2112 (pronounced "twenty-one twelve") is the fourth studio album by Canadian rock band Rush, released in March 1976 by Mercury Records.[8][9][10][11] It reached No. 5 in Canada and became the band's commercial breakthrough in the US, peaking at No. 61.

2112
Studio album by
ReleasedMarch 1976 (1976-03)
RecordedJanuary 1976
StudioToronto Sound (Toronto, Canada)
Genre
Length38:42
LabelMercury
Producer
Rush chronology
Caress of Steel
(1975)
2112
(1976)
All the World's a Stage
(1976)
Singles from 2112
  1. "The Twilight Zone"
    Released: June 1976[7]
  2. "The Temples of Syrinx"
    Released: February 1977[7]
Alternative cover
40th anniversary reissue
40th anniversary reissue

The band was in financial hardship due to the disappointing sales of 1975's Caress of Steel, which also gained an unfavourable critical reception, and a decline in attendance at its shows. Mercury, their international label, considered dropping them but granted one more album following negotiations with manager Ray Danniels. Rush were pressured to deliver more commercial material, but decided to continue developing its progressive rock direction it had explored on Caress of Steel and made the 20-minute futuristic science-fiction title track occupy side one of 2112, with a collection of shorter songs on side two that display their hard rock roots.

2112 was released to favourable reviews from music critics and quickly outsold the band's previous albums. Rush toured the album extensively in 1976 and 1977, which culminated in their debut concerts in Europe. 2112 remains the band's second-highest-selling album behind Moving Pictures, with more than 3 million copies sold in the US alone. It is listed in 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die, and ranked second on Rolling Stone's reader's poll, Your Favorite Prog Rock Albums of All Time.[12] 2112 has been reissued several times; a 40th Anniversary Edition was released in 2016 with previously unreleased material, including the album performed by numerous contemporary artists.

Background

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In January 1976, Rush ended its 1975–1976 tour to support 1975's Caress of Steel. The band had enjoyed writing and recording the album, but guitarist Alex Lifeson recalled the group was in a state of confusion after the tour, sensing the disappointing reaction from crowds after playing songs from it on stage.[13] The album marked the band's foray into progressive rock with lengthy, story-based songs, more complex song structures, and hard-to-grasp lyrics, which made it difficult to receive radio airplay and promote effectively.[13] Vocalist and bassist Geddy Lee said the band could not understand the underwhelming response, and later dubbed the tour the "Down the Tubes Tour" as they struggled to meet their $125-a-week salary while crowds declined.[14] Lee added, "That really shakes your confidence. We were so confused and disheartened."[13] In 1980, Lifeson, who had formed the band in 1968, said this was the only moment in its history when he felt close to giving up.[15]

In addition to their financial hardship, Rush's international label, Mercury Records, considered dropping them. Peart recalled seeing label owner Polygram's financial predictions for the forthcoming year, and the band were not listed.[16] To help the situation Rush manager Ray Danniels flew to the label's head offices in Chicago to try to regain confidence and spoke highly of the band's ideas for a new album without having heard any of it. This followed the group's conscious decision to exclude Danniels from the writing and recording sessions, and only played the album to him when it was finished.[13] Danniel's plea was a success, and Mercury approved one more album.[13] Despite pressure from the label and management to make a more commercial record, the band ignored the advice and proceeded with material as they saw fit.[13] Lifeson said, "I remember having these conversations about, 'What are we going to do? Are we going to try to make another mini-Led Zeppelin record or are we going to do what we are going to do and continue forward and whatever happens, happens?' ... We fully intended to [not] go down in flames but we were prepared to do that."[13] Drummer and lyricist Neil Peart looked back on the situation: "We had been working towards something a little more ambitious on each of the previous two albums. We simply decided that 2112 would have to be the realization of all our hopes."[17] Following the commercial success of 2112 and its tour, the band vowed to take full creative control of their music from that point on.[18]

Writing and recording

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Rush put down musical ideas for 2112 in backstage dressing rooms, hotel rooms, and in their van while touring Caress of Steel in the second half of 1975.[14][19] Peart had already started writing lyrics, to which Lee and Lifeson would develop songs on acoustic guitars that complemented the mood of what Peart was writing about. This was a departure from the pair using their acoustic guitars to write heavy rock arrangements that were eventually recorded on electric instruments, although some passages were written on electric guitar using a portable Pignose practise amplifier.[13][20] Lee and Lifeson composed with little overdubbing in order to recreate the music on stage as much as possible.[19] Lifeson recalled developing "The Temples of Syrinx" backstage at a gig in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario in front of their opening act Mendelson Joe.[13] The "Overture" was the final piece to be written on the album.[21] Lifeson said 2112 was the first Rush album that "really sounded like Rush".[14]

In January 1976, the band entered Toronto Sound Studios to record with their longtime associate Terry Brown assuming his role as producer, operating a Studer 24-track machine.[22][19][13] Lifeson plays a 1968 Gibson ES-335 for the majority of the electric guitar parts, 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.[15] A section of "Discovery" features a Fender Stratocaster that Lifeson borrowed from a friend.[14] Lee used a Rickenbacker 4001 bass with stereo output; Brown fed one channel into the mixing board and then into a compressor, and the other was channelled into Lee's Electro-Voice speakers turned up to the maximum.[13] Upon completing the album, the band expressed an interest in recording in another studio to explore different sounds.[17] Their next album, A Farewell to Kings, was recorded in Wales.

Songs

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Side one

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Side one is occupied by the 20-minute futuristic science-fiction song "2112". The seven-part track is based on a story by Peart who credits Russian-American novelist Ayn Rand, inventor of the philosophy of Objectivism and author of the dystopian fictional novella Anthem, the plot of which bears several similarities to "2112". The band had read the book, and Peart added the credit in the album's liner notes to avoid legal action.[23] In the British paper NME, Barry Miles made allusions of the Rand influence to Nazism, which particularly offended Lee, whose parents were Holocaust survivors.[13] "Overture" begins with a soundscape from musician and album cover artist Hugh Syme performed on his ARP Odyssey synthesizer with an envelope filter and Echoplex Delay pedal.[24] Music writer and professor Rob Bowman calculated that in the entire piece, 2:34 of the song contains improvised guitar solos.[13] "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 and borrows a short sequence from Tchaikovsky's1812 Overture.[13][14]

"2112" tells a story set in the city of Megadon in the year 2112, after an intergalactic war in 2062 forces many of the planets to be ruled by the Solar Federation (symbolized by the Red Star on the cover artwork), where music is unknown and individualism and creativity are outlawed. The population is controlled by a cabal of priests living in the temples of Syrinx, who take orders from giant banks of computers that control all aspects of life ("The Temples of Syrinx").[13][25] An unnamed protagonist finds a guitar inside a cave and rediscovers the lost art of music ("Discovery").[25][20] Upon playing the guitar to the priests, they destroy it and declare music a waste of time and against the computers' plan ("Presentation"). In a dream an oracle shows him a planet established simultaneously with the Solar Federation, where an elder race flourish in creativity and individuality ("Oracle: The Dream").[20] He awakens, depressed that music is part of such a society that he can never be part of and kills himself ("Soliloquy").[13] Another planetary war begins and the elder race successfully take down the Solar Federation,[26] but the song ends with an ambiguous spoken ending: "Attention all planets of the Solar Federation: We have assumed control" ("Grand Finale"). Peart described the ending as a "double surprise ... a real Hitchcock killer".[25][23][13]

Side two

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Side two contains five individual songs that display the band's more traditional hard-rock sound and Lee's higher-pitched vocals featured on their previous albums.[20] Lifeson said while having a title track more serious, the rest of the album was to be "just a little lighter and a little more fun".[13] Bowman wrote that the variation of styles on side two offers "a very different listening experience" in comparison.[13] Though the tracks are not specifically about the "2112" concept, they do contain ideas that can relate to its overall theme.[23] Lee wrote the lyrics for "Tears" and Lifeson the lyrics to "Lessons", while Peart wrote the rest.[27]

"A Passage to Bangkok" is a song about marijuana; Lee said it is "a travelogue for all the places in the world that grow the best weed". The track mentions a number of cities and countries, specifically Bogotá, Jamaica, Acapulco, Morocco, Bangkok, Lebanon, Afghanistan, and Kathmandu.[21] Rush started to write "The Twilight Zone" at a time when they needed one more song to fill side two. It was quickly put together, Peart said it was written and recorded in one day.[28] The band were big fans of the television series The Twilight Zone and based the track on the stories written for it from its host, Rod Serling.[21] "Lessons" is one of the few Rush songs written solely by Lifeson. For him, the process of songwriting is more seldom and spontaneous in comparison to dedicating time to write, rehearse and scrap parts that do not work.[15] "Tears" is a romantic ballad and is the first Rush track to incorporate the Mellotron, which Syme performs.[21] "Something for Nothing" is a song about freewill and decision making.[21] Peart was inspired by graffiti on a wall that he saw while on his way to perform at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles that read "Freedom isn't free", which he adapted into the song.[29] Lifeson asserted that its lyrical tie-in with the "2112" suite makes the track act as a coda to the record.[27]

Artwork

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The album was packaged in a gatefold sleeve designed and produced by longtime Rush cover artist Hugh Syme. It marks the first appearance of the emblem later known by fans as the "Starman" logo, which was adopted into the band's stage design and future album covers. Peart used it on the front bass drum heads of his kit from 1977 to 1983, and again in 2004 and 2015. The Red Star, a symbol of the Solar Federation depicted in the "2112" suite, represents what Peart described as "any collectivist mentality", while the man represents the protagonist of the story and to Peart, "the abstract man against the masses". Syme said: "That he is nude is just a classic tradition ... the pureness of his person and creativity without the trappings of other elements such as clothing". In July 2013, the Starman logo was featured on a Canada Post stamp honouring Rush.[30] The gatefold includes a photograph of the band dressed in white and standing in front of a wind machine, and was a shoot Lifeson remembered for being particularly awkward.[27]

Commercial performance

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2112 was released in March 1976 on vinyl, 8-track cartridge, and cassette tape.[8][9][10][11] It received strong promotion from Polydor, the distributor of Mercury Records albums, who issued an advertising campaign based on graphics on the album sleeve, in major trade publications.[19] It became Rush's second album after Fly by Night to enter the top ten on the Canadian Albums Chart, peaking at No. 5.[31] In the US, it peaked at No. 61 on the Billboard Top LPs & Tape chart, the week of 29 May 1976, during a 37-week stay on the chart. It was the band's first to crack the U.S. top 100.[32]

The album sold faster than any of Rush's previous albums.[19] In June 1976, the album had outsold the band's past catalogue in Canada and the United States,[23] selling close to 35,000 and more than 200,000 copies, respectively.[33] 2112 became a strong seller in the United States; it reached gold certification by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in November 1977 for selling 500,000 copies.[34] In November 1995, the album reached triple platinum for selling more than 3 million copies, becoming Rush's second-biggest seller after Moving Pictures.[34][35]

Reception

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Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [36]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music     [37]
The Guardian     [39]
PopMatters9/10[40]
Rolling Stone      (Deluxe)[38]

Cashbox praised the album, calling it "a valid and melodic tale ... the story/song is a definite cohesive listen".[19] They said of "Temples of Syrinx" that it "combines growling guitars with an incredibly shrill lead vocal."[41] In an article about 2112 for Creem, Dan Nooger wrote the album "features some significant Mellotron meanderings and amazingly eccentric lyrics".[20]

  • 2112 was included in IGN's list "10 Classic Prog Rock Albums".[42]
  • In a reader's poll held by Rolling Stone, it placed second on the list of favourite Prog Rock albums.[43]
  • AllMusic's Greg Prato (4.5 out of 5): "1976's 2112 proved to be their much sought-after commercial breakthrough and remains one of their most popular albums."[36]

The Audio-Visual Preservation Trust of Canada, a non-profit Canadian charitable organization dedicated to promoting the preservation of Canada's audio-visual heritage, has sponsored MasterWorks, which annually recognizes twelve culturally significant Canadian classics from the film, radio, TV and music industries. In 2006, 2112 was one of the albums chosen to be preserved.

In 2018, the album won the Polaris Heritage Prize Audience Award in the 1976–1985 category.[44]

Ultimate Classic Rock included the album on their list of the "Top 100 '70s Rock Albums".[45] Prog readers voted 2112 the 15th best progressive rock album of all time.[46]

Tour

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Rush promoted 2112 with a concert tour of the United States, Canada, and for the first time in their career, across Europe, between February 1976 and June 1977. The tour saw the band perform over 140 shows.[13] To make their set tighter, "Discovery" and "Oracle: The Dream" were omitted from the performance of the "2112" suite. However, "Discovery" was performed on later performances of "2112" on tours for A Farewell to Kings and Hemispheres. Rush would not perform the track in its entirety until their 1996 tour following the release of Test for Echo.[13] The shows at Massey Hall in Toronto in June 1976 were recorded and compiled for release as their double live album All the World's a Stage, released in September 1976.

Reissues

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Year Label Format Notes
1987 Anthem CD [47]
1993 Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab CD As part of the "Original Master Recordings" collection with a 24k gold-plated disc.[48][49]
1997 Anthem/Mercury CD As part of "The Rush Remasters" collection.[50]
2011 Anthem CD Digitally remastered by Andy VanDette as part of the reissue of Rush's Mercury-era albums.[51]
2012 Mercury CD, DVD, Blu-ray Digitally remastered Deluxe Edition including a 5.1 surround sound mix and bonus content.[52][53]
2015 Anthem/Mercury/Universal LP Digitally remastered by Sean Magee at Abbey Road Studios on 200g vinyl and AAC digital format.[54][55][56]
2016 Anthem/Mercury/Universal CD, DVD, LP 40th Anniversary Edition with bonus content, including new studio tracks featuring various musicians performing the album.[57]

Track listing

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Original release

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All lyrics are written by Neil Peart, except where noted

Side one
No.TitleMusicLength
1."2112"
  • I. "Overture" – 4:31
  • II. "The Temples of Syrinx" – 2:16
  • III. "Discovery" – 3:25
  • IV. "Presentation" – 3:41
  • V. "Oracle: The Dream" – 2:00
  • VI. "Soliloquy" – 2:19
  • VII. "Grand Finale" – 2:16"
Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson
  • Lee, Lifeson
  • Lee, Lifeson
  • Lifeson
  • Lifeson
  • Lee, Lifeson
  • Lee, Lifeson
  • Lee, Lifeson
  • 20:34
    Side two
    No.TitleLyricsMusicLength
    1."A Passage to Bangkok" Lee, Lifeson3:32
    2."The Twilight Zone" Lee, Lifeson3:16
    3."Lessons"LifesonLifeson3:51
    4."Tears"LeeLee3:30
    5."Something for Nothing" Lee3:59
    2012 Deluxe Edition bonus tracks
    No.TitleLength
    7."I. Overture" (Live at Northlands Coliseum, 1981)4:31
    8."II. The Temples of Syrinx" (Live at Northlands Coliseum – Edmonton, AB, Canada, 25 June 1981[58])2:19
    9."A Passage to Bangkok" (Live at Manchester Apollo – Manchester, England, 17 June 1980[58])3:57

    40th Anniversary Edition (2016)

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    Bonus disc
    No.TitleLength
    1."Solar Federation"0:18
    2."Overture" (Performed by Dave Grohl, Taylor Hawkins and Nick Raskulinecz)4:01
    3."A Passage to Bangkok" (Performed by Billy Talent)3:37
    4."The Twilight Zone" (Performed by Steven Wilson)4:21
    5."Tears" (Performed by Alice in Chains)4:21
    6."Something for Nothing" (Performed by Jacob Moon)3:54
    7."2112" (Live at Massey Hall Outtake)15:50
    8."Something for Nothing" (Live at Massey Hall Outtake)4:08
    9."The Twilight Zone" (Live 1977 Contraband)3:28
    10."2112 1976 Radio Ad"1:00

    Personnel

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    Credits are adapted from the album's 1976 liner notes.[22]

    Rush
    Additional musician
    Production
    • Rush – production, arrangement
    • Terry Brown – arrangement, production, recording, engineering, mixing
    • Brian Lee – mastering
    • Bob Ludwig – mastering
    • Hugh Syme – graphics
    • Yosh Inouye – photography
    • Gerard Gentil – photography (band)
    • Ray Danniels – management
    • Vic Wilson – management
    • Moon Records – executive production

    Charts

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    Chart (1976) Peak
    position
    Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[31] 5
    Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[59] 33
    US Billboard 200[32] 61

    Certifications

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    Region Certification Certified units/sales
    Canada (Music Canada)[60] 2× Platinum 200,000^
    United Kingdom (BPI)[61]
    1997 release
    Gold 100,000
    United States (RIAA)[62] 3× Platinum 3,000,000^

    ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
    Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

    References

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    1. ^ "10 Classic Prog Rock Albums". IGN. 28 August 2008. Archived from the original on 24 February 2019. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
    2. ^ "50 Greatest Prog Rock Albums of All Time". Rolling Stone. 17 June 2015. Archived from the original on 23 April 2019. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
    3. ^ Greene, Andy (16 August 2013). "Weekend Rock Question: What Is the Best Prog Rock Album of the 1970s?". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 16 November 2017. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
    4. ^ Thoroddsen, Arnar Eggert (2005). "Rush - 2112". In Dimery, Robert (ed.). 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. London: Cassell Illustrated. p. 362.
    5. ^ "'Metal Evolution' Makes Case for Rush as Prog Metal Pioneer". rush vault. 31 January 2012. Archived from the original on 24 February 2019. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
    6. ^ Freedman, Robert (2014). Rush: Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Excellence. Algora Publishing. p. 50. ISBN 9781628940848. Archived from the original on 2 April 2021. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
    7. ^ a b Strong, Martin Charles (1995). The Great Rock Discography. Canongate Press. ISBN 9780862415419.
    8. ^ a b "Creem, March 1976, p. 25" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 28 July 2014. Retrieved 1 April 2020.
    9. ^ a b Wagner, Jeff (2010). Jeff Wagner, Mean Deviation: Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal, Bazillion Points, 2010, p. 25. Bazillion Points Books. ISBN 9780979616334. Archived from the original on 2 April 2021. Retrieved 1 April 2020.
    10. ^ a b McParland, Robert (27 October 2017). Robert McParland, Science Fiction in Classic Rock: Musical Explorations of Space, Technology and the Imagination, 1967-1982, McFarland & Company, 2017, p. 142. McFarland. ISBN 9781476630304. Archived from the original on 2 April 2021. Retrieved 1 April 2020.
    11. ^ a b "Mercury Releases Two," Record World, March 20, 1976, p. 61.
    12. ^ Greene, Andy (26 July 2012). "'Reader's Poll: Your Favorite Prog Rock Albums of All Time". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 29 July 2012. Retrieved 26 July 2012.
    13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Bowman, Rob (2012). 2112 (40th Anniversary Edition) booklet (Media notes). Rush. Anthem Records. 0602537150168. Archived from the original on 3 October 2017. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
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