Canada’s greatest power trio was assembled slowly, one piece at a time. Toronto guitarist Alex Lifeson co-founded Rush as a ...
“We always have one song, on every album, that doesn’t quite click,” Lee said. “And we thought that Tom Sawyer was going to ...
They ditched the kimonos for keyboards and pursued a new, modern sound that had fans bewitched and bewildered in equal ...
Not only did their lineup undergo several changes before settling on the classic trio of Geddy Lee, Neil Peart, and Alex Lifeson. But they also started out playing covers of popular rockers like ...
For fans, one of the most moving moments came when Peart, known for his reserved demeanor, embraced his bandmates on stage. Lee reflected, "The first time in forty years he'd done that ...
It felt to me incorrect that we didn’t do it, but Neil [Peart] was adamant ... ruling out playing live again, Lifeson said that does still regularly jam with Lee and will continue to do so.
Rush might be some of the most talented musicians in progressive rock, but they wrote one song that was too daunting to record in one go.
Five years after Neil Peart’s sudden death from brain cancer, Alex Lifeson told Classic Rock in a new interview that he and Geddy Lee will never resurrect Rush with another drummer. In the ...
Geddy Lee is the rare type of bass player ... Combining his skill set with guitar alchemist Alex Lifeson's sonic concoctions and drum god Neil Peart's downright ridiculous chops, Rush achieved ...
UMe/Mercury and Anthem Records label groups celebrate the half-century milestone marker for Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame icons with RUSH 50, a wide-ranging 50-track super deluxe anthology that ...
Rush eventually settled on the trio of vocalist/keyboardist/bassist Geddy Lee, guitarist/vocalist Alex Lifeson and drummer/lyricist Neil Peart. The seven-time Grammy nominees and 10-time Juno ...