The album opens with one of the best Rush songs my opinion namely with "Tom Sawyer", which is very rocky, but also boasts keyboard passages, also I think the middle part with Alex Lifeson solo extremely horny, and then takes nice ride . "Red Barchetta", the hardness a little bit out, and seemed a bit more epic again with a good solo peppered, Peart is distinguished by one or the other ingenious drum fill out. "YYZ" on the shortly thereafter following Live plate Rush is behind this instrumental a fat drum solo here on the studio version to remain without drum solo for the song shows but very vertrakt many tempo changes and different melodies emerge just awesome! "Limelight" deals thematically with the aversion to success and seen the Human follow the respective person.Musikalisch comes the song over very rocky and is also a potential single. "The Camera Eye" the longest song of the plate there is a relaxed tension on starts only after a good 2 1/2 minutes take properly ride a scant minute later sets the incomparable vocals of Geddy Lee a, the then me far better than like heute.Der song goes like YYZ by many passages in several other tunes and rhythms. "Witch Hunt" is beautifully dark held a few keyboard effects gild the result, the guitar plays a very dry reef, and also very rocking and then again a very epic keyboard riff to come. "Vital Signs" for me not so strong as the other songs, but finished the album yet with some nice keyboard melodien.In the song features some reggae elements that you probably abgeguckt at The Police? has.
Conclusion: Many fans see Rush in Moving Pictures, which marks a turning point in the stylistic development of the band, the most successful album of Rush. The seven songs sound catchy and at all complexity significantly more pleasing than on the albums that had published until then the band. The elements of hard rock are more pushed into the background, while electronic melody lines take wider space.
As usual with Rush originate from the lyrics Neil Peart, while the music has been written by the other two members Alex Lifeson Rush and Geddy Lee.