Era la mia prima chiamata. The Canadian trio is Gary-Roberts-getting-up-there in chronology (”I don’t like the term ‘old song,’” Lee joked with the Red Rocks throng, “I prefer ‘veteran.’”) and in weighing the travel costs and such associated with an across-the-country trek, I was motivated primarily by a hunch that a Rush concert at Red Rocks was an opportunity that may well not present itself again. I was damn glad I made it.

Too much focus I think is placed on the amphitheater itself — which is stunning — and not on the larger park proper, which is nothing short of a geological marvel and a fabulously isolating and enriching immersion in starkly beautiful and rugged terrain. You really do feel transported virtually onto another planet in this mountain carving of a monument. Two three-hundred-foot-tall rocks, each taller than Niagra Falls, afford perfect acoustics and a mesmerizing backdrop for the shows at Red Rocks.

There are records of public performances on the site that date back more than 100 years, but the amphitheater as it’s generally known today was constructed in 1941.

Geddy Lee on Red Rocks: “It’s an amazing location. One of the most beautiful venues in America . . . or anywhere. I would hazard a guess that it’s one of the most beautiful anywhere.”

I agree.

Amazingly, during the concert’s intermission, I stood at a men’s room urinal next to man who’d also traveled all the way from Washington, D.C., for the gig. I found that both marvelous and fitting of the occasion. There were as well Canadians in no small number in attendance, including a few in Maple Leafs’ regalia; Californians; Texans; East Coasters, Midwesterners; at least one Brazilian (he a new lover of Coors, incidentally); and two couples I chatted up from London. Red Rocks, as you might imagine, has a novel way of luring in a very global crowd for its special gigs. The pre-concert beer swigging up top on the park-sprawling patio affords visitors encounters with travelers from literally around the world.

It’s admittedly elitist of me to express it, but such is the splendor of Red Rocks that at times I found myself silently cursing the pedestrian acts so regularly permitted to perform there. Of course, taste in music is like taste in wine or film or food: necessarily subjective. Still, years back, Rush was welcomed at Radio City Music Hall (for a week) while almost all other rock peers were shunned. Just saying. I imagined a Hall and Oates gig profaning this hallowed place, for instance; please do not comment with any affirming (and weekend-ruining) note of their actually appearing.

This is a great venue for great musicians, and Rush this week at Red Rocks reminded us of their greatness.

I was in row 48, center, and a man to my immediate right earlier in the week had retired from 26 years of duty in the Air Force, and made the trip with his wife from Cheyenne, Wyoming. For some months he’d identified the venture as the first significant act in his retirement. I thanked him for his service to our nation and complimented him on his sense of rewarding leisure. Like me he drank draft beer liberally and believed ‘Subdivisions’ the most stunning of the sets’ songs.

Ominous clouds settled in over the Rocks, and just moments into the set, nine thousand sets of eyes widened over lightning bolts that began belting lower Denver. There were moments when Mother Nature timed the strikes to coincide perfectly with Lee’s piercing vocal pitch. The man-made lighting for the show was impressive, but the natural illumination was both frightening and engrossing. Of that dramatic Rocky Mountain weather: early this last week back East I was vexed with rapidly deteriorating forecasted conditions for greater Denver. But locals are quick to observe of their elevated environs, “If you don’t like the weather, give it 15 minutes.”

Rain made only a light and intermittent appearance. But wild wind whipped through the amphitheater, often shrouding Geddy’s face in his flowing hair but never seeming to hinder his impassioned vocal performance. We 9,000-plus however stood in apprehension for nearly the entirety of the first set as the threat above persisted.

The intermission was the longest I’d ever experienced at a Rush show (30 minutes plus), and I couldn’t help but wonder if that was in deference to the conditions. Mercifully, the storm clouds parted during, and the second set was performed under clear skies and soothing air — Denver earlier that day had seen temps flirting with the middle 90s, but by 9:45 that night we couldn’t have been at 70.

Of course I’m partial to new media, and I knew that non of the old would chronicle the show in newspaper or on TV, despite the fact that about 25 million Rush fans world-wide would have been interested in hearing about so special a gig. So I found great delight in seeing, within hours of the show, video images of numerous tracks from the set posted on YouTube. The evening’s opener, the vintage guitar-riff-ed ‘Limelight,’ can be found here.

For me, Lee was the second star of the night. Overall, the band’s sound was high-tech crystal clear and spectacularly loud — I mean really, really loud. Red Rocks ensures that loud bands sound spectacularly loud there. Lee’s vocals were wonderfully out in front of the mix. He really sang with passion and that piercing emotional pitch the band’s devotees cherish. There was, seemingly, no letup either among the three of them even as their playing stretched past 11:00.

I found it quasi horrific to depart Red Rocks when park staff wanted us all to. The evening had offered up all that I’d hoped, and more, and I found myself emotional in comprehending my great fortune with cooperating weather gods — we easily could have been sky-electrified out of the performance.

I want badly to return Red Rocks, but only for a Rush show.

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Song for the Surge

By The OFB Team
Thursday, April 3, 2008

It’s clear from hearing Journey’s Don’t Stop Believin’ both in the arena and blaring in the victorious locker room that the Capitals have selected that song as their anthem. OFB wonders what song our readers think best matches the Caps’ accomplishments/challenges this spring. Each of us identified a single song we’d associate with the Caps’ surge and posed it as an option in the poll below. We’ve allowed readers to add their suggestion as well.

Groove out to these inspiring tracks or suggest one of your own:

  • Prime Mover - Rush

    From the point of ignition
    To the final drive
    The point of the journey is not to arrive

    Anything can happen…

  • Stayin’ Alive - Bee Gees

    Whether you’re a brother or whether you’re a mother,
    You’re stayin’ alive, stayin’ alive.
    Feel the city breakin’ and everybody shakin’,
    And we’re stayin’ alive, stayin’ alive.

  • The Rising - Bruce Springsteen

    Lost track of how far I’ve gone
    How far I’ve gone, how high I’ve climbed
    On my back’s a sixty pound stone
    On my shoulder a half mile line
    Come on up for the rising
    Com on up, lay your hands in mine
    Come on up for the rising
    Come on up for the rising tonight

  • A Beautiful Thing -Tragically Hip

    so we talked about things and where they went
    big remarkable events
    and how each day’s a new day
    and they get spent
    how you’d continue, artfully, like the breeze
    trying to do one true beautiful thing


What single song would you associate with the Caps' surge?
  • Add an Answer
View Results
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A Canadian Reminds Us That There’s More to Life Than Hockey — and Mostly I Agree

By pucksandbooks
Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Annually at Christmas I’m gifted books that over the course of the calendar year I’ve identified to family and friends as significant and ensnaring of my attention. The result is a modest pyramid of them late each December that, due to my devotion-mistress the rink, lies ignored about my home generally until my mind rests a bit from thoughts puck. Meaning: I pick them up and begin devouring in spring. My routine October through April is pretty much work, rink, blogging, read blogs, eat, jot down future blog ideas, and sleep. Reading is confined to hockey blogs, three daily newspapers, and — if I’m lucky – one or two good novels consumed mostly in airports and in 12-page fits and bursts on daily Metro rides (100-page bursts on weekend Metro rides).

This past weekend’s rink-as-crypt for the Caps, however, engendered a bit of a psychological break from the hockey season for me earlier than I’d anticipated. On Monday, seeking relief from the grief, I threw myself into one of the undisturbed Christmas books. Three hundred pages in, I feel compelled to highlight one of its sucker punches to the heart for you.

This week I’m reading Neil Peart’s Roadshow: Landscape with Drums. If you’ve been a reader of OFB since its inception last autumn, you know that for its founders Peart and his bandmates, Rush, represent the soundtrack of their youths.

Maybe it’s because they’re Canadian, maybe it’s because their hard rock riffs have endured in hockey rinks across North America counting well past 30 years, but in our travels puck we’ve found a striking volume of sonic soulmates with our affinity for Rush. For instance, the moment I learned that the band would be going back out on the road in 2008 and performing at Hersheypark Stadium this coming July, I had instant takers for a tailgate for it within the Hershey Bears’ hockey organization and community. Mother of Geddy Lee, do we have killer seats for that show!

A band like Rush that’s been around as long as it has has, as you might imagine, a fanbase today in possession of highly disposable disposable income. (America’s wealthiest cohort is its elderly.) And so this blogger will also be journeying out to Colorado to catch the band’s June performance at Red Rocks. [For a snazzy view of that world-class outdoor concert venue, click here.]          

But one need not like hard rock nor Rush to appreciate the human being that is Neil Peart. For starters, he is, hands down, the planet’s most accomplished and impressive percussionist; now in his fifties, he still shames rock peers 30 years his juniors with his virtuosity.

Today Peart is in recovery — not from what you’d understandably expect of a big-name rock-and-roller (drugs, booze), but rather from tragedy. In an eleven-month period in 1997-1998, he lost first his lone child, Selena, to an auto accident in Ontario and then some months later his wife of nearly 20 years, Jackie, to cancer. Imagine. Roadshow is Peart’s second book since the twin agonies, and like the first (Ghost Rider: Travels on the Healing Road), documents his travels across North America on a motorcycle. Constant movement for Peart — with his hands and feet within a monstrous drumkit onstage, and afterward, on his bike between gigs out on roads – has been for the past 10 years a therapy for avoiding the painful trap of domestic, stationary living with unimaginable loss. 

One of my favorite Rush songs comes from 1982’s Signals, ‘The Analog Kid.’ It memorializes a first instance of love, arrived at in adolescence:

The fawn-eyed girl with sun-browned legs

Dances on the edge of his dream

And her voice rings in his ears

Like the music of the spheres

In Roadshow, Peart affords his reader the biography of that song.

“The summer before I turned fifteen, my family camped outside Montreal to visit the World’s Fair, Expo ‘67, and at the campground, I met a girl from Ohio. Her father was extremely watchful (warning her that Canadian boys had “Roman hands and Russian fingers”), and we never even kissed, but I fell hopelessly in fourteen-year-old love, and wrote to her all that summer, to Beach City, Ohio.

“I remember sitting on the front steps of our house waiting for the mailman, and when her letters trickled off, I was devastated. Maybe her father made her stop writing me. In any case, I always remembered her . . . ”

Forty years removed from his first love, having been married, tragically widowed, and eventually remarried to an accomplished American photographer, Peart never forgot that summertime first love. In his middle fifties, on the road again with Rush, he programmed into his motorcycle’s GPS a route well out of the way of the band’s itinerary so that he could navigate once again Main Street of Beach City, Ohio.

I think he’s surviving life’s most savage sting rather fine.  

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For Those About To Rock, OFB Salutes You

By pucksandbooks
Saturday, March 31, 2007

The soundtrack of the pro hockey arena the past two-plus decades, perhaps predictably, has nightly included one of Canada’s most idiosyncratic exports: Geddy, Alex, and Neil  Rush. I’m not sure I’ve watched an NHL game on TV the last 20 years without hearing a snippet of one of their radio hit records of the ’80s aired during a stoppage of play. The band is back with fresh material in 2007, embarking on a world tour this summer and fall, and three-quarters of not-too-old-to-rock-out-still OFB will be in attendance. Later this morning, tickets for those shows will go on sale all across the country, but in a way that is anything but progressive.

Rush - on stage

My chief thought this weekend is the loss, attributable to technology, of one of my favorite life experiences: showcasing my allegiance to my band with nights of shopping mall campouts in line for Rush tickets. Once upon a time, before modems, the loyal fan who wanted to attend the show had to scrounge together his lawn-cutting earnings, insert fresh batteries in the boombox, gather his Hemispheres and 2112 and Moving Pictures cassettes, and make a hurried race to the suburban shopping mall cement for fully 36 hours (at least) in advance of the 10:00 a.m. ticket sale to assure his admission. It was, for me, a sacred ritual. A most satisfying sacrifice. I did it in high school and college in places like Rockville, Md., Richmond, Va., and Dayton, Ohio. I’d do it again now, for sales this weekend, if just two other Rush fans would join me, pledging to bring a cooler of beer and, I suppose, a digitized boombox . . . although I’d prefer to see one of those tape-playing clunky giants of the forgotten past.

I have so many cherished memories from those eons of hours in lines. The early ‘80s were so chock full of great heavy sounds; we didn’t listen just to Rush throughout the nights but also AC/DC and Pink Floyd and Sabbath and Zeppelin. And the beautiful thing about that time was that you didn’t even need your cassettes with you to hear them; you could scroll all up and down the FM dial and land on album rock greatness seemingly without ever encountering a commercial. Man do I miss that. XM’s got nothing on the spirit of that radio.

Here’s my predictable Old Fart lament: kids today  to the extent that they even listen to rock any more  will never know those sacred nights of sacrifice and their classic sounds. Continue reading ›

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Morning cup-a-joe (1/12/07)

By pucksandbooks
Friday, January 12, 2007

cupajoe.jpegSaturday is Hockey Day in Canada, and OFB is celebrating it in spirited style. Mr. and Mrs. Gustafsson are hosting a day- and evening-long multi-media and culinary indulgence at Chez Gustaffson. We’re frying a turkey, sipping tapped beer, and of course wearing touques  our only opportunity to do so this winter.

We’re especially eager to put some faces, handshakes, and hugs to a handful of hockey bloggers we’ve largely come to know only through e-ether since our inception last autumn. And at midnight Saturday Gustafsson and Japer’s begin celebrating their respective birthdays. Here’s hoping that by that point in the proceedings we’ve witnessed two points secured in Sunrise and a mystery female guest initiate her body being painted in the molding of a Caps’ sweater. If it’s good enough for Gilbert Arenas’ birthday, it’s good enough for Gustafsson.

We’ll transform the Gustafsson basement into our own private province  and what happens in TouqueLand stays in TouqueLand. All the more important to have this take place tomorrow while the mercury here reputedly will reach 70; I’ve asked the Gustafssons to have desk fans directed at my recliner and slabs of dry ice placed on my armrests. I will make the best of the conditions outdoors  I’m bringing a set of street hockey sticks, and Team OFB will take on all sneakered comers during intermissions.

Who sings the opening anthem for Hockey Day in Canada? Why Bob and Doug McKenzie and Geddy Lee, of course. Remember, Take off to the Great White North, it’s a beauty way to go.

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The Over-35 Beer Leaguer: A Lament

By pucksandbooks
Tuesday, October 10, 2006

The dancer slows her frantic pace
In pain and desperation
Her aching limbs and downcast face
Aglow with perspiration

Stiff as wire, her lungs on fire
With just the briefest pause
Flooding through her memory
The echoes of old applause

She limps across the floor
And closes her bedroom door…

The writer stares with glassy eyes
Defies the empty page
His beard is white, his face is lined
And streaked with tears of rage

Thirty years ago, how the words would flow
With passion and precision
But now his mind is dark and dulled
By sickness and indecision

And he stares out the kitchen door
Where the sun will rise no more…

Some are born to move the world
To live their fantasies
But most of us just dream about
The things we’d like to be

Sadder still to watch it die
Than never to have known it
For you, the blind who once could see
The bell tolls for thee…

Losing It,” by N. Peart

Yesterday I received email from a college chum informing me that his suburban Cincinnati beer league team was going like gangbusters out of the gate but that he, individually, wasn’t producing anywhere near his normal numbers. Nearing 40, diet and generally fitness conscious, a fairly avid runner, Tim asked me for suggestions to improve his stamina and lower body strength. It seemed as if he wanted to sweat his way back into stardom.

On the sheet at seventeen we stride like Superman. At 27, with an extra gasp, still we double-shift late in the third behind by a goal. But at 37 . . . the conspiracy starts. Our hockey hearts still perfectly pump their passion, but immediately below a menacing mutiny undermines our mission. Continue reading ›

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