Moving Pictures Tour Explained

Concert Tour Name:Moving Pictures Tour
Location:North America
Album:Moving Pictures
Start Date:September 11, 1980
End Date:July 5, 1981
Number Of Legs:2
Number Of Shows:95
Last Tour:Permanent Waves Tour
(1979–1980)
This Tour:Moving Pictures Tour
(1980–1981)
Next Tour:Exit... Stage Left Tour
(1981)

The Moving Pictures Tour was a concert tour by Canadian rock band Rush in support of their eighth studio album, Moving Pictures.

Background

Prior to the tour stating in February 1981 and preparing to enter the studio to record Moving Pictures, the band performed an isolated number of shows from September 11 to October 1, 1980 with Saxon as a support act. The tour began in Kalamazoo on February 20, 1981 and concluded on July 5 in East Troy. Max Webster, FM, Goddo and The Joe Perry Project were also opening acts for Rush on the tour. The March 27, 1981 performance in Montreal was recorded for the band's live album, Exit... Stage Left and its accompanying video. Each show was estimated to have costed $40,000 which featured back-projected film, pyro and dry ice. 905,000 fans had attended the shows overall on tour, with the band making an estimate of $4 million by the end of the tour.

Reception

John Griffin from the Montreal Gazette who attended the performance in Montreal, noted that Geddy Lee's vocals sounded like a guinea pig with an amphetamine habit, but praised both Lifeson, referring to his guitar playing as ordinary at best, and Peart, acknowledging his drumming as an interesting aspect that he made so little of the massive drum kit.[1]

Don Adair, a reporter from the Spokesman-Review opened his review of the band's show in Spokane, stating that the band gave the nearly full coliseum their money's worth, stating that it was heavy metal all the way complete with flash pot and thunderous decibels. Adair praised the band as a healthy rock and roll band, stating that it wouldn't bait the kids with pandering Van Halenesque sex and booze references, and healthy to do a two hour show with minimum posturing and carry the show with their orchestrated music. He also praised the lighting and effects that contributed to the dynamics of the performance which were designed by Howard Ungerlieder. He however, criticized that the music took it far too seriously, calling it pretentious.[2]

Roman Cooney from the Calgary Herald opened his review of the Edmonton performance, comparing Geddy Lee's vocals to a cat, but continued by stating that the band continued to push the heavy metal tide a little farther from imbecility. He claimed that if the band continued to spoil the heavy metal image and making their concerts more musically arresting than before, the group would be taken more seriously. Cooney commented on Peart's drum solo, noting it as "startlingly innovative". He later commented on the rest of the show with the band switching back and forth between "creative, exciting rock" and "insipid, banal exercises in needless noise and commotion". He concluded his review, stating that the band is becoming more adventurous on stage, being able to recreate the excitement their music had on vinyl.[3]

Set list

These are example set lists adapted from Rush: Wandering the Face of the Earth – The Official Touring History of what were performed during the tour, but may not represent the majority of the shows.

1980 Setlist
  1. "2112: Overture/Temples of Syrinx"
  2. "Freewill"
  3. "By-Tor and the Snow Dog"
  4. "Xanadu"
  5. "Limelight"
  6. "The Trees"
  7. "Cygnus X-1 Book II: Hemispheres – Prelude"
  8. "The Spirit of Radio"
  9. "Closer to the Heart"
  10. "Beneath, Between and Behind"
  11. "Tom Sawyer"
  12. "Jacob's Ladder"
  13. "A Passage to Bangkok"
  14. "Natural Science"
  15. "Working Man"
  16. "Finding My Way"
  17. "Anthem"
  18. "Bastille Day"
  19. "In the Mood" (with Neil Peart drum solo)
Encore
  1. "La Villa Strangiato"
1981 Setlist
  1. "2112: Overture/Temples of Syrinx"
  2. "Freewill"
  3. "Limelight"
  4. "Book II: Hemispheres – Prelude"
  5. "Beneath, Between and Behind"
  6. "The Camera Eye"
  7. "YYZ" (with drum solo)
  8. "Broon's Bane"
  9. "The Trees"
  10. "Xanadu"
  11. "The Spirit of Radio"
  12. "Red Barchetta"
  13. "Closer to the Heart"
  14. "Tom Sawyer"
  15. "Vital Signs"
  16. "Natural Science"
  17. "Working Man"
  18. "Book II: Hemispheres – Armageddon"
  19. "By-Tor and the Snow Dog"
  20. "In the End"
  21. "In the Mood"
  22. "2112: Grand Finale"
Encore
  1. "La Villa Strangiato"

Tour dates

List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue and opening act(s)
Date[4] CityCountryVenueOpening Act(s)
First Leg
September 11, 1980HamptonUnited StatesHampton ColiseumSaxon
September 12, 1980CharlotteCharlotte Coliseum
September 13, 1980CharlestonCharleston Civic Center
September 14, 1980NashvilleNashville Municipal Auditorium
September 16, 1980Baton RougeRiverside Centroplex
September 18, 1980North Fort MyersLee County Civic Center
September 19, 1980Pembroke PinesHollywood Sportatorium
September 20, 1980LakelandLakeland Civic Center
September 21, 1980JacksonvilleJacksonville Veterans Memorial Coliseum
September 23, 1980CincinnatiRiverfront Coliseum
September 25, 1980PhiladelphiaThe Spectrum
September 26, 1980LandoverCapital Centre
September 27, 1980South YarmouthCape Cod Coliseum
September 28, 1980SpringfieldSpringfield Civic Center
September 30, 1980AllentownAllentown Fairgrounds
October 1, 1980PortlandCumberland County Civic Center
Second Leg
February 20, 1981KalamazooUnited StatesWings StadiumMax Webster
February 21, 1981DubuqueFive Flags Arena
February 22, 1981DavenportPalmer Alumni Auditorium
February 24, 1981La CrosseLa Crosse Center
February 26, 1981ChicagoInternational Amphitheatre
February 27, 1981
February 28, 1981
March 1, 1981
March 2, 1981MilwaukeeMecca Arena
March 4, 1981St. LouisCheckerdome
March 5, 1981
March 7, 1981LouisvilleFreedom Hall
March 8, 1981DaytonHara Arena
March 10, 1981EvansvilleRoberts Municipal Stadium
March 11, 1981IndianapolisMarket Square Arena
March 13, 1981DetroitCobo Hall
March 14, 1981
March 15, 1981
March 21, 1981LondonCanadaLondon Ice HouseFM
March 23, 1981TorontoMaple Leaf Gardens
March 24, 1981
March 25, 1981
March 27, 1981[5] MontrealMontreal ForumMax Webster
March 28, 1981OttawaOttawa Civic CentreFM
April 3, 1981TucsonUnited StatesTucson Community CenterMax Webster
April 4, 1981PhoenixArizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum
April 5, 1981AlbuquerqueTingley Coliseum
April 7, 1981HoustonSam Houston Coliseum
April 8, 1981
April 10, 1981DallasReunion Arena
April 11, 1981San AntonioConvention Center
April 12, 1981Fort WorthTarrant County Convention Center
April 14, 1981Little RockT.H. Barton Coliseum
April 15, 1981JacksonMississippi Coliseum
April 16, 1981MemphisMid-South Coliseum
April 18, 1981MobileMunicipal Auditoriumrowspan="7"
April 19, 1981New OrleansMunicipal Auditorium
April 21, 1981ShreveportHirsch Memorial Coliseum
April 23, 1981Kansas CityKemper Arena
April 24, 1981
April 25, 1981Oklahoma CityMyriad Arena
April 26, 1981TulsaTulsa Assembly Center
May 6, 1981PittsburghCivic ArenaFM
May 7, 1981RichfieldRichfield Coliseum
May 8, 1981
May 9, 1981BuffaloBuffalo Memorial Auditorium
May 11, 1981BinghamtonBroome County Memorial Arena
May 12, 1981RochesterRochester Community War Memorial
May 13, 1981SyracuseOnondaga County War Memorial Auditorium
May 15, 1981Glens FallsGlens Falls Civic Center
May 16, 1981LandoverCapital Centre
May 17, 1981
May 18, 1981New York CityMadison Square Garden
May 20, 1981UniondaleNassau Coliseum
May 22, 1981PhiladelphiaSpectrum
May 23, 1981BostonBoston Garden
May 24, 1981ProvidenceProvidence Civic Center
June 1, 1981DenverMcNichols Sports Arena
June 3, 1981Salt Lake CitySalt Palace
June 5, 1981OaklandOakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena
June 6, 1981
June 7, 1981FresnoSelland Arena
June 9, 1981San DiegoSan Diego Sports Arena
June 10, 1981InglewoodThe Forum
June 11, 1981
June 12, 1981AnaheimConvention Center
June 14, 1981Long BeachLong Beach Arena
June 15, 1981Las VegasAladdin Theatrerowspan="2"
June 16, 1981RenoCentennial Coliseum
June 18, 1981SeattleSeattle Center ColiseumFM
June 19, 1981
June 20, 1981PortlandMemorial Coliseum
June 21, 1981[6] SpokaneSpokane Coliseum
June 23, 1981VancouverCanadaPacific ColiseumGoddo
June 25, 1981EdmontonNorthlands Coliseum
July 2, 1981BloomingtonUnited StatesMetropolitan Sports CenterThe Joe Perry Project
July 3, 1981
July 4, 1981East TroyAlpine Valley Music Theatre
July 5, 1981

Box office score data

Date! scope="col" style="width:13em;"
CityVenueAttendanceGross
September 11, 1980Hampton, United StatesColiseum4,287$34,820[7]
September 13, 1980Charleston, United StatesCivic Center Coliseum3,198$25,894
September 20, 1980Lakeland, United StatesCivic Center10,000 / 10,000$84,600[8]
September 25, 1980Philadelphia, United StatesThe Spectrum14,500$120,483[9]
September 27, 1980South Yarmouth, United StatesColiseum7,200 / 7,200$61,637
June 18–19, 1981Seattle, United StatesColiseum24,641$237,325[10]
June 20, 1981Portland, United StatesColiseum9,780$98,944
June 21, 1981Spokane, United StatesColiseum6,172$53,930
June 23, 1981Vancouver, CanadaPacific Coliseum11,408 / 11,408$121,668[11]
June 25, 1981Edmonton, CanadaNorthlands Coliseum11,285$129,661
July 2, 1981Minneapolis, United StatesMet Center23,691$249,390[12]
July 4–5, 1981East Troy, United StatesAlpine Valley Music Theatre40,000 / 40,000$394,900

Personnel

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. News: Griffin . John . Rush: Pomp-rock trio hot on tedium . June 26, 2022 . The Montreal Gazette . March 28, 1981 . Montreal, Quebec . 117 . en.
  2. News: Adair . Don . No one accused Rush of subtlety . May 16, 2022 . 35 . The Spokesman-Review . June 22, 1981 . Spokane, Washington . 13 . en.
  3. News: Cooney . Roman . Canning heavy metal moves Rush towards sanity . May 7, 2022 . The Calgary Herald . June 26, 1981 . Calgary, Alberta . D1 . en.
  4. Web site: Moving Pictures Tour . Rush.com . April 30, 2022 . en-CA.
  5. News: Friday: Evening . May 12, 2022 . 336 . Rome News-Tribune . May 30, 1986 . Rome, Georgia . 6 . en . This concert filmed in 1981 at the Montreal Forum.
  6. News: Day by Day: Today . May 16, 2022 . 34 . The Spokesman-Review . June 21, 1981 . Spokane, Washington . D10 . en . Concert - Rush, 7:30 p.m., Spokane Coliseum.
  7. Top Box Office . Billboard . September 27, 1980 . 92 . 39 . 37 . April 30, 2022 . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. . en . 0006-2510.
  8. Top Box Office . Billboard . October 4, 1980 . 92 . 40 . 37 . April 30, 2022 . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. . en . 0006-2510.
  9. Top Box Office . Billboard . October 11, 1980 . 92 . 41 . 41 . May 6, 2022 . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. . en . 0006-2510.
  10. Top Box Office . Billboard . July 4, 1981 . 93 . 26 . 53 . May 12, 2022 . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. . en . 0006-2510.
  11. Top Box Office . Billboard . July 11, 1981 . 93 . 27 . 48 . May 12, 2022 . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. . en . 0006-2510.
  12. Top Box Office . Billboard . July 18, 1981 . 93 . 28 . 51 . May 12, 2022 . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. . en . 0006-2510.