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Force Ten (song)

"Force Ten"
Rush Force Ten.jpg
Promotional single by Rush
from the album Hold Your Fire
Released 1987
Format Vinyl
Recorded 1987
Genre Progressive rock
Length 4:33
Label Mercury Records
Songwriter(s) Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson, Neil Peart, Pye Dubois
Producer(s) Peter Collins

"Force Ten" is a song written, produced and performed by Canadian rock band Rush, released as a promotional single from their album Hold Your Fire. It was the last song written for the album. The song has been critically positively received, and peaked at number 3 on the Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart.

"Force Ten" was written in three hours on December 14, 1986, the last day of pre-production for Hold Your Fire. With nine songs already written, producer Peter Collins felt it was important to have one more song for the album.Pye Dubois, who previously worked with Rush on their song "Tom Sawyer", had sent Neil Peart some lyrics for the song, and Peart would add more verses to it. Lyrically, the song describes the "storms of life," making a reference to a very high level of the Beaufort scale ("force ten" being near the scale's maximum of 12) as an analogy, according to the book Rush and Philosophy: Heart and Mind United.

Musically, "Force Ten" is composed in a A minor key, with changes into a major scale also occurring in the song. The song is set in common time at a fast rock tempo. Peart has said that Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson were "trying to explore some musical areas that we hadn't covered yet," when writing the music for the song. The opening is very atmospheric before the bass guitar starts playing, which Sputnikmusic said that it "picks up the pace." Lee performed bass chords in the song, inspired to do so by his friend Jeff Berlin. The song was described by The Cavalier Daily as "intense".


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