Rush weren't truly Rush until their second LP, 1975's Fly by Night, which bloomed beyond the derivative heavy rock of their self-titled debut into a more intricate, imaginative format. And the ...
Rush hasn't performed "Fly by Night" since 1978. Lifeson wanted to reincorporate the track into the band's setlist for its R40 tour in 2015; however, as he told Rolling Stone, he thought that "Geddy ...
In 1976, Rush practically lived on the road. Two years prior, the Canadian band had replaced their first drummer, John Rutsey, with Neil Peart, and they were hitting their stride as a touring band.
Rush announced new tour programs for their first three album road trips, as none were published at the time the events took place. Last year, frontman Geddy Lee recalled how the trio were “very green” ...
The drum kit Rush’s Neil Peart played between 1974 and 1977 — both onstage and on albums like Fly by Night and 2112 — will soon hit the auction block. The chrome Slingerland drum kit, which Peart ...
Is there a rock band more synonymous with Canada than Rush? (Well, besides The Tragically Hip.) Formed in Toronto in 1968, the progressive rock group boasted musicians at the height of their craft: ...
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