Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Neil Peart, Geddy Lee, and Alex Lifeson during the All The World's A Stage tour, 1977. (Credit: Fin Costello/Redferns) Canada’s ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Rush in the '70s (from left ...
Jeff Cornell is a veteran music and entertainment writer, who has contributed to Variety, Billboard, Loudwire, The Hollywood Reporter, and MTV. Rush is one of the most innovative and influential bands ...
Rush’s Rush 50 debuts on four U.K. charts, including a No. 5 entry on the Rock & Metal Albums list, giving the band its fifteenth top 10 on the tally. LONDON - 1st JUNE: Bassist Geddy Lee, drummer ...
Simply put, Rush were on fire as the decade turned to the 1980s. But in this week's Chuck's Fight Club on the Loudwire Nights radio show, we want to know which you think is the better Rush album — ...
Rush's Alex Lifeson just revealed which album he had the "most fun" making and it was a pretty big one, to say the least. Some bands' biggest albums are a total nightmare to make, causing members to ...
The biggest and arguably best album Rush ever made is now 45 years old. Released on Feb. 12, 1981, Moving Pictures marked the crucial turning point where the beloved Canadian trio fully shifted their ...
In a long and brilliant career, Canadian trio Rush were described in various ways. Metallica guitarist Kirk Hammett proclaimed them “the high priests of conceptual rock”. Critic Robert Christgau, ...
Canada’s greatest power trio was assembled slowly, one piece at a time. Toronto guitarist Alex Lifeson co-founded Rush as a teenager in 1968, and a few months later, invited a childhood friend, ...