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Certain bands are made for a full-blooded live approach, and others thrive in acoustic settings. Geddy Lee knows Rush were better in the former.
Rush are a band now so linked with the idea of creative evolution that to ask any member to pick their favourite songs seems a little frivolous.
I’m a huge fan.” Weinrib, better known as Geddy Lee, played his final show as the octave-bending frontman of Rush eight years ago. At the time, though, he still held out hope for an encore ...
And as Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson know, anything connected to their band Rush will most likely be a hit. Fifty-five years after they formed Rush in the suburbs of Toronto, Lee is out with a memoir ...
Rush in 2012: (from left) Neil Peart, Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson | Credit: Rush On the eve of the US tour, it’s Alex Lifeson and Geddy Lee who speak to Classic Rock about the present, the past and ...
TORONTO — The service at the Rosedale Diner is friendly, but Geddy Lee gets extra attention. A scruffy line cook stops by the table for a second time and looks at Lee. “You’re a Canadian ...
Speaking on the phone from his home office, Geddy Lee asks if he can take a second to grab one particular baseball. He knows its story by heart but wants to get it exactly right, in its own words.
In an interview with Classic Rock, Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson reflected on their decision to only tour in the United States and Canada Marina Watts is a Digital Writer, Music at PEOPLE.
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 the distinction of being the season’s only ...
Geddy Lee is reluctant to look back. The Rush bassist and vocalist has said so not only in press and publicity materials for his new memoir, “My Effin’ Life,” he says so several times in the ...
Rush's surviving members joined alt-country band Blue Rodeo for a salute to the late singer/songwriter in the form of a ...