"VITAL SIGNS" RUSH (1981)

For October, the Mental Jukebox is dialing it way back to the eighties and going deep. Deep cuts have always been an important element of music listening to me because they’re often the songs that resonate with me most. Deep cuts are usually the ones that the true fans appreciate most. I like my singles and hits, but I love my deep cuts.

The Moving Pictures album is widely recognized as one of Rush’s best albums – from beginning to end. It is a tale of two halves. Side A contains four of the band’s biggest anthems. While still rooted in Rush’s progressive agenda, the songs reveal signs of a band willing to reach across the aisle to music fans that prefer more straight ahead rock, most notably in “Limelight” and “Red Barchetta”. But Side B is unapologetically progressive and less palatable for the masses. That’s what makes songs like “Vital Signs” so good.

The song reflects Peart’s mind for things rock bands rarely articulate so eloquently. “Leave out the fiction. The fact is this friction will only be worn by persistence.” The electronic elements give the song its prog tilt, but it’s also a song heavily influenced by the reggae rock sound of The Police in both the drums and guitar playing. “Vital Signs” is clear evidence of a band that’s willing to evolve and welcome in new influences. A band that has never settled for the status quo.

“Leave out conditions. Courageous convictions Will drag the dream into existence.”