Side one "
Bastille Day" concerns the storming of the
Bastille during the
French Revolution. "I Think I'm Going Bald" was written in reference to
Kim Mitchell, lead guitarist and vocalist for
Max Webster who shared management and touring. "
Lakeside Park" is about the park of the same name in
Port Dalhousie,
St. Catharines,
Ontario, where Peart grew up and worked during the summer as a teenager. "The Necromancer" is a 12-minute track in three parts. It concerns a necromancer, someone who practices
necromancy, a type of
divination involving the summoning of spirits of the deceased. The song was influenced by the works of author
J. R. R. Tolkien; the necromancer is an alias used by the character
Sauron in Tolkien's novel
The Hobbit (1937). The introduction contains the lyric, "Three travelers, men of Willow Dale", a reference to the band itself, as Lifeson had formed the first incarnation of Rush in the Toronto suburb of
Willowdale. The final section, "Return of the Prince", sees the return of the character By-Tor from the song "By-Tor and the Snow Dog" on
Fly by Night, but in "The Necromancer", the character is a hero and not a villain. "Return of the Prince" was released as a single in Canada.
Side two "The Fountain of Lamneth" is the band's first of three side-long tracks, the others being the
title track of
2112 in 1976 and "Cygnus X-1, Book II: Hemispheres" from
Hemispheres in 1978. It consists of six parts and tells the story of a man in search of the Fountain of Lamneth as he chronicles the occurrences on his journey. The second part, "
Didacts and Narpets", consists mostly of a drum solo. In 1991, Peart said that the shouted words heard are an argument between the central character and the Didacts and Narpets (anagrams of "addicts" and "parents", respectively). He could not remember what the words were, "but they took up opposite positions like: 'Work! Live! Earn! Give!' and like that." ==Cover==