2112

2112
 
 
2112  is the fourth studio album by Canadian rock band Rush.  Released in 1976, the album features the seven-part title suite written by Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson, with lyrics written by Neil Peart telling a dystopian story set in the year 2112.  The album is sometimes described as a concept album although the songs on the second side are unrelated to the plot of the suite.  Rush repeated this arrangement on the 1978 album Hemispheres.  2112 is one of two Rush albums listed in 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die (the other being Moving Pictures).  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 
Even progressive rock bands whose albums sold well from the beginning often didn't reach their creative peak for awhile.  The magnum opus for Emerson, Lake and Palmer, “Karn Evil 9” was on their fifth album, Brain Salad Surgery.  Jethro Tull’s classic album Aqualung was their fourth album.  This also applies for several rock bands of the same time period that do not truly fit the progressive rock category.  It was Queen’s fourth album, A Night at the Opera that included their unforgettable “Bohemian Rhapsody”.  Canadian hard rockers Rush came up with 2112 as their fourth album (that title is exactly 100 years from now, as it happens).  The Dark Side of the Moon – Pink Floyd’s space-rock masterpiece that took up near permanent residency on the Billboard album charts – was the band's eighth album.  With Trillion though, the band was never given the opportunity to develop an audience or to refine their sound. 
 
(October 2012)
 
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We have been bombarded with important anniversaries this year.  Though I purposely did not research all of these anniversaries and undoubtedly missed plenty of them for this post (I have been adding them as I think about new ones, however), I know about several others:  A long-time favorite food that I still enjoy, Sun Maid Raisins was started in 1912; I lived for nearly 7 years in Jackson County, MS, which was founded in 1812; and the first book of fairy tales and folk stories that were assembled by the Brothers Grimm was published in 1812.  The “unsinkable” ship Titanic went down in 1912.  The first Whitman’s Sampler – the standard by which all mixed chocolate boxes should be judged IMHO (though not since their acquisition by Russell Stover in 1993 – and yes, I do think that Godiva is over-rated) – came out in 1912.  The time-traveling sequences in one of my favorite romance movies, Somewhere in Time (starring Christopher Reeve and Jane Seymour) were set in 1912.  As I noted in the UARB post on Trillion, one of the best known albums by Rush is called 2112; this album placed second on a readers’ poll by Rolling Stone on “Your Favorite Prog Rock Albums of All Time”.  My alma mater, North Carolina State University celebrated its 125th anniversary this year. 
 
(Year 3 Review)
 
Last edited: March 22, 2021