Sometimes,
I don’t really mind being proven wrong …
“The proper study of mankind is books.” – Aldous Huxley
So I’m
being guilted into watching Super Bowl 59.
I’ve watched
about a dozen games this season. The times when the Giants and Jets have played
in prime time and when they’ve come down here to get beaten up by Texas teams. I’ve
watched about two games each round of the playoffs, and every single team I
rooted for lost. My ideal Super Bowl would’ve been the Bills / Lions. One team
hasn’t been there in three decades and when it did, lost four games in a row.
The other team hasn’t been in a championship since a decade before I’ve been born.
Instead,
we’ll be subject yet again to more of Taylor Swift, that dope Kelce she’s
dating, and the refs throwing flags every time the defense gets somewhat in the
vicinity of Mahomes. There’ll be a plethora of stupid ads to endure. There’ll
be virtue signaling, I’m sure, even if tampered from the extremes and excesses
of the prior four years. And all in the service of making Roger Goodell and the
owners more and more $$$.
Why would
I subject myself to this?
Last year we
watched the original Star Wars, and everyone seemed to enjoy it. I know
I did. The girls care nothing of football, but are keen to the idea of the type
of family viewing night we hold regularly. That and eating TGI Friday foods. So
it was a win-win for everyone. At least I like to think so.
However,
this year I’ve floated Raiders of the Lost Ark or Indiana Jones and
the Last Crusade, to deaf or uninterested ears. Indeed, the Mrs. actually wants
to watch the game. She feels she’s “missing out” if she, uh, misses out on
the game. Try as I might, I can’t seem to persuade her otherwise. Best case
scenario I can see, so far, is us watching something Patch is into (we’re
currently in the midst of a recent Hell’s Kitchen season), with periodic
breaks for score checks. I dunno.
Or maybe I’ll
spend Sunday night out in my reading chair in the living room, on some Civil War battlefield or
cracking the mysterious world of the quantum with Wheeler and Feynman. Or maybe
over the weekend something else will light my fire and I’ll deep dive into
esoterica through the long hours of the evening. We’ll see.
My
prediction: Chiefs (of course) 41, Eagles 38. It will come down to the last two
minutes, a penalty against Philadelphia, and Mahomes connecting to that oaf in
the end zone.
One of my
resolutions for 2025 was to reduce my sugar intake.
Why?
Well, for
a whole host of reasons – the black clouds of potential diabetes, dental decay,
weight gain, poor sleep, lack of energy, etc. But the biggest scare for me is
something I heard at random about six months ago:
“Cancer
feeds on sugar.”
Then, over
the fall and winter, I heard it two more times on two unrelated occasions. I
took this for a sign, as I’ve had a sweet tooth for … well … decades, to be
honest.
So I figured
at my age, entering the final third of my life, I should do something about
this. Before it does something to me.
Last year
I quit soda. Specifically, my two demons of choice, Diet Coke and Diet Dr
Pepper. I’d consume about ten cans a week. Ever look at the ingredients? That’s
a lot of aspartame, potassium benzoate, and caffeine I’d been ingesting. Right now
I’m thirteen months free of that monkey.
But I gradually
replaced my Diet Coke / Diet Dr Pepper drinks of choice with two others:
Sparkling Ice and Pure Leaf Iced Tea. Sparkling Ice initially was satisfying,
but something felt off with it. Yep, there’s that preservative potassium
benzoate, which some but not all studies link to adverse health effects,
including cancer. More importantly, the drink is sweetened with sucralose. Even
more importantly, I would get headaches from drinking it (one or two 17 oz. bottles
a day). So I stopped consuming them over the summer.
Man,
though, did I get addicted to that Pure Life lemon flavored iced tea. And would
you know it? One bottle contains 38 grams of sugar – added sugar, at that. 38
grams! The American Heart Association
recommends 36 grams of sugar – that’s 9 teaspoons – a day, max, for a man. And
I was drinking about ten of these a week. So that’s an average of around 50
grams of added sugar a day, 40% more than what the AHA recommends.
And that’s
not all. I eat a lot of cookies and ice cream, too. It’s comfort food,
rewarding, stress-relieving, endorphin-releasing. It’s the same for you, also.
Every day I’d have at minimum a handful of cookies or a generous scoop of ice
cream. A trip to CVS for milk required the purchase of a heath bar. That candy
bar alone has 68 grams of sugar. Yikes.
Now, there’s
no way I can measure all that side sugar. So let’s make a good faith assumption.
Based on my regular daily intake of 50 grams of sugar for the iced tea, lets conservatively
double it to account for all these ice cream / cookie / candy bar snacks.
That’s 100 grams of sugar a day. Some days I did worse, some days better. But
an average of 100 grams daily seems a reasonable estimate.
On January
1 I quit the iced tea. Also, no sugary snacks. I also minimized or eliminated condiments
and sauces which contain sugar, though not to a rigorous, spartan extent. Just
eliminating those 100 grams of sugar a day, though, means that I DID NOT INGEST
3,100 grams of sugar this month.
3,100
grams is 3.1 kilograms. 1 kilogram is 2.2 pounds. Ergo, I did not eat 6.8
pounds of sugar this month!
Some
things that weigh about 6.8 pounds –
- A small to medium cat
- A gallon of milk
- A standard bag of All-Purpose Flour
- A bag of potatoes
- 20 bananas
- A new-born baby (!)
Picture
that amount in pure, white sugar. That did not go into my body this month. That’s
less food and fuel for any nascent cancer cells within my aging carcass. That’s
less food for plaque on my teeth. That’s less work my pancreas has to do to
secrete insulin into my bloodstream.
Because I didn’t
go cold turkey, I didn’t have any headaches. I only had one bad night of sleep
this month, and that was due to unrelated circumstances. My energy level seems
a little better, maybe 10 percent better (?), but that’s something I hope will
improve as the sugar semi-fast continues on in 2025.
May I
recommend it to you? There’s really no downside to it …
Over the
holidays we had a pipe break in the wall between the master bedroom and the
storage space beneath the stairs going up to the second floor of our home.
This
decided my Reading Plan for 2025.
I
originally thought I’d read my way through the Great Books collection I
inherited a two decades ago. I tried Herodotus, and failed. I tried Plutarch,
and failed. I started getting worried. I pulled out Augustine, Cervantes, even
Boswell, and was repelled by each in turn like similar poles of a magnet.
What was
going on?
I’ve
learned over the years that a book comes to you when the time is right. Kinda
like that saying that the teacher appears when the student is ready. Books are
teachers, of that I have no doubt, and I guess I’m not ready for the
intellectual rigor and focus required to get though these Great Books. Or
rather, I have other pressing duties and obligations first to fulfill before I
sit down before a roaring fire and journey with Herodotus through the ancient
world, or tilt at windmills with Don Quixote.
So what
does all this have to do with a burst pipe?
Well, we
had to remove some boxes from the storage room so the plumber could get in, cut
out part of the wall, and do his plumbing magic to the fractured pipe (it actually
was a slow leak, more like a drip that must’ve been dripping for several
weeks). Two of the boxes contained books packed during our move from New Jersey
nearly four years ago. A lot of those books were from my On Deck piles. Most,
if not all, I haven’t read. Those books, predominantly history and physics/math
fiction and nonfiction, had instantly become my 2025 Reading Plan.
I’m
starting off with two Civil War books that the Mrs. had bought me for my
birthday back in 2020. There are also some WW2 doorstops, four WW2 novels, and a
book on the Crusades. Since I like to juggle two books at a time, I’m also
working my way through a book on particle physics. There are two others I found
on quantum mechanics, and – wow! – a Douglas Adams Hitchhikers Guide to the
Galaxy omnibus! All four books of the Hitchhiker trilogy in one hardcover!
I read these books in the summer of 1989 with a buddy, and what a fun read that
was. Truly. The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy could be the funniest
book(s) I ever read.
I decided
to be laid back after a somewhat rigid 2024 of reading (such as Tom Clancy
books in story chronological order, or Dean Koontz books in the order I read
them as a kid). Now, once I finish a book, history or science, I’ll see what
one jumps in my hand next. Could be a switch to fiction. Dunno. Whatever I’m
ready for, well, that will be what I read next. But I do want to get to the
Hitchhikers books in the spring, when it starts getting a little warmer out.
I did
order three paperbacks on, of all things, the history of Buddhism, thanks to
some deep dives into meditation and mindfulness I’ve done recently. They were,
however, erroneously delivered to my daughter’s mailbox at college. So when she
comes back home next, in two or three weeks, I’ll toss those books onto the
“Storage Room Box” pile and get to them, too, before spring.
Happy laid-back
reading, all!
N.B. For those who think I always have my nose in a book, I read about an hour a day. I do not watch TV regularly, save for some hockey games here and there, a weekly movie with Patch and a weekly SF movie over the weekend while the ladies are out, and maybe a show here and there with the Mrs. So I basically read during the time most of my family and friends are watching TV.
My oldest daughter, Little One, now age 20, has been a Bob Dylan fan for quite a while. She has a hippie streak, music-wise, liking a lot of 60s and 70s folksy stuff, such as the Byrds, the Mamas and the Papas, Buffalo Springfield, Gordon Lightfoot, Joan Baez, and such. She ranges to more popular stuff of that era, such as the Beatles, the Kinks, early Rolling Stones, and Neil Young. And, as a disclaimer, she plugged into current era stuff too, of which I’m blissfully ignorant.
Anyway,
she’s been wanting to see the Bob Dylan movie A Complete Unknown since
she first heard of it sometime last year. Unfortunately, none of her friends
are into it. I bought her a Dylan biography for her birthday back in September
(the “definitive” one, naturally), and got her a Dylan 2025 wall calendar for Christmas.
So I was the one who had to step up to the plate – wanted to, actually, for her
– and took her to the local cineplex to see it.
What did I think? Especially now, since it’s been nominated for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actor, Best Supporting Actress, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Costume Design, and Best Sound. Whew. It’s almost like Dylan was transgender. I can honestly say the flick should definitely win in one category, and maybe three others.
Caveat: I
am not a Bob Dylan fan. I’ve heard the half-dozen radio-friendly songs over the
years, and I’ve listened to two albums at Little One’s behest (his debut 1962
album and 1966’s Blonde on Blonde). I have never been impressed and just
don’t understand it. I may respect it (and honestly I’m not really sure if I do
or not), but I can only shake my head.
With that
in mind, I didn’t like the movie. I didn’t hate it, either. I kinda enjoyed it,
as a piece of archaeology of a forgotten era. The movie roughly covers the years
1962-65, when Dylan makes his first impression among the New York folk circuit
to when he wreaked havoc by “going electric” and betrayed the faith at the 1965
Newport Folk Festival. From that perspective, I found it informative. Hagiographic,
yes, almost to a fault. I had to chuckle inwardly every time a character on
screen attained glowing nirvana on his or her first listen to Bob’s warbly voice and
plucking and strumming.
Timothy
Chalamet earned the Best Actor nomination. He becomes Bob Dylan, is Bob Dylan,
and I remembered Val Kilmer’s portrayal of Jim Morrison way back in the 1991
Doors movie. His singing and guitar playing is admirable and quite the carbon copy.
He portrays Dylan as kind of a jerk, which I guess is his real personality, as Little
One told me Dylan had script approval. He treats everyone as a pawn in his holy
quest to attain whatever it is he is trying to attain. Pure artistry, I guess.
But he pretty much comes across as a narcissistic user of folks (last word used
intentionally).
The other
two Oscar categories it may win would be Best Costume Design and Best Sound.
Watching the flick you feel transported to the 60s. Everyone is
year-appropriate-grubby. And the sound is pretty damn good, I must admit, everything
from Dylan’s solo singing and guitar playing in a cabin to him on stage with
his “electric” band.
The only
performance I feel deserves the Academy Award win is Best Supporting Actor. Edward
Norton becomes Pete Seeger. Watching Chalamet as Dylan, I knew I was watching an
extremely talented mime. But with Norton it was a complete disappearance into a
role. Now, I don’t know Pete Seeger other than as a footnote in the history of
contemporary American music, and I seem to recall mainstream America regarded
him as a proto-Communist back in the day. But Norton becomes Seeger so
completely that I didn’t even realize it was him (Norton) until halfway through
the movie. He almost steals the show. Despite my antipathy to the historical
character, I enjoyed him immensely every time he was onscreen (and I am aware
he was portrayed in the most saintly, humanizing way possible).
Funny
anecdote: On the way home I mentioned to Little One my enjoyment of Norton’s
Pete Seeger character, with this disclaimer: “I am not a violent man. But if I was
locked in a room with Pete Seeger and his banjo, I’d end up beating him to
death with that damn banjo after four hours, tops.”
I’d give
the movie a B-minus for the average man, and a solid A for Dylan fans. It kept
my attention for two hours and fifteen minutes, but I would not watch it again.
It was a one-time labor of love to my daughter, who’ll gladly watch any crazy
science fiction movie I’m into anytime and anywhere.
There’s
one small scene I think about often. 21-year-old Dylan is quietly walking
through a park, eating an apple, going through his mail. There’s a letter from
the record company. He opens it, and inside is a check written out to BOB DYLAN
for $10,000. (About $100,000 in today’s money). He acknowledges it silently and
without emotion and tucks it in his pocket. And that’s that. Even if it never
happened, can you imagine how freeing it must be to be totally divorced from
the concept of money, of earning it, of paying bills, paying down debt, of
buying stuff, of security against tomorrow’s trials? I can’t, and that’s a
peace of mind I would give almost anything to have.
I was driving
home from work last week via a stop at CVS when I heard the news reporting Marco
Rubio’s statement before Congress during his Secretary of State confirmation
hearings. Now, I haven’t been following the news lately (a conscious decision
for 2025), but I did listen and catch snippets of his speech and stayed for the
commentary. Needless to say, I liked what I heard. Immensely.
The Trump
Doctrine.
I purposefully
remain blissfully ignorant, as I have more important matters to concern myself
about, matters under my direct control as opposed to matters 1,500 miles away
in Washington DC. So take this as a “man on the street”-style interview. A
reporter comes up to me, plays me Rubio’s opening statement, and asks what I
think.
I agreed
with his position regarding the current position of the United States. He
posits that since the fall of the Soviet Union / Berlin Wall in 1989/1991,
America has bought completely into the globalist view of government. That is,
we are all citizens of the world first, and citizens of nations second. We are
the world, we are the children, etc. From this follows increasingly open
borders to allow for mass movements of populations over into and out of
traditional national boundaries. Also trade should freely flow over broders, a
position advocated by Republicans over the years.
The Trump
Doctrine is a shift in government priority to America and Americans first. As
in citizens of the United States of America. Immigration is fine as long as the
need is there and we are importing the best, brightest, and most productive for our country (and even this should be sharply curtailed). But immigration has to
be legal and follow a process. Illegal immigration should not be tolerant. Not
every illegal immigrant is a violent criminal, but many are, to the detriment
of the innocent who encounter them. Presumably legal immigration will screen
out active criminals.
And, no, the crisis at our southern border is not of the same type and kind of
Jews fleeing Nazi Germany. This was a position advocated to me by a liberal
family member.
We should
stop the overfunding of Ukraine. The way this man on the street sees it,
we are sending billions and billions of dollars to the second most corrupt country
to fight off its invasion by the most corrupt country. Where is the accounting
for this money? Where is it going to? Is it being used for what it is earmarked
for? As of September 2024 the US government
has allocated $183 billion to Ukraine. The population of the US is around 340
million. 154 million tax returns were filed. My simple Windows Calculator tells
me that each taxpayer has paid $1,188 to Ukraine. That’s about three trips to
the grocery store in Biden’s economy.
I think it’s
a good idea to re-evaluate all our financial promises and obligations to other
countries. Israel. NATO. The European union. Japan and Korea. To my man-on-the-street
mind, cynical and street-wise, I see these billions of dollars lining corrupt politicians
pockets, on their side and ours. Stop and re-evaluate.
As far as
the open trade position goes, I have no opinion. I am not an economist. That
dismal science has always eluded me. So I have to trust to others to make those
decisions. To be honest, I didn’t see much of a difference in the parties, until
Bidenomics hit (and I remember my family suffering under Carter policies when I
was a boy). I use common sense, and Democrat-advocated policies don’t make sense.
They don’t add up. But who knows with this economic alchemy. I just want
limited government and want them to get their hands off my wallet. End the Fed!
(Just kidding … somewhat.)
So I am
all for America and Americans First. The doctrine of the second Trump administration.
The cynical man on the street in me doubts if this will fully be done, thinks
that a lot of this is lip service, but he also thinks there’s a better chance
of this happening than under a … shudder … Harris administration.
And there
ya have it, Hopper’s two cents on the guiding principle of the next four years.
(And it’s actually worth less than that.)
So for the
first time in 58 months – something like 1,700 days – for the first time in
nearly five years I worked “in office” for three days in a row.
I believe
it was around the third week of March of 2020, during the Wu Flu thing, we received
orders to work from home. As a payroll manager, this was something I could
do after my company provided me with a laptop and a scanner.
After a
couple of weeks we were allowed to come in on a two-day-a-week schedule. I can’t
remember when this exactly happened but I believe it was around the end of April.
We had to mask up unless we were in our offices / cubicles by ourselves. This
charade played out for the remainder of my time in New Jersey.
When I
arrived in Texas in July of 2021 I obtained a corporate job which was completely
remote. I did all my interviewing via Teams and they shipped out a laptop to me
a day before my start. In late January of 2022 we went to a two-day-a-week
schedule, and they were generous in giving us remote time (for example, if a
holiday fell on that Monday, we could spend the rest of the week working from
home). Our department’s schedule was staggered, and my normal days in were Tuesday
and Wednesday.
This continued
for two years.
Now, at
the start of 2025, we received the command to come in three days a week. This
week was the first week for this (last week was shortened due to the
Snowmaggedon), and man did it take a lot out of me. I wake up earlier than most
farmers – it’s pitch black out and freezing (for Texas, but still, it’s been
around 32 degrees every morning down here). The entire house is slumbering as I’m
showering. I have to warm up the car for 10 minutes. And since I’m a night owl,
the constant early waking has taken its toll, and I’ve been dragging buttock
all week long.
Now, I don’t mean to sound ungrateful, and I don’t mean to sound like a wimp. For 32 years I worked Monday through Friday, sometimes Saturdays, sometimes Sundays (with H&R Block) and sometimes late into the evening (again with H&R Block and regularly with the dealerships). I did it, and I reserve scorn for those techie company employees who fight their overlords against coming in a full week.
But … man … did this remote job spoil me. I can do this
job from Antarctica if I had to, as long as I had an internet connection. For
me it boils down to another day of fighting traffic (north Dallas seems to have
as many cars – and traffic lights – as Manhattan) – drivers riding my bumper,
drivers zipping in and out of lanes, the cost of additional gas and tolls, and,
most importantly, additional time I’m not paid for. All because I’m needed to
sit at a cubicle in an office because “we work best when we collaborate face to
face.”
Yesterday
before heading out for the day one of my pals at work came up to me and said,
in mock seriousness, “We did it. We did it.” And I had to laugh, knowing these
same thoughts had been going through his head as well …
Well, an
apocalyptic event happened down here in Texas yesterday: Snow.
We’ve been
down here for 3½ years, and normally we receive but a dusting of snow once
or twice a winter. The temps plummet below freezing for a week or two every January
and we’re forced to let the faucets drip to avoid burst pipes. Our first winter
saw a mini-freeze where icy rain coated the streets for two or three days and schools
were closed and everyone worked from home. Other than that, we really don’t
have harsh winters down here, for obvious reasons. The severe weather comes in
the form of 90 days of summer heat over 100 degrees (the record for my experience
has been 108 degrees) and harsh hail storms every couple of months.
Rumors of
snow circulated Monday night. In the grocery store with Patch I overheard a
couple catastrophizing about 9 inches of the white stuff. I inwardly laughed.
Back in NJ we’d get one or two of those sized storms a winter and drive to work
the next day. But at my job Tuesday word spread we’d be remote on Thursday and
Friday. By Wednesday it was official. And yesterday morning, Snowmaggedon 2025
began.
1 pm.
2:48
pm.
Around 3 o’clock
the snow stopped falling at around 3 inches accumulation. After a brief
reprieve it started up again, this time as sleet. Icy rain. Much more dangerous
to these southerners. The sleet continued throughout the evening and overnight
and as I write this at 11 am on Friday, it is still going.
Since we hardly
ever get snow down here, the towns do not stock up on salt or invest in snowplows.
They do have some, a fraction of what we had up in Jersey, but that’s reserved
for the tollways. The side streets are on their own. I expect to be “snowed in”
until late Saturday afternoon. Today’s high will be 37, but Saturday will go up
to 46. It’s supposed to be sunny, too. Most’ll melt by dinner time. I expect to
be driving to pick up some takeout Saturday night, and attend mass with the family
Sunday morning.
And Texans
will speak of Snowmaggedon 2025 in hushed tones for years to come …
The current
view from my north Dallas home office window.
For Christmas,
my wife bought me this book:
It’s My Effin’ Life by Geddy Lee, the bassist and vocalist for the Canadian progressive rock band Rush. The band was a trio of three virtuosi musicians (including Alex Lifeson on guitar and Neal Peart on drums) active since 1974, though it first formed in the late ’60s when Geddy and Alex were high school classmates. They’ve released 19 studio albums and a whole bunch of live albums and have sold 42 million of them worldwide. In 2013 they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. They played their last concert on August 1, 2015, after Peart announced his retirement. In January of 2020 the legendary drummer died of glioblastoma at age 67.
As I’ve
written about numerous times in these here electronic pages, I’ve been a
lifelong fan of Rush. I still remember the first time I heard them: Spring of
1982, the song “Tom Sawyer” piped into my ear drums through my brother’s Walkman.
To say I was instantaneously transfixed would be an understatement. Somehow I
got the cassette tape of Moving Pictures, which contained “Tom Sawyer,”
and I listened to that all summer. I bought a songbook of the album a little
bit later, but that defeated my inexperienced fingers at the time. Soon more
Rush purchases followed, classic Rush, their earlier 70s masterpieces. “Subdivisions”
dominated the FM radio play at this time.
43 years
later I am still a fan, though to be honest it’s been a while since I’ve
listened to them. Once every few months I’d ask Alexa to shuffle Rush songs as
I did the dishes. I think I mentioned Lee’s autobiography to my wife when it
came out around a year ago, then it slipped my mind. So I was pleasantly surprised
when I unwrapped it at Christmas. I set aside my current reading and delved
into it. I am almost 200 pages deep (the autobiography clocks in at 507 pages)
and to supplement my reading I am doing something like I did when I read the
Mozart biography back in May: I am (re)immersing myself in Rush’s music.
I am
listening to their albums in chronological order. On deck for today is 1978’s Hemispheres,
one of the first “albums” I bought on CD around 1989 and listened to about a
thousand times before 1990. I’ve re-listened to seven so far: Rush, Fly
By Night, Caress of Steel, 2112, All The World’s a Stage (live),
A Farewell to Kings, and Exit … Stage Left (live). Some I’ve
listened to while walking around the ponds near my house, some while nestled in
my reading nook, some at work with the headphones on cranking out spreadsheets.
I have seventeen more studio albums and one more live album to get thought, so
this will take me to the end of the month.
Combining My
Effin’ Life with these re-listens has been a hugely pleasant experience. A
lot of nostalgia’s been flowing through my mind: voracious listening as a kid,
trying to figure out songs on guitar, me and my band mates playing tons of their
stuff at rehearsals (particularly Cygnus X-1), even the one time I saw
them live in April of 1990. I am now trying to convert my wife and children into
Rush fans. Not gonna happen for the little ones (though Patch likes “Xanadu”),
but the Mrs. seems open, at least for their music. Rush fans are something like
90 percent male, and it has something to do with the science fiction and philosophic
lyrics combined with the progressive rock (unusual time signatures and weird
chord progressions) and mostly with Geddy’s, er, unique singing voice. I have
but one Rush t-shirt, but this may have to be corrected, and I think the Mrs.
will help out more with this end of the Rush experience.
Anyway, that’s
one of the many things I’ve been up to lately. Perhaps when I finish I’ll write
up a post of Rush trivia for any fan who may blunder upon this blog. I dunno. After
1982’s Signals album Rush’s overall sound changed to one more heavily dominated
by synthesizers, and as this was when I started playing in bands, I was more
interested in guitar-driven music and am not familiar with their mid- and
late-80s work. So I am looking forward to listening to that with a new ear, and
hopefully finding something to enjoy that I didn’t thirty years ago. I did have
a t-shirt I purchased at the concert for 1989’s Presto tour, but I
decidedly did not like the album. 1991’s Roll the Bones I bought on CD, and
though that was a more return-to-earlier-form kinda thing, only gave it a few
listens. Not up to those 70s masterpieces. Same with their final five albums,
all borrowed from the library here and there. With a newfound and nostalgic
re-appreciation of the band, I am hoping to uncover a lot of hidden gems, and
hoping that one turns out to be 2025’s Song of the Year here at the Hopper.
An ancient
2011 post by me on Rush, here.