Rush - Vapor Trails

2




Album Details

Title: Vapor Trails
Artist: Rush
Release Date: 5/14/2002
Re-Released On: 8/24/2004
Label: Atlantic, WEA
Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto
UPCs: 075678353123, 075678374029, 4988029871183
Genre: Rock
Styles: Hard Rock, Prog-Rock, Arena Rock, Album Rock
Moods: Ambitious, Complex, Dramatic, Elaborate, Epic, Lively, Confident, Energetic, Sprawling, Atmospheric, Enigmatic, Fiery, Reflective, Tense/Anxious, Fierce, Intense, Literate, Provocative, Volatile, Earnest, Plaintive, Swaggering, Urgent, Visceral, Aggressive, Cerebral, Theatrical
Total Copies: 2
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. One Little Victory
  2. Ceiling Unlimited
  3. Ghost Rider
  4. Peaceable Kingdom
  5. The Stars Look Down
  6. How It Is
  7. Vapor Trail
  8. Secret Touch
  9. Earthshine
  10. Sweet Miracle
  11. Nocturne
  12. Freeze, Pt. 4 of "Fear"
  13. Out of the Cradle

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2004CDAtlantic83740
2002CDAtlantic83531
2002CDWEA10015

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Most longtime Rush fans realize that a new album from the Canadian trio in the early 21st century is quite an accomplishment. After drummer Neil Peart's much-publicized tragic turn of events in his private life not long after Rush's 1996 release Test for Echo (the death of both his teenaged daughter and wife less than a year apart), the group's future was understandably cast into doubt. Slowly but surely, however, the band regained their footing and issued their 17th studio album in 2002, Vapor Trails. You would think that a veteran band entering their fourth decade together would perhaps mellow out a bit, but this doesn't prove to be case -- as evidenced by the leadoff track, "One Little Victory," while the majority of the album follows the same direct and hard-hitting sound as their past couple of releases (fans of the group's more synth-based and sterile mid-'80s style will have to look elsewhere). Peart, who remains the group's main lyricist, opts to conquer such challenging subject matter as the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on "Peaceable Kingdom," while bits of the lyric to "Ghost Rider" ("Pack up all those phantoms/Shoulder that invisible load") leads the listener to believe that perhaps the drummer is sharing his personal healing process with the fans. Other standouts include the melodic "Sweet Miracle," the explosive "Out of the Cradle," the mid-paced title track, and "Earthshine," the latter of which showcases how fine Lee's voice has matured (especially when compared to his high-piercing shriek on Rush's early albums). All in all, Vapor Trails does an amiable job of signaling the welcomed return of Rush. ~ Greg Prato, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Alex LifesonMandola, Engineer, Guitar (Electric), Guitar (Acoustic)
Chris StringerAssistant
David LeonardMixing
Geddy LeeEngineer
Howie WeinbergMastering
Hugh SymeArt Direction, Paintings, Portraits
Joel KazmiAssistant
Liam BirtExecutive Producer
Neil PeartCymbals, Drums
Paul NorthfieldEngineer, Producer
Pegi CecconiExecutive Producer
Roger LianSequencing, Mastering
RushProducer

Member Reviews

Raef N. (Budgie) wrote on 2/20/2008...

Worst Rush album ever recorded.
The songs all sound the same from the first to the last. Very un-original, noisy and non-musical.
Impossible to find a melody to remember on there.
Stay away!!!