Book I: The Voyage • "
Prologue": This starts with a dissonant electronic soundscape and spoken introduction by album producer
Terry Brown. Afterwards, a heavily syncopated bass riff in shifting time signatures (3/4, 7/8, 3/4, 4/4) fades in, with the full band joining in as the introductory sound effects fade out. • "
1": The shortest section of the song describes the black hole itself, and asks the question of what happens to someone who flies into it. • "
2": The protagonist sails into the black hole on board his "Rocinante". This section contains a
wah-wah guitar solo by
Alex Lifeson. • "
3": The climactic section of Book I uses a chord sequence first heard at 3:21 in the Prologue. The lyrics describe the "Rocinante" spinning out of control, and the protagonist's body being destroyed ("every nerve is torn apart"). This section includes the highest note sung by
Geddy Lee on any studio album (B5 at 9:27). The song fades out with a repeated chord sequence – which returns at 11:56 in Book II.
Book II: Hemispheres • "
Prelude": This section contains several themes heard later in the song, similar to the "Overture" in "
2112". • "'
Apollo Bringer of Wisdom'''''": Apollo, the Greek god of the sun and the arts, represents the left hemisphere. 'Left-brainers' are often logical thinkers, adept at mathematics. • "'
Dionysus Bringer of Love'''''": Dionysus, the Greek god of wine and fertility, represents the right hemisphere. He stood for uninhibited desire in Nietzsche's
Birth of Tragedy and
Human, All Too Human and was the opposite of Apollo. 'Right-brainers' are less common than 'left-brainers,' and include people who are artistic and sensitive. • "'
Armageddon The Battle of Heart and Mind
'": The title is reference to the Biblical war, but in this case Apollo and Dionysus pull man in opposite directions, toward Order or Chaos, respectively. The debate between classical and romantic (
Apollonian and Dionysian) cultures is ongoing. The left stereo channel switches to the right for dramatic effect when Lee sings the word 'hemispheres'. • "'
Cygnus Bringer of Balance'''
": The chords played at the end of The Voyage
return here. The explorer from The Voyage'' is frightened by the fighting and, after hearing the explorer's silent cry of terror, Apollo and Dionysus stop fighting and dub him Cygnus, god of Balance. • "'
The Sphere A Kind of Dream'''''":
Jane Austen's novel
Sense and Sensibility may be alluded to in the last few lines of the song. ==See also==