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2112 | 
enlarge | Artist: Rush Label: Island / Mercury Category: Music
List Price: $9.98 Buy New: $7.97 You Save: $2.01 (20%)
New (51) Used (40) Collectible (4) from $3.70
Rating: 289 reviews Sales Rank: 1438
Format: Original Recording Reissued, Original Recording Remastered Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.7 x 0.4
MPN: 534626 UPC: 731453462625 EAN: 0731453462625 ASIN: B000001ESF
Release Date: May 6, 1997 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Promotion: Save $10.00 when you spend $50.00 or more on Qualifying Items offered by Amazon.com. Enter code BMLSAVES at checkout. Terms and Conditions Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Tracks:
| • | '2112': I: Overture/II: The Temples Of Syrinx/III: Discovery/IV: Presentation/V: Oracle: The Dream/VI. Soliloquy/VII. Grand Finale | | • | A Passage To Bangkok | | • | The Twilight Zone | | • | Lessons | | • | Tears | | • | Something For Nothing |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com essential recording Only Rush could have pulled this off, and only in the '70s. 2112--the title suite of the band's 1976 breakthrough album--is a comically pretentious, futuristic rock opera written by a nerdy drummer and sung by a whiny-voiced geek. It also happens to be a great piece of rock & roll that lifts the listener through a variety of moods and textures from genteel acoustic ("Oracle") to thrilling metal ("The Temples of Syrinx"). Perhaps realizing that they had taken conceptualism about as far as it could go, even these guys backed off on the epic hero stuff for later releases. 2112 still stands as one of the great signposts of the prog-rock era. --Michael Ruby
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| Customer Reviews: Read 284 more reviews...
Memories of innocence August 24, 2008 I was driving home from a friends house and listened to this CD that I had stuck in my console. I remember purchasing 2112 on a whim, as an LP, in 1977( freshman year in high school). I played this over and over and made a cassette recording to play in the under dash player I had mounted in my dad's car. It brought back ALOT of memories of fun times and innocence, a time when there were no cell phones, internet, computers,CD's, high def. etc. Going to second base in the back seat of your dad's car was exciting and dangerous, hiding beers in the woods and lying about whose house you were sleepng at. This was truly played over and over and over, whether it was at a friends house on the turn-table singing along and trying to match Geddy's high notes or copied to a cassette recording handed from one friend to another. If you enjoyed this album in the past... its well worth breaking out again.. :)
Thank you Geddy, Alex and Neil for GREAT music !!
Good but not great August 23, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
3 1/2
A very decently ambitious classic progressive rock album in my opinion, but largely overrated as one of the flagpoints in the genre. Probably unnecessarily elevated for it's conceptual arch and epic introduction suite, 2112 is still a worthwhile investment for those dabbling in prog via classic rock. The emphasis however does not lie in complex melodic manipulations and challenging time signatures but in fluid, unpretentious rock and roll with a slightly nerdier angle, undoubtedly "enhanced" with these acquired high pitched, in tune shrieks.
Outstanding! August 20, 2008 I can't believe anyone would give this a 1 star review!! They must be tone deaf!!
"Attention all planets of the Solar Federation. We have assumed control!"
I like disagreeing with the masses August 6, 2008 0 out of 10 found this review helpful
This album, if I may be blunt about it, is a complete and utter flying dog turd. The big hype is the "epic" 20-and-a-half minute self-titled track. I wanted to take it safe and just hear it on Youtube before I considered buying. WOOOOOOOOW am I glad I didn't waste my money on this garbage! Nothing stuck out at all, except for the whiny, annoyingly high-pitched vocals, and that I was completely wasting my time.
Everyone I know on Yahoo! Answers seems to rave Neil Peart's "superior drumming." Where the hell is it? I don't hear nuthin' superior from ANY of the instruments. I didn't even bother to listen to the lyrics, knowing I'd have to try and interpret what the horrendous singer was saying, and I didn't feel like listening. Apparently, it's a buncha cheesy sci-fi crap anyway. I REALLY don't see the inspiration for other prog-rock bands in Rush (except maybe James LaBrie's ear-piercing vocals for Dream Theater). Symphony X and the aforementioned Dream Theater blows these twats out of the water in terms of lyric writing, instrumental talent, and making good, interesting, and enjoyable 20-minute+ compositions.
WOW!! July 28, 2008 Rating ****** (I want to rate it 6 out of 5 stars)
I am a teenager, and I was mainly into led zeppelin, pink floyd, etc. I was in my loft and I saw my mom's CD, "The Spirit of the Radio" which is a greatest hits of their first 12 studio albums. I picked it up and played it and was blown away. Sure, I had heard Tom Sawyer, but I thought that was their (rush) only good song. The 3 songs that blew my mind the most was Fly by Night, 2112 Overture (Temples of Syrinx), and Closer to the heart. I bought all of Rush's CD's and this album switches between Farewell to Kings and Fly by Night as my favorite Rush album.
The album starts with a 20+ minute progressive metal/rock suite. It is a great song and is probably one of my 5 favorite songs ever. Then there is the rest of the album. It is really good and includes a great song Something for Nothing. That is one of my favorite Rush songs. The other songs on the album are good, but the beginning and ending are the best.
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