The Big Money
"The Big Money" | ||||||||||
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Single by Rush | ||||||||||
from the album Power Windows | ||||||||||
B-side |
"Middletown Dreams" (USA) "Territories", "Red Sector A"(live) (UK) | |||||||||
Released | October, 1985 | |||||||||
Format | 7", 12" | |||||||||
Genre | Hard rock, progressive rock | |||||||||
Length | 5:35 | |||||||||
Label | Mercury Records | |||||||||
Producer(s) | Peter Collins and Rush | |||||||||
Rush singles chronology | ||||||||||
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"The Big Money" is a song by Canadian rock band Rush, originally released on their 1985 album Power Windows. It peaked at #45 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #4 on the Mainstream Rock chart, and has been included on several compilation album, such as Retrospective II and The Spirit of Radio: Greatest Hits 1974-1987.
The title of the song comes from John Dos Passos's novel The Big Money, part of his U.S.A. trilogy. Rush had previous referenced Dos Passos with the song "The Camera Eye," from the album Moving Pictures.
The lyrics, written by drummer Neil Peart, reflect on the power of "big money" and the sheer magnitude of trade in the modern global economy, particularly during the 1980s. Regarding the idea that the song's lyrics were inspired by a John Dos Passos book of the same name, Peart replied "I am a big fan of Dos Passos’ stylistic ability, his poetic approach to prose, but the ideas presented in the songs are quite different from those which he exemplified." - Neil Peart, "Backstage Club Newsletter", January 1988.
Music video
The video for the track was directed by Rob Quartly, produced by Allan Weinrib (Geddy Lee's brother), and created by Green Light Productions, using, for the time, state-of-the-art computer graphics similar to those seen in the video for the song "Money for Nothing" by Dire Straits. The video also features the band performing the song on an oversized Monopoly-style game board with the words "Big Money" in the middle. A full-length version of the video was included on the VHS and laserdisc releases of Rush's A Show of Hands tour concert film, while an edited version was released to MTV and other outlets, as well as on the short-lived CD Video format, directed by Weinrib.
The car featured in the animated intro has a license plate that reads "Mr. Big", a reference to producer Peter Collins, who produced Power Windows. Neill Cunningham, the album cover model for Power Windows, also appears in the video.[1]
Live performances
When performed live, many of the synthesizers and sound effects heard in the original track are triggered through pedals used by Lee and Lifeson, plus Peart's electronic drum pads. The song was first performed live during the Power Windows Tour and was the show opener on the Hold Your Fire Tour (as heard on the 1989 live album A Show of Hands). The song would be performed during most of Rush's later tours, including the Roll the Bones Tour, the Test for Echo Tour, the Vapor Trails Tour (documented on the 2003 album Rush in Rio), and most recently, the Clockwork Angels Tour (documented on the 2013 album of the same name).
See also
References
- ↑ Patch, Nick (2016-01-20). "Rush's Power Windows a window into record-store owner's past". Toronto Star. Retrieved 2016-01-24.