Were old, proclaimed Rush’s Geddy Lee to the Erwin Center last night for the groups now standard half-time. Screech, 57, hasnt hit nitrous notes since early last decade, while guitar beast Alex Lifeson, also 57, has trimmed down, and pug-nosed poet/drummer Neil Peart, 58, looks more and more like Sluggo. Theres life in the old ladies nonetheless.
Delivering the same set-list at the AT&T Center in San Antonio last September, the Canadian power trio couldnt match the expert cross section of songs performed at the Erwin Center in 2008, but past the wobbly, curiously-curated first set, the three-headed classic rock monster matched its own arena pyrotechnics.
Presto came as a pleasant surprise, and a triptych of Freewill, Marathon, and Subdivisions closing out the first set went from lope to sprint to victory lap with the surety and thrill of an Olympic champion. Even then, next LP preview BU2B proved the heaviest hitter of the evening, its Vapor Trails/Snakes & Arrows runoff due every geyser of steam blasting from the stage.
Playing Moving Pictures as most of the second set still equals something of a cheat given that all but one of its seven tracks has cycled in and out of the threesomes sets since 1981. Tom Sawyer and Limelight never left, in fact, with kinetic instrumental YYZ and even Witch Hunt close behind. And yet where the threesome put its shoulder to the LP in the Alamo City last fall, here it caught fire.
Red Barchetta motored more hot-rod hybrid than oil and gas oldie, and when Peart missed his lofted drumstick the arena commiserated at full volume. True rarity The Camera Eye again proved perhaps the ultimate highlight, its New Wave flounce and progressive lurch raw and fast, and, at 10 minutes, as expertly edited as its video backdrop images of Manhattan. Lifesons sleek solo rose like a steel and glass skyline, while closing sleeper Vital Signs, DOA last year, blipped the guitarists lo-fi Telecaster chank.
Preview two, Caravan, proved compositionally premature, sky rockets, et al, one of Pearts ever-liquefying drum solos shaking out a thoughtful meditation on bash as the immediate antidote. Perennial singalong Closer to the Heart and first encore La Villa Strangiato, last of four pure instrumentals Lees bass on Leave That Thing Alone thick as suspension bridge cables peaking the show like the late-1970s. Having grown intro dreadlocks, walk-off Working Man went ballistic before and after Lifesons every-note solo, he whod given great guitar face all night.
Acid rocks got nothing on Rush.
Frank Erwin Center set-list, 6/12/11
Spirit of the Radio
Time Stand Still
Presto
Stick It Out
Working Them Angels
Leave That Thing Alone
Faithless
BU2B
Freewill
Marathon
Subdivisions
Intermission
Moving Pictures:
Tom Sawyer
Red Barchetta
YYZ
Limelight
The Camera Eye
Witch Hunt
Vital Signs
———–
Caravan
Closer to the Heart
2112 Overture/The Temples of Syrinx
Far Cry
Encore: La Villa Strangiato, Working Man
This article appears in June 10 • 2011.



