Xanadu (song)

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“Xanadu”
Song by Rush
Album A Farewell to Kings
Released August 18, 1977
Recorded 1977, Rockfield Studios
Genre Progressive Rock
Length 11:08
Label Mercury Records
Writer Peart
Composer Lee & Lifeson
Producer Rush & Terry Brown
A Farewell to Kings track listing
"A Farewell to Kings"
(1)
Xanadu
(2)
"Closer to the Heart"
(3
Exit...Stage Left track listing
"The Trees"
(9)
"Xanadu"
(10)
"Freewill"
(11)
)


"Xanadu" is a song recorded by the Canadian progressive rock trio Rush for their 1977 album A Farewell to Kings. It is approximately eleven minutes long, beginning with a five-minute-long instrumental section, then transitioning to a narrative written by lyricist Neil Peart, inspired by the Samuel Taylor Coleridge poem Kubla Khan.

Contents

[edit] Lyrics

In Peart's lyrics, the narrator describes searching for something called "Xanadu" (although it is not explicitly stated what this is, references to the poem "Kubla Khan" imply that it's a mythical place based on the historical summer capitol of the Mongolian Empire) that will grant him immortality.[1]

[edit] Music

"Xanadu" is the first Rush song in which synthesizers are an integral part. Unlike the previous 2112 album or Caress of Steel, which relied solely on guitar effects to give a more lush sound to the arrangements, "Xanadu" used both guitar effects and synthesizers, and thus represented a transitional phase for the group.

The song also marks Rush's clear foray into program music. Previous albums had displayed some elements of program music. "Xanadu" was clearly programatic. Subsequent albums during the late '70's and early '80's would see the group explore program music more systematically.

A very ambitious arrangement for a three-piece band, "Xanadu" requires each member to utilize an array of instruments to affect the performance. Lifeson used a double-necked Gibson electric guitar (one twelve-string, the other six-string) as well as synthesizer pedals; Lee made use of a double-necked Rickenbacker (bass and six-string guitar) as well as extensive synthesizer arrangements (through both pedals and keyboards) while singing; and Peart took on various percussion instruments (notably temple blocks, tubular bells, bell tree, glockenspiel and wind chimes) in addition to his drum kit work.

More recent performances of the song have been altered in order to simplify the arrangement. For example, when played during the R30 tour, the end of the song was changed so that Geddy Lee did not play the rhythm guitar part, as in the original arrangement.

[edit] Covers and tributes

  • Foo Fighters occasionally copy the ending snare drum pattern of "Xanadu" onto live performances of their song "My Hero"

[edit] References

  1. ^ Kubla Khan. University of Virginia Library (1797). Retrieved on 2007-11-20.