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Click on "CC" icon for Closed Captioning (Lyrics on Screen) "Time Stand Still" is the second track from Rush's twelfth studio album titled "Hold Your Fire", recorded from January 5 – April 24, 1987 at The Manor Studio in Oxfordshire, Ridge Farm Studio in Surrey, Air Studios in Montserrat and McClear Place in Toronto. It was released on September 8, 1987. Peart wanted to do something in the same vein as Power Windows, this time working around the theme of time. However, after writing lyrics for the first song he wrote, "Time Stand Still", Peart started to create more material that would turn the theme into "Instinct," which was the reason for titling the album Hold Your Fire. "Time Stand Still" was the first track Neil Peart wrote for Hold Your Fire. According to Peart, he wrote the lyrics for "Time Stand Still" based on his time with Rush: "All through the '70s our lives were flying by; we spent so much time on the road that it became like a dark tunnel. You start to think about the people you're neglecting, friends and family. So the song is about stopping to enjoy that; with a warning against too much looking back. Instead of getting nostalgic about the past, it's more a plea for the present." "Time Stand Still" is in the key of E major. The tempo is moderately fast. The song starts in 7/4 before going to common time by the first verse. 'Til Tuesday bassist and frontwoman Aimee Mann briefly sings in each chorus of the song, marking Rush's first collaboration with another vocalist, with Rush guitarist Alex Lifeson adding that the band thought a female singer "would suit the song". Initially, the band had hoped to recruit Cyndi Lauper to sing the part, then later approached the Pretenders' Chrissie Hynde because, according to Lifeson, "we thought she'd be perfect. But Chrissie was unavailable at the time." Rush later recruited Mann & paid her $2,000 to sing on the track, with Lifeson saying that "her voice blends with Geddy [Lee]'s perfectly and I think it creates the right atmosphere for the song. It's just something new for Rush." Lifeson's metallic faux-acoustic guitar begins this song with his signature use of arpeggiated chords. An unusual blend of AOR, pop, and, as the subtle use of unusual time signatures from the outset reveals, progressive rock. "Time Stand Still" was the lead single for the album. Lyrically, a perfect continuation from the preceding track "Force Ten", the first lines "I turn my back to the wind/to catch my breath" immediately bring to mind the violent and awesome storms that were mentioned in "Force Ten". The album's fast-paced opening stride gives way, with this second track, to a more considered, almost sombre tone. Lee sings Peart's lyrics with a convincing yearning, willing to stop for a moment, long enough for some of life's better experiences to truly sink in and for the good times to last a little longer. The endless ticking of a clock is brought to mind by Peart's percussion in the chorus. Wood blocks and high-pitched toms are carefully placed around the melody and add an additional unsung layer of meaning to the song. While the song's emotional resonance is hard to fault, the music video has aged particularly poorly. Directed by experimental Polish director Zbigniew Rybczyński, the video's bizarre use of green screen to give the impression that the band were floating around a studio is a strange and unintentionally amusing image. Geddy Lee remarked on the video later on in the band's career: "“My daughter saw this video for the first time because they featured some of it in [Beyond the Lighted Stage],” Geddy Lee told Rolling Stone in 2013. “She just thought it was hilarious that we were flying through the air.It's such a strange video. It was just a bizarre day... This is my hair at its worst. It's a bad 'do. I don't even think we ever really nailed music videos. The funny thing is just watching this giant drum kit flying through the air. It's one thing to see humans. They have a form. But here's this whole drum kit floating through space. Who says we don't have a sense of humor?" The video helped the song reach #3 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Chart. It was a regular part of their live set in the 1980s and early 1990s, returning in 2010/11 for the Time Machine Tour. The song was not played since then, though they did name their 2015 tour documentary Time Stand Still. It chronicled the R40 Live Tour, which they billed as their last tour ever. It was. Aimee Mann appears with the band in the video, which was filmed over the course of an entire day. Neil Peart (1988): "My first idea was to write about time and the first song I wrote was 'Time Stand Still'. But the more I thought about it and played around with the ideas, the more expanded idea of temperamental barriers took shape. 'Time Stand Still' applies to that concept in that it deals with the attitude of enjoying life & not letting it whisk by without appreciating it." #MysticRhythmsLive