There are several distinct phases in the epic career of Rush. While today they are pigeonholed as progressive rockers, they didn’t start out that way. The Canadian combo hail from a time when a ...
In the end, what Rush delivered in Tom Sawyer was a brilliant ensemble performance: the tension in Peart’s taut beats and explosive fills, the expressiveness in Lifeson’s solos, the heavy propulsion ...
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: Getty Images Blessed with an unmistakable vocal shriek in addition to his superlative ...
Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson voice a pair of oblivious cops in Rush’s new animated "YYZ" video, which promotes their upcoming deluxe reissue of 1981’s Moving Pictures. The clip, produced by Fantoons ...
The extensive Rush 40th anniversary album series continues with an expanded edition of the prog-rock band’s groundbreaking 1981 release, ‘Moving Pictures,’ cementing its well-deserved classic album ...
Few intros in rock music have the punch of Rush's "Tom Sawyer," but according to Geddy Lee, the band almost trashed the song. "There were all these technical problems because we were using one of the ...
Though Rush, the Canadian rock trio consisting of Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson and Neil Peart changed over the years from a blues-inspired hard rock beginning and later moving into progressive rock — their ...
Geddy Lee — or rather, as his touching new memoir, “My Effin’ Life,” makes plain, the man born with so many family names, nicknames and colloquial derivations of names, his own mother was uncertain of ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. The surviving members of progressive rock titans Rush will reunite for a 50th anniversary tour in 2026. Rush ...
At 512 pages, “My Effin’ Life” has its share of Rush lore. But the most memorable parts of the singer and bassist’s book are about survival. By Elisabeth Egan Geddy Lee’s memoir, “My Effin’ Life,” has ...
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KCTV) - Almost two decades after donating hundreds of signed baseballs to the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, a legendary musician returned to the museum Saturday to sign the book he ...