"Lock and Key" is a song written, produced and performed by Canadianrock bandRush. It is a promotional single from their twelfth studio album, Hold Your Fire. The song deals with the theme of every human being’s primal, violent instincts underneath their civil appearance - their “killer instinct”. Critics gave the song liking reviews, with some saying it had quality of a hit single, and would make it on the Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. The song's music video was originally released in 1987, and was produced by Bob Jason and directed by T. Vanden Ende.
Composition and background
Music
"Lock and Key" is an atmospheric, darkprogressive rock song, composed in a G♯ minor key, and played at a moderate tempo and in common time. The intro follows the chord progression G♯m—F♯/A♯—B6—C♯7—G♯m—F♯/A♯—E—G♯m—F♯ /A♯—B, the versus following G♯m—F♯/A♯—B, the pre-chorus following D#5—E♯5—F♯5—G♯5—A♯5—F♯5, the chorus following G♯m—F♯/A♯—B6—C♯—C#sus—G♯m—F♯/A♯—E5, and the bridge following G♯5—A♯5—B5. Lee said the song to have been a mix of sounds and ideas. Instrumentation includes keyboards, a rough-toned electric guitar, a smooth, creamy-toned bass guitar, and drums. Geddy Lee played both keyboards and bass in the song, which he found to be a "battle". He also said in 1988 that, unlike most songs from Hold Your Fire, he played a 5-string bass for the song: "I find that low string really means more today, because we're living in the world of synthesizers that go lower than basses ever went before." Drummer Neil Peart said that in the song, he performed "a solo while Geddy and Alex keep time behind me. That's fantastic, a beautiful exchange of roles: a drum solo in the terms of a guitar solo, where the rest of the band supports, Geddy and Alex playing the actual rhythmic pulse. It allows us to try out a new suit, to take on a new interrelationship between us." The song also includes a guitar solo by Lifeson that, according to a review on Sputnikmusic, deviates "from his melodic aspirations elsewhere on the album ."
Lyrics
"Lock and Key" alludes to the Carson McCullers novel The Heart is a Lonely Hunter. The subject of the song is about violence, making mentions of threats about a "killer instinct" inherent in humanity. Alex Lifeson said that the phrase meant "the ability to kill for no reason at all," so, according to the book Mystic Rhythms: The Philosophical Vision of Rush, "we suppress and repress the living, vibrant, animal courage, and substitute the tepid, torpid, vapid, but secure robotic, mechanistic, automatic-pilot self. Risk is the price of being free, and we’d rather not pay it."
Release
"Lock and Key" was only released as a promotional single by Anthem Records in Canada in 1987. It is the sixth track of the album Hold Your Fire, and it later appeared on compilation albums such as Chronicles and Sector 3. Rush also performed the song live on their Hold Your Fire tour, and a live performance of the song appears on the laserdisc version of the concert filmA Show of Hands. The song was also listed as a track on the official flyer for the live box setRush Replay X 3, but Anthem claimed it was an error and said it would not appear on the box set.
Reception
The song has been given positive reviews from music critics. Allmusic called the song "quintessential Rush". Sputnikmusic named it a "brilliant choice for a second single, and criminally underrated," and Scouting magazine said the song had "genuine hit-single potential." Metal Storm said that the song was a standout track of Hold Your Fire, stating that it "has a clear-cut power edge over the rest of the album." The Manila Standard also named it one of the best cuts from the album. In contrast, The Cavalier Daily found the song to be forgettable. The song peaked at number 16 on the BillboardHot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart.
Music video
The song's music video was originally released in 1987. It was produced by Bob Jason and directed by T. Vanden Ende. The video was later released on iTunes on December 7, 2005. The video includes a reel of old and unusual footage in the background, such as clips from the 1932 filmThe Last Mile. Lee said that the goal of making the video was to make the footage match with the lyrics, which was very difficult to do, because "we were all trying to do those effects on camera."