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This is for the PAPERBACK version of
Limelight: Rush in the ‘80s.
Same contents as the hardcover
exactly (including the colour photo
sections), but with different cover
design, as you can see – including a
nice spot-varnish job that doesn’t
come through in the picture. The new
design matches the concept used on
the paperback version of Anthem,
also now available.
The book is 318 pages, comprising,
along with Anthem (still available!)
and follow-up Driven, my deepest dig
into Rush ever. Hopefully this
trilogy will stand as the most
definitive book on this period,
although there’s no stopping Rush
scholarship. There are two
eight-page colour sections, but
other than that, it’s a 114,000-word
deep dive into the life of the band
covering:
- Permanent Waves
- Moving Pictures
- Exit… Stage Left
- Signals
- Grace Under Pressure
- Power Windows
- Hold Your Fire
- A Show of Hands
- Presto.
Inspired by what I had to do on my
recent Led Zeppelin and Clash books
(i.e. writing 500 words on every
single song), there’s far more
song-by-song analysis than I stuck
in any of my previous Rush titles.
But there’s also a trove of unseen
first-hand interview material with
the band as well as engineers,
producers, managers and other
industry movers an’ shakers.
Here’s blurb on ‘er that went out to
the book industry:
In what is the action-packed follow
up to the formative Anthem: Rush in
the ‘70s, author Martin Popoff
celebrates Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson
and Neil Peart at the trio’s peak of
their powers of persuasion. Rush was
one of the most celebrated and
highly regarded hard rock act of the
‘80s, and it all begins in this book
with Permanent Waves en route to
Moving Pictures, their crowning
glory. Limelight: Rush in the ‘80s
is a celebration of fame, of
pushback against that fame, of large
amounts of monies in but then monies
just as quickly disseminated to pay
for the band’s rapidly growing stage
performances. In tandem however was
a rapidly evolving sound built of
fearless creativity. The latter half
of the book is contentious indeed,
as Rush adopt keyboard technology
and go pert and poppy, causing an
uproar in the old guard base, but
then garnering a whole new crop of
listeners who wanted to take the
trip into the future with their
undaunted heroes of sonic
exploration. Limelight: Rush in the
‘80s therefore charts a dizzying
period in the band’s career, built
of explosive excitement but also
exhaustion, a state that would lead,
by tome’s termination, to the band
questioning everything they
previously believed in, each to a
man eying the oncoming decade with
trepidation and suspicion.
Bio: Martin Popoff is the author of
110 books on music, including four
previous titles on Rush. He has also
worked on various documentaries for
Banger Films, including the
award-winning Rush doc Beyond the
Lighted Stage. At approximately
7900, Popoff has had published in
books more record reviews than
anybody in the history of music
writing.
OK, back to me talkin’…books will be
signed by me to you unless you wave
your arms wildly and tell me
otherwise within like half an hour
of ordering!
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US orders $42.00 US
funds
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Int'l orders (air mail) $55.00
US funds
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Canadian orders $48.00 Cdn.
funds
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Book will be signed to you from me,
so let me know if it is a present
for someone else, or you don’t want
it signed.
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If you would like a PayPal
invoice, please indicate what
country you are in and give me
the email address you use at
PayPal. Or just do yer usual
and direct funds to
martinp@inforamp.net.
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Email martinp@inforamp.net with any
questions. Sweet postage savings to be
had for multiple orders (or two of
pretty much anything—long story, ask
me!) for US orders.
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