Utwory: DVD1 1. Tom Sawyer 2. Distant Early Warning 3. New World
Man 4. Roll The s 5. Earthshine 6. YYZ 7. The Pass 8. Bravado
9. The Big Money 10. The Trees 11. Free Will 12. Closer To The
Heart 13. Natural Science 14. One Little Victory 15. Driven 16.
Ghost Rider 17. Secret Touch 18. Dreamline 19. Red Sector 'A' 20.
Leave That Thing Alone 21. O Baterista 22. Resist 23. 2112 24.
Limelight 25. La Villa Strangiato 26. The Spirit of Radio 27.
By-To & The Snow Dog 28. Cygnus X-I 29. Working Man DVD 2 1. The
Documentary - The Boys In Brazil 2. YYZ - MX Multiangle 3. O
Baterista - MX Multiangle 4. La Villa Strangiato - MX Multiangle
From .co.uk
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"The nature of Rush has always been musicianship
first", comments Geddy Lee in the documentary that accompanies
Rush in Rio. It's an apt summation of both the band and this,
their first made-for-DVD concert release. Fans will know already
about the Canadian power trio's legendary musical craftsmanship,
and so will be delighted to learn that the same meticulous care
has been extended to this two-disc set, a record of their first
ever visit to Brazil, and especially the climactic concert of the
Vapor Trails ( /exec/obidos/ASIN/B000065DTE/%24%7B0%7D ) tour, in
which Messrs. Lee, Lifeson and Peart played to an ecstatic
audience of 60,000 at the Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro on
November 23rd, 2002.
The first disc clocks in at just under three hours and presents
the gig itself in non-anamorphic widescreen filmed by 22 cameras,
and recorded in stunning clarity in Dolby Digital 5.1 sound. The
result of such comprehensive coverage captures the stadium
atmosphere ideally: the Brazilian fans cheering lustily, like an
enthusiastic football crowd whose favourite team has won for the
first time in years; the massive video screen; the even bigger
light and pyrotechnic effects; and Geddy Lee's washing machines,
of course. Kicking off with the crowd-pleasing "Tom Sawyer" (but
then, everything pleases this crowd), Rush reach back into every
phase of their catalogue to provide a bravado demonstration of
musicianship infused with apparently limitless energy, not to
mention enjoyment: just watch them grinning as the audience goes
wild for "YYZ". Things really hot up in the second half, when
fire-breathing dragons announce "One Little Victory", followed by
the big surprise of the night: the Lee-Lifeson acoustic rendition
of "Resist", following right after Neil Peart's storming drum
solo "O Baterista".
Disc 2 contains The Boys in Brazil, a lengthy fly-on-the-wall
look at the band's Brazilian trip, from fans at the airport,
through Alex Lifeson clowning around in his hotel room, to
various rehearsals and soundchecks. Retrospective interviews with
the trio are interspersed throughout. It's hardly groundbreaking
as rockumentaries go, but for fans it's a rare chance to peak
behind the scenes at a band who value their privacy. Three tracks
can also be found here in multi-angle versions: select any one of
four mini-screen options to view "YYZ", "O Baterista" and "La
Villa Strangiato" from different perspectives. In addition, there
are two Easter eggs: the 1975 promo for "Anthem" and the "By-Tor"
animation used during the concert. Rush fans everywhere will soon
be wondering how they lived so long without this splendid
two-disc set. "We will pay the price, but we will not count the
cost." --Mark Walker