Caress Of Steel 1975 Rare
Jul 14, 2013 November 15, 1975 The Rockford Armory, Rockford, IL, USA Here is a rare concert from the Caress of Steel tour. The audio quality isn't great, so be prepared. Caress of Steel is the third studio album by Canadian rock band Rush, released in 1975. The album shows more of Rush's adherence to the hard rock and progressive rock styles of the band's first two albums.
Tour Dates Date Location Venue August 24, 1975 Lansdowne Park, Ottawa Bandshell, Central Canada Exhibition August 27, 1975 Montreal, Quebec Places des Nations September 1, 1975 Thunder Bay, Ontario Unknown Venue September 17, 1975 Winnipeg, Manitoba Winnipeg Arena September 19, 1975 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan The Arena September 20, 1975 Edmonton, Alberta Kimsmen Fieldhouse September 21, 1975 Calgary, Alberta Clearwater Beach September 26, 1975 Vancouver, British Columbia Pacific Coliseum October 2, 1975 Regina, Saskatchewan Trianon Ballroom October 5, 1975 St.
Bastille Day (4:40) 2. I Think I'm Going Bald (3:41) 3. Lakeside Park (4:10) 4. The Necromancer: I. Into the Darkness / II. Under the Shadow / III.
Return of the Prince (12:32) 5. The Fountain of Lamneth: I.
In the Valley / II. Didacts and Narpets / III. No One at the Bridge / IV. Bacchus Plateau / VI. The Fountain (19:57) Total Time: 45:02 Line-up/Musicians - Geddy Lee / vocals, bass - Alex Lifeson / 6 and 12 string electric and acoustic guitars, classical guitar, steel guitar - Neal Peart / drums, percussion About this release Studio album September 24, 1975 Produced by Rush and Terry Brown 1975 - Anthem(Canada) 1975 - Mercury(US)(UK) 1987 - Mercury(US) CD 1997 - Anthem(Canada) CD: remastered 1997 - Mercury(US)(Europe) CD: remastered 2009 - Warner Music(Japan) CD: CD sized album replica, remastered, limited edition Thanks to,,, for the updates Buy RUSH - CARESS OF STEEL music. 'Caress of Steel' is the 3rd full-length studio album by Canadian progressive rock act Rush. The album was released through Mercury Records in September 1975, only 7 months after the release of 'Fly By Night (1975)'.
Elwave 9 crack. 'Caress of Steel' initially didn´t fare too well and sold less copies than 'Fly By Night (1975)', and the tour supporting the album had low attendance. Rush considered calling it quits at this point (or at least feared that they would be forced to), but they soldiered on and subsequently found commercial and artistic success with their next album '2112 (1976)'. Although 'Fly By Night (1975)' certainly wasn´t a stylistic consistent album, 'Caress of Steel' is even more diverse, and not exactly loaded with radio friendly material either. The inclusion of 'The Necromancer' and 'The Fountain of Lamneth', which are both 10 minutes plus epics (the latter is just short of 20 minutes long) probably didn´t help gain the band more fans. Not that there weren´t progressive rock fans who enjoyed these types of tracks, but Rush was at this point still more known as a hard rock act rather than a progressive rock act, and their fans probably needed a bit more time to adjust to their new direction.