch Hunt" is great track for that feel.

  • @jage71
    @jage71 Před 2 lety

    Might be my favorite bit off that video. Guitar solo is spot on.

  • @stevejohnson1577
    @stevejohnson1577 Před 3 lety +2

    Count Floyd and your 3d glasses via SCTV 😂😂😂

  • @tommyo5150
    @tommyo5150 Před rokem

    My favorite rush song and favorite video all hail Neil and Count Floyd!

  • @michaelrichey8516
    @michaelrichey8516 Před 3 lety

    There's a drum workshop that Neil held in California (you can find it here on CZcams), where he explained that they weren't big on the idea of playing any pre-recorded tracks during concerts. If there was something Alex or Geddy couldn't accomplish, Neil would trigger it with one of his midi drums.
    If you watch enough live videos, you'll see Geddy playing keyboards with his hands, and his feet, all while singing and playing bass. Dude is seriously multitasking.
    I had the pleasure of being in the 1st 20 rows of a Rush concert once, and it was pretty amazing to see those three play up close(ish). After that concert, I figured out that the best acoustics were on the back wall of the stadium. Who knew the cheap seats got the best (audio) show.

  • @jfgoodysr
    @jfgoodysr Před 2 lety +1

    Rush was a band that never did the stupid stuff bands did back then, all they did was work hard to perfect their craft. I think they nailed it.

  • @johng1598
    @johng1598 Před 4 měsíci

    The fill at 11:31 is one of my most favorite Neil fills ever...so subtle, complex, and perfect for the song. He plays a 3 sets of silky smooth single stoke rolls of triplets using 16th notes with the accent on every 4th hit (12 strokes total across 3 toms). Insanely difficult to hear much less play (hence, why Neil is the Professor).

  • @rob3732
    @rob3732 Před 3 lety +4

    You have to watch the isolated drums on Digital Man.

  • @Mrbimdrummer
    @Mrbimdrummer Před rokem

    Neils part in this song her learnt from a drum machine. Amazing

  • @SeanVedell
    @SeanVedell Před 2 lety +1

    One of my favourite Neil quotes many years later came from being asked about using samples on-stage. “Sure we use samples, but only samples of ourselves!” The cool part was that it didn’t matter to them who triggered the sample. Geddy didn’t trigger just Geddy samples. From Neil again “It didn’t matter who triggered what. Whoever had a free hand or foot at that moment got the job.”

  • @cjbacon4869
    @cjbacon4869 Před 3 lety +1

    FYI (on this track): Neil is playing to a click track at all times which is brought front of house and through monitors for them to keep time through the keyboard and overlays pre-programmed through MIDI triggers, The Taurus Pedal were designed like a floor organ with foot pedals specific to playing Bass parts with his feet while using both hands on keys - the odd note or hands on bass parts are no doubt the parts that could not be programmed so had to be played IN TIME, hence the all important road map of the Click track. Rock and Roll with a lot of performance magic - sort of like the "overnight success" myth that's going round...(hope this helps)
    RUSH and all the boys including Neil Peart (RIP) are the prime example of dedication to hard work and professionalism which they have had even back in the days when we would crowd into a small sweaty gymnasium at St Jerome's HS or St Mary's HS playing in front of just over 100 kids with John Rutsey (RIP) on drums and then through the bar gigs at Goldie's in Grand Bend and arena rock shows with Neil in the band - everyone hears the stories of when they were on the road with Kiss and Uriah Heep ie the "GLee" story but the significance is the reality of all of the bands who deliver our best moments - hard work and a dream coupled with determination is the best beginning, where we choose to take it is entirely up to us and look where it brought them through the years.
    What I find most interesting about his playing on this track is just how relaxed he is while transitioning from "open" sound of cymbals and hi-hat and the "tight" and concise attack on the drums as the reference to the center of all things happening in the composition with a mix of the Reggae style he implements throughout this album and period in his ever evolving style.
    The one thing I know about Mr Neil Peart is that he prided himself on self education and the ability to participate in the journey of discovery in almost everything he did, and it is my personal feeling that it was this ability that helped him through the most difficult times of his large life when he took his much needed hiatus to begin to heal his soul due to the tragic loss of his daughter and wife. Most of all I am glad beyond measure he was able to find love again and to remember to breathe because Life will happen in spite of us and we just have to learn to live with it (I guess).
    Thank you for the soundtrack to part of that life and for all the lessons I learned from being just one more open mind who dared to see that rudimentary drumming in Rock is awesome and so was the time we continue to share with Neil through his legacy in drumming, but also as a life well lived.
    Geddy and Alex - can't wait to see you "out there" because you just know you can't sit still for long with that artistic "itch" - it's a "curse" and the "cure".
    Keep on rocking.
    Shoutout to the "4th" member of RUSH - Howie Ungerleider without which the RUSH sound would not have happened; good ear on ya. (hope i spellT it right)
    Andrew: first time seeing one of your videos, well done! - I like that you actually listen and then give your honest opinion/evaluation or question. You must be an amazing teacher and keep it up because it is refreshing especially with how much Neil's playing always "blows them away" but then that is what Neil was famous for with everyone I have ever heard speak of his indomitable influence on anyone who hears him, musicians and fans alike - it just opens our minds to not just the Drums, but also the possibilities of just realizing the only boundary we are held fast to are ones we create ourselves unless we are ourselves open.
    Much respect. Hope all is well brother.
    Thank you
    Hope all is well with you and yours. Be well
    We are our brother's keeper. Pay It Forward
    May peace be with you and yours always

  • @allwaizeright9705
    @allwaizeright9705 Před 2 lety

    This is one standout song that Neil played but never got the recognition it deserved.

  • @robertmcgrory3464
    @robertmcgrory3464 Před 3 lety +1

    The other thing that is so impressive about Rush as a band is how their sound evolved through time and how they incorporated whatever was influencing them at the time.. Relentless exploration of sound, tone and rhythms.. That is why, IMO, they have been so influential amongst many musicians and fans a like..

  • @jimsteele4017
    @jimsteele4017 Před 2 lety

    Yeah, this is the Synth Rush Era. Neil's playing to a sequencer, which is playing the synthesizer bedding track. Finally, a Rush song with a recorded track, lol!

  • @necromancer6897
    @necromancer6897 Před 4 měsíci

    Rush is just awesome!!!!

  • @michaelweatherall832
    @michaelweatherall832 Před 3 lety +1

    This is the concert film that made me a fan.

  • @sqr2024
    @sqr2024 Před 3 lety +1

    One of the and maybe the best ever bands live.

  • @fjhgh100
    @fjhgh100 Před 3 lety +1

    I was at this show in Toronto , close floors for my first Rush concert. ... it was electric.

    • @marklittle8805
      @marklittle8805 Před rokem

      It was my first Rush show as well. Totally blown away...

  • @rob3732
    @rob3732 Před 3 lety +2

    I was there .... tremendous concert and this song one of my favorites.

  • @brianlowesterbrianlowester5562

    Saw the grace under pressure tour in 84. This was a huge transition for Rush. I was on the fence. The older i get the more i appreciate this era

  • @SeanVedell
    @SeanVedell Před 2 lety +1

    I still have my 3-D glasses from that show! Count Floyd was a character on the show called SCTV, a comedy that spoofed life running a small cable channel. It had Marty Short, Eugene Levy, Andrea Martin, John Candy, Catherine O’Hara, Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas in the cast. Early work from future heavy weights and it was hilarious!

    • @AndrewRooneyDrums
      @AndrewRooneyDrums  Před 2 lety +1

      Still got the glasses!? NICE

    • @SeanVedell
      @SeanVedell Před 2 lety

      @@AndrewRooneyDrums Of course. They’re tucked into the middle of the tour book.

  • @sanchoemanuel5858
    @sanchoemanuel5858 Před 3 lety +1

    One of my favs of all time and totally underrated

  • @vanlifeson6773
    @vanlifeson6773 Před 3 lety +1

    This tour astonished me. Geddy doing everything at once and sounding amazing Neil wow and Alex jammin. It was unforgettable. Grace Under Pressure tour was filled with amazing high tech sounds. After that tour I never missed another concert tour from Rush.

  • @Chasred-ml4hm
    @Chasred-ml4hm Před rokem

    First time seeing this channel Warren picked a great song a even better live show to react to. It's amazing how so much music come from just these three guys!

  • @spiffymick7073
    @spiffymick7073 Před rokem

    By this point they were definitely using tracks. Doesn't change how awesome it sounds.

  • @johnandrews3568
    @johnandrews3568 Před 2 lety

    So I was at this show and the 'stick trick' was a cool way for Neil to keep time. We always got our rush seats side stage to get the maximum view of Neil to see WTF he was doing. The show referenced was SCTV and within that 'show' (a fictitious tv network) was the show 'Monster Chilller Horror Theatre' hosted by 'Count Floyd' played by Joe Flaherty and Dr. Tongue, aka John Candy RIP

  • @carlgibbons5777
    @carlgibbons5777 Před 3 lety +3

    Yes, there is a sequencer used on this song. Neil is playing to a click. One of the few songs he uses a click on. He prefers not to be a "slave" to the click.

  • @djehuti3
    @djehuti3 Před 3 lety +4

    You really need to listen to the studio version. Even though Rush are great live, Neil's amazing drumming in this track is drowned out a bit. Especially his high hat work.

  • @travis8404
    @travis8404 Před 3 lety +2

    one of my faves rush in there prime neil was a beast the best RIP never forgotten

  • @mark_a_schaefer
    @mark_a_schaefer Před 2 lety

    The sketch at the beginning is from SCTV (Second City TV), a sketch comedy show about a fictional TV station in "Melonville, USA" and starring such greats as John Candy, Eugene Levy, Catherine O'Hara, Andrea Martin, Joe Flaherty, Rick Moranis, Dave Thomas, and Harold Ramis. Joe Flaherty played news anchor Floyd Robertson alongside Eugene Levy's Earl Camembert. Floyd Robertson had a weekend gig as the station’s “Count Floyd” host of “Count Floyd’s Monster Chiller Horror Theater.” The shtick was that they always showed movies in 3-D, which consisted mostly of the actor leaning into and out of the camera shot. When the film would go to break, Count Floyd would always try to sell what had just been shown as "scaaaaary" even though generally, it hadn't been. "Did you see the way that plate of spaghetti just... leapt out of the screen? Scary!"
    This is actually one part of a long Rush/SCTV collaboration starting, I believe, with Geddy singing on Bob & Doug McKenzie's (Rick Moranis & Dave Thomas) "hit single" "Take Off." The Rush song "Red Lenses" also makes mention of SCTV's National Enquirer-esque tabloid, "The National Midnight Star." In those sketches, newsreaders would read a bizarre and unbelievable headline like, "Your Underwear can kill you" and then would turn to an "expert," such as John Candy dressed in a lab coat, who'd say, "It's true!" In "Red Lenses" Geddy sings, "We've got Mars on the horizon, says the National Midnight Star" and you hear presumably Alex and Neil shout, "It's true!"
    To me, the fact that Rush could produce such fantastic music and never take themselves too seriously is one of the reasons for their greatness.

  • @jackteppo9633
    @jackteppo9633 Před 2 lety

    That was the baddest ass song. Neil flips sticks left and right. The headphones are for protection.

  • @frankphillips7436
    @frankphillips7436 Před rokem

    Neil stated that Geddy and a friend of his got together and put the basics of the rhythm together for The Weapon.
    They created the basic drum track on a drum machine and presented it to Neil.
    He joked it was embarrassing to learn to play a drum track from a machine but in the end it was pleasing because it was not a rhythm he thought he would have made himself. He said he really liked it although.

  • @garyday6
    @garyday6 Před 3 lety +6

    rush digital man live drum cam please .great reaction thanks

    • @MarcoBosma
      @MarcoBosma Před 3 lety +1

      yes!!!!!! the end....OMG...try to follow that

  • @dennerjd
    @dennerjd Před 3 lety

    The Nacho Libre meme was perfect. lmao!

  • @justincamp5716
    @justincamp5716 Před 3 lety

    Peak Rush. So good. No one can touch them.

  • @RH-xs8gz
    @RH-xs8gz Před 2 lety

    This song has some of the best hi-hat work ever recorded!
    As far as Neil’s headphones, I’m not sure it is a click track, but there is most definitely a sequencer running underneath everything. That may be what the headphones are for.

  • @25newrush
    @25newrush Před rokem

    Geddy, the ultimate multitasker, there are no equals

  • @mikebell2112
    @mikebell2112 Před rokem

    At the beginning of the solo, Alex is imitating playing a backwards track, which is what the studio version was.

  • @kennyplay5982
    @kennyplay5982 Před 3 lety +1

    Dam, I really wish Rush had a CLEAR video from back then.

  • @richierich398
    @richierich398 Před 3 lety +2

    They are videos called Neil Peart takes center stage and it’s isolated drum tracks with video of him playing the songs live. Digital man is pretty awesome and when I would recommend

    • @mightyV444
      @mightyV444 Před 3 lety

      Starts with an amazing drum intro, too! 😀

  • @johnmcclure4983
    @johnmcclure4983 Před 3 lety +1

    Neil used the headphones to listen to a rhythm track so he could stay in sync with the videos.

  • @blairc3991
    @blairc3991 Před 3 lety

    I was there awesome show in 1984 at the old Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto!

  • @Lister1965
    @Lister1965 Před rokem

    I was at this concert in 1984; I was 19 and this was my 2nd Rush concert (2nd of 11? 12?) I believe Neil was wearing headphones so he could stay in sync with the sequencer bass that plays throughout the song. And I also believe Neil was a Tama artist at this point.

  • @nathanmasseyRU40
    @nathanmasseyRU40 Před 3 lety

    Thank you Andrew--life long Rush fan and just found your videos and binge watched 4-5 videos in a row! Love to see you discover their awesome musicianship and also your enthusiasm for this unique power trio that are always playing virtuoso performances. You will not get tired of discovering their creativity. Enjoying your journey! All of North America, Europe, Brazil.....love Rush. Now New Zealand will too.

  • @trancethan
    @trancethan Před 2 lety

    Do I ever stop and just think “this is three people?”. Yes for 30 years I have

  • @robertkaplan3324
    @robertkaplan3324 Před rokem +1

    My favorite Rush song is the Weapon off Signals Neil goes off at the end

  • @TheSuccessfulHuman
    @TheSuccessfulHuman Před rokem

    If I recall, Neal would be playing with headphones when he was listening to the sequences, which were mostly the arpeggios that you’re hearing. If I remember correctly, he is able to count and keep time even in blank space. There’s no click track maybe others can either verify or deny this.

  • @mikeprows6068
    @mikeprows6068 Před 3 lety

    One of my faves.

  • @dmenatianart
    @dmenatianart Před rokem

    Incredible reaction!!!

  • @juliebrockett3471
    @juliebrockett3471 Před 3 lety

    Excellent concert!! Doesn’t get better than that!! Be Well and God Bless... from Texas!!

  • @rodolfootero7877
    @rodolfootero7877 Před 3 lety +1

    Geddy jumps from a sequenced synth bass to his regular bass during the song, thats also why Neil is wearing headphones, to play with the sequenced bass