Comments

  1. Eric says

    Yes, quite nicely remembered. Thanks for the ongoing stream of rationality . . . I’ve only recently found you, via Richard Dawkins’ site, and I’m very glad . . . One of my greatest friends lives in Minnesota, a place in which I understand there is quite an ensemble of talent and intelligence . . . your talents, and my friend’s, confirm the hypothesis.

  2. firemancarl says

    Suh-weet! Rush and Chuck D, not the one from the PE, does his Paul Bunyan immitation!

  3. Justin H. says

    I may have to withhold my usual anti-Rush diatribe for this one. A job well done is a job well done.

  4. says

    Let’s don’t start a Rush flame war here. Any atheist worth his/her non-belief has to be a Rush fan. Otherwise, you’re just a poser.

  5. pcarini says

    Who’s starting the flame war Bruce? Are you saying that because you think that athiests must be into music as soulless as Rush?* Fun video, though. At least that track didn’t have Geddy Lee’s banshee-wail all over it.

    *I consider Rush to be a polarizing force in musical taste, similar to how W. is polarizing politically. You can’t bring them up without 60% of the room saying they’re a buncha wankers and the other 40% vehemently defending them.

  6. T. Bruce McNeely says

    Hah, it’s Chuck D!
    At first glance, I was wondering what Red Green (another fellow Canadian) was doing with an axe?

  7. Turdus says

    I especially like the words on the head of the axe “Axes of Good.” I am a Rush fan now. Have at those F*#@ing trees Chuck!

  8. says

    This is from their latest album – Snakes and Arrows!
    Also check out the lyrics to “Faithless”…

    I’ve got my own moral compass to steer by
    A guiding star beats a spirit in the sky
    And all the preaching voices –
    Empty vessels ring so loud
    As they move among the crowd
    Fools and thieves are well disguised
    In the temple and market place

    Like a stone in the river
    Against the floods of spring
    I will quietly resist

    Like the willows in the wind
    Or the cliffs along the ocean
    I will quietly resist

    I don’t have faith in faith
    I don’t believe in belief
    You can call me faithless
    I still cling to hope
    And I believe in love
    And that’s faith enough for me

    I’ve got my own spirit level for balance
    To tell if my choice is leaning up or down
    And all the shouting voices
    Try to throw me off my course
    Some by sermons, some by force
    Fools and thieves are dangerous
    In the temple and marketplace

    Like a forest bows to winter
    Beneath the deep white silence
    I will quietly resist

    Like a flower in the desert
    That only blooms at night
    I will quietly resist

  9. says

    Actually I never listened to Rush, at least not knowing it was Rush. I like it. Great video. Is there a still of the big trees so we can see the details?

  10. Kerry Maxwell says

    The usual “Long walk for a short drink” from Rush, with the typical delusions of profundity. This a way too long elaboration of the Darwin fish bumper ornament. Could have been worse – at least there were no obvious Ayn Raynd, I.C., references.

  11. mmmm says

    For a good atheist band, try Echo and The Bunnymen:

    From “Never Stop:”

    “Deny that you were ever tempted by the lie
    That there’s an answer in the sky.”

    Deny, indeed.

  12. Tim says

    That was fun, I’ve been enjoying RUSH for 30 years. If religious folk lived their beliefs quietly it would be far less annoying and far more compelling than the evangelical mess it’s largely become. It is in accordance with Sturgeon’s law, 9/10ths crap.

  13. Turdus says

    Speaking of atheist songs, the best has got to be “Dear God’ by XTC

    Dear God,
    Hope you got the letter and
    I pray you can make it better down here.
    I don’t mean a big reduction in the price of beer
    But all the people that you made in your image,
    See them starving on their feet
    ‘Cause they don’t get enough to eat
    From God
    I can’t believe in you.
    Dear God,
    Sorry to disturb you, but
    I feel that I should be heard loud and clear.
    We all need a big reduction in the amount of tears
    And all the people that you made in your image,
    See them fighting in the street
    ‘Cause they can’t make opinions meet
    About God,
    I can’t believe in you.
    Did you make disease, and the diamond blue?
    Did you make mankind after we made you?
    And the devil too?!
    Dear God,
    Don’t know if you noticed, but…
    Your name is on a lot of quotes in this book,
    Us crazy humans wrote it, you should take a look,
    And all the people that you made in your image,
    Still believing that junk is true
    Well I know it ain’t, and so do you
    Dear God,
    I can’t believe in…
    I don’t believe in…
    I won’t believe in heaven and hell.
    No saints, no sinners, no devil as well.
    No pearly gates, no thorny crown.
    You’re always letting us humans down.
    The wars you bring, the babes you drown.
    Those lost at sea and never found,
    And it’s the same the whole world ’round.
    The hurt I see helps to compound
    That Father, Son and Holy Ghost
    Is just somebody’s unholy hoax
    And if you’re up there you’d perceive
    That my heart’s here upon my sleeve.
    If there’s one thing I don’t believe in…..
    It’s you…..
    Dear God.

  14. Kseniya says

    Wow. Darwin made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled math-rocker?

    Hey, pretentious bands have their place in the tree of rock. Diversity is strength! Without Rush, maybe there’d be no Dream Theatre, no Tool, no Mars Volta… I don’t love those bands, but they’re interesting (particularly the last two.) Volta’s from some other universe. I mean that in the best possible way.

  15. K8-B
  16. says

    Some Rush I like, and some Rush I don’t. As far as songs go, I don’t like this one. Love the video though, and the message is a great one.

  17. zoom says

    I like Rush, but I’m not a fanatic.

    But some of the Rush haters here need to get over their little tiny selves. I mean… sheesh, what a bunch of music critic wannabees.

    Soulless? Delusions of profundity? You sound like the wanker coworker character in a bad romantic comedy. Sane people don’t talk like that about rock music. It’s all good. Just fucking relax already and stop pretending you’re relevant.

  18. says

    Rush? Yuck. How about Crass instead? “…This Christ / sterile, impotent, f**klove prophet of death / you are the ultimate in pornography…”

  19. says

    Would that be a Monastomemetic Tree? … vs. Science b-loggers Axes?

    FYI: If I coined a bitchin’ new term, I want credit dammit! ;-)

  20. says

    Religions are a bit more like animals than trees, they meet up and have sex, then we are left with nothing but monkey-fish-frogs

  21. James F says

    Special Rush song dedication to all the religious fundamentalists out there:

    Witch Hunt (Part III of Fear)

    The night is black
    Without a moon
    The air is thick and still
    The vigilantes gather on
    The lonely torchlit hill.

    Features distorted in the flickering light
    Faces are twisted and grotesque
    Silent and stern in the sweltering night
    Mob moves like demons possessed
    Quiet in conscience, calm in their right
    Confident their ways are best

    The righteous rise
    With burning eyes
    Of hatred and ill-will
    Madmen fed on fear and lies
    To beat and burn and kill

    They say there are strangers who threaten us
    Our immigrants and infidels
    They say there is strangeness too dangerous
    In our theaters and bookstore shelves
    That those who know what’s best for us
    Must rise and save us from ourselves

    Quick to judge
    Quick to anger
    Slow to understand
    Ignorance and prejudice
    And fear walk hand in hand…

  22. Kseniya says

    Hide, witch, hide
    The good folk come to burn thee
    Their keen enjoyment hid behind
    A gothic mask of duty

    (Jefferson Starship)

  23. False Prophet says

    *I consider Rush to be a polarizing force in musical taste, similar to how W. is polarizing politically. You can’t bring them up without 60% of the room saying they’re a buncha wankers and the other 40% vehemently defending them.

    Posted by: pcarini | April 18, 2008 9:43 PM

    Actually, I recall an interview with Geddy Lee where he said pretty much the same thing: “People either love or hate Rush.”

    I have to love them, both out of a sense of Canadian patriotism and because all rock bassists must at some point bow before the tabernacle of Geddy Lee.

    Hey, pretentious bands have their place in the tree of rock. Diversity is strength! Without Rush, maybe there’d be no Dream Theatre, no Tool, no Mars Volta… I don’t love those bands, but they’re interesting (particularly the last two.) Volta’s from some other universe. I mean that in the best possible way.

    # K8-B

    Posted by: Kseniya | April 18, 2008 11:43 PM

    Blasphemy! All three of those bands are interesting! I’ve been a fan of Dream Theater and Tool for over 15 years, and more recently discovered and embraced Mars Volta (you could also include the Dillinger Escape Plan as the heavy nu-metal version of Mars Volta).

    But it brings up an interesting question: is pretentiousness based on musical skill and ability somehow worse than pretentiousness based on theatrics or ego? (I’m talking to you, Bono! You too, Axl Rose!)

  24. Kseniya says

    Blasphemy! All three of those bands are interesting!

    Yikes! Ummmm… That’s what I said. Take me to the confounded bridge – but please don’t throw me off it! I might not float. But I’m not a witch or blasphemer. Really.

  25. pcarini says

    (Turdus @ #11) I especially like the words on the head of the axe “Axes of Good.” I am a Rush fan now. Have at those F*#@ing trees Chuck!

    D’oh.. I misread that as “Axes of God”, probably due to the context. It makes more sense that way.

    (Kseniya @ #21)Without Rush, maybe there’d be no Dream Theatre, no Tool, no Mars Volta…

    It must just be a prog-rock thing for me, I’m not into any of those bands. However (and this is where I contradict myself) I love the Primus, particularly their early stuff, which has a heavy Rush influence. People who talk up Neal Peart can’t come to grips w/ the fact that Herb outdid him at his own game.

    Zoom @ #24:

    I like Rush, but I’m not a fanatic.
    But some of the Rush haters here need to get over their little tiny selves.

    Uh huh.. could’ve fooled me.

    Soulless? Delusions of profundity? You sound like the wanker coworker character in a bad romantic comedy.

    Since I’m being called out directly here, I’ll just say that I stand behind my “soulless” comment. Emphatically. One-hundred percent. I feel the word is a concise description of why I don’t like them: The music is very well done technically, but just doesn’t resonate with me.

    I enjoy throwing good-natured jabs of this sort at my Rush listening friends because it tends to be a sensitive topic, and sometimes it’s fun to push buttons. If that gets your knickers in a knot then you should listen to your own advice and relax.

  26. says

    I’ve always liked this section from Queen’s Roger Taylor song The Key. From his solo album Happiness?:

    With your bishops priests and mullahs
    And all the mumbo jumbo clans
    When you’re not accepting women
    How can you love your fellow man?
    Well you can search the whole wide planet
    Down to viruses and germs
    A ‘sensible’ religion
    Is just a contradiction in terms

    Full lyric at:
    http://www.oldielyrics.com/lyrics/roger_taylor/the_key.html

    Ian

  27. Iain M says

    Or how about the Reel Big Fish song, ‘Imaginary Friend’?

    “I couldn’t do it
    So I asked for a helping hand
    To get me through it
    But I guess it wasn’t in your plan
    Or maybe you were

    Just too busy to make time for me
    I always put you first
    Expected me to figure out things
    But they all kept getting worse
    When I think about the way you let me down
    I wonder if I’m supposed to count on you

    How could you ignore me?

    My imaginary friend didn’t come through in the end
    So now I have to find a real one
    Didn’t answer when I called
    Well I guess it’s just because
    He was never there at all

    I can’t believe it
    Now that I’m looking back
    Why didn’t I see it
    Well I guess I didn’t even ask

    While you were never
    Ever in the places I would go
    You never showed yourself
    All those heart-felt conversations
    Were with me and no one else
    When I called your name
    You never answered am I insane?
    If you saw my suffering

    How could you ignore me?

    My imaginary friend didn’t come through in the end
    So now I have to find a real one
    Didn’t answer when I called
    Well I guess it’s just because
    He was never there at all

    It’s not hard to let him go
    I don’t know know why I ever loved him so

    Maybe there is something wrong with me
    I don’t see what they see
    Used to fold my hands and close my eyes
    And think that you were with me
    Now there’s something wrong
    It doesn’t seem to make much sense
    I just feel so stupid now

    How could I believe it?

    My imaginary friend didn’t come through in the end
    So now I have to find a real one
    Didn’t answer when I called
    Well I guess it’s just because
    He was never there at all”

  28. redbeardjim says

    Could have been worse – at least there were no obvious Ayn Raynd, I.C., references.

    I’d be very surprised if you could find any “obvious Ayn Rand references” in any Rush song from the past 30 years.

  29. defectiverobot says

    pcarini, I empathize with your position. I don’t know that I’d say “soulless,” but I understand where you’re coming from. I’m not a big Rush fan, but I do respect them (and really, who doesn’t like Tom Sawyer?). Pretentious or not, I give them credit for trying something different. Not bad for a guy who didn’t even make it through high school.

    As for XTC, I remember seeing the video for Dear God in high school and thinking, “Holy crap! They can do that on Mtv?” I’ve been a fan ever since!

  30. Tulse says

    I like Dear God a lot, but it really is of the “atheist angry at God” school, which is not that convincing to me. I don’t usually get angry at fictional characters.

  31. Schmeer says

    I love the Primus

    Primus Sucks!*

    If you love the bass you must acknowledge Geddy Lee’s influence on Les Claypool. And if you can’t appreciate Claypool you suck in a way that Primus fans won’t chant at a concert.

    *True Primus fans (like true Scottsmen) know that this is the greatest term of endearment.

  32. Schmeer says

    And since were talking about song lyrics and I’m such a metalhead, here’s some wonderful Behemoth for you bitches.
    Sometimes it’s fun to play with the fundies by giving them a little bit of their worst fear; play into the paranoid delusions.

    Christgrinding Avenue, from The Apostasy

    Reptile!
    Spreading sickness and disease among the men
    Grubby creed!
    What are ye but the soulless meat?
    Lunatic!
    Cancer consuming Thy race from inside
    Beware!
    No grace awaits Thee in the crying skies above

    I’m on my way
    Destination hell
    By the power ov will
    I shall complete
    The devil’s work

    Vultures attack!
    May hell unlock overpowering might
    Mourn not, my comrades!
    Thou art fateless in the blinding light
    Soldiers!
    On the altar ov liberation crucify the whore
    Rejoice!
    Drink to crucifixion
    For oppression is no more!

    Slay the whore!
    Make it bleed,
    Make it weep
    Let it die forever more
    Slit the throat!
    Let them rot
    Let them pay
    Let em taste their own blood
    Make em crawl!
    Upon this corpse
    I shall feast
    ‘Till no hope remains for the twisted mob!

    Mithras!
    Raise Thy sword of judgment, loose the iron rain
    Beat the drum
    No earthly power
    May hinder nor stop Thee
    Sekhmet!
    Manifestation ov Mut
    Protector ov Ma’at
    I call upon the most divine
    To spew forth this infecting dust ov life

    I’m on my way
    Destination hell
    By the power ov will
    I shall complete
    The devil’s work

  33. Johnny Vector says

    Well since it’s a music thread, and we’re discussing Les Claypool… I loved the bit in the special features of “Rising Low” (Mike Gordon’s documentary about the making of Gov’t Mule’s The Deep End) where Claypool gets all doe-eyed fanboy crazy about getting to meet Chris Squire. Which surprised me rather, although I then went back and listened to some old Yes, and yeah, I can see that.

    Sorry, what were we talking about?

  34. eyelessgame says

    I’m quite the Rush fan (No! Really? With this screen handle?) but it’s fine with me if not everyone likes them — as above, diversity is strength. Me, I like pretentious.

    And really — I won’t spam with lyrics, but Rush has written dozens of atheist anthems — some of them are more objectivist, some are more humanist. Something for Nothing, Free Will, Roll The Bones, Witch Hunt, Totem, virtually everything on Snakes and Arrows (Faithless, Armor and Shield, The Way the Wind Blows, Far Cry).

    I don’t care if they were into Rand in the 1970s. Lots of people did dumb things in the 1970s — hell, look at the picture of how they’re dressed on the 2112 album cover. :) As brighter Objectivists do, they’ve grown up since then and become much more humanist.

  35. mike says

    Or how about my new song entitled, “Quit Posting the Lyrics to Songs Because Nobody Cares”? It has no lyrics, so I can spare you the pain of having to scroll past them to see if anyone says anything interesting.

  36. Tim says

    Songs critical of religion?, May I suggest the late Frank Zappa’s “Heavenly Bank Account”?, Perhaps Jethro Tull’s “My God”, or “Two Fingers”?

  37. Hap says

    I don’t think that Armor and Sword is antreligion so much as decrying its use to bad ends. Lots of other things on Snakes and Arrows are definitely atheist, though, and the reference to God Delusion in the tour picture book is probably a good indication of that as well.

    Rush is somewhat pretentious but I still like them.

  38. rimpal says

    Atheism is well within the Abrahamic religion and is nothing but an unwillingness to accept the big kahuna. So all you atheists remember you are on the same spectrum as believers, submitters, and the redeemed ones, somewhere beyond agnostics. This video too owes its theme to the Abrahamic myths. It is obviously inspired by the myth of the Tower of Babel, which was one of the many consequences of the original Fall. Just as the myth of Babel imagines humanity to have branched of into a thousand different communities none of whom understood any one else, this video too imagines the many tradition groups – here ancient, Abbrahamic and Taoic-Dharmic to be simply nbranches of some uber tree. The arttiste doesn’t understand that the one tree that undergirds his work is the tree with the Tower of Babel at its root – whence the other trees have supposedly branched out.

  39. pcarini says

    Tim @ #44: Did you mean Heavenly Bank Account? (sorry, that one requires a link to the vid.)

    Also:

    Atheism is well within the Abrahamic religion and is nothing but an unwillingness to accept the big kahuna.

    Or any big kahuna.. are you telling me I need to renounce my belief in each brand of foolishness specifically?

  40. merkin says

    could you please not refer to Dillinger Escape Plan as “nu-metal?”

    thank you.

  41. Aegis says

    “Rush is somewhat pretentious but completely awesome and I still like them.”

    Fixed.

  42. Tim says

    pcarini – Yes that’s the one, thanks for the link to the video! Here’s a weird thought, ever wonder how much the world could change if christians actually lived up to the socialism implicit in the gospels and the book of acts?, oh well, if they lived up to it they’d thank evolutionary biologists for revealing the glories of life.

  43. Daniel Jackson says

    Motorhead: Anti-Theism with Attitude.

    Don’t Need Religion

    No Voices in the Sky

    God Was Never On Your Side

  44. pansies4me says

    From the Cowboy Junkies:

    Someone
    out there
    kneeling.

    No one
    out there
    listening.

    But what I want to know
    before you save my soul
    is who gave this power to that f***er up there?

    Someone
    out there
    crying.

    Someone
    out here
    waiting.

    But what I want to know
    before I let you go
    What I need to know
    before I slowly lose control
    is who gave this power to that f***er up there?

    ’cause there is someone
    and she is out here
    crying…

    It’s a haunting song and oh so true.

  45. says

    Wow, Malignant Narcissism on Pharyngula – what an awesome treat!!!

    And the video is cool as well.

    I don’t really care what other people say about Rush, we all have the right to an opinion about art (unlike science!), however I must say that I am a little confused about the two words thrown around here “soulless” and “pretentious”. Mostly I am amazed that someone thinks Rushes music is soulless, but maybe it’s because the only meaning for me of that word is “enfused with emotion”. There are probably only about 10 Rush songs that fit that category (yes – in my opinion), which isn’t bad for such a large repertoire, and “Malignant Narcissism” is not one of them! at the least you must hear the humor in this song! Anyway… the other word…

    Pretentious: wikipedia definitions..
    1. Marked by an unwarranted claim to importance or distinction
    2. Ostentatious; intended to impress others

    Neither of these fit Rush, they haven’t made any claims (60% of everyone is willing to do it for them) so they can not be unwarranted. And I’m sorry but Rush doesn’t bother trying to impress others, they do their music for themselves.

    It’s hard to be pretentious with a real sense of humor.

    My $0.02