Nearly 10 years after they played their final shows, Rush bassist Geddy Lee and guitarist Alex Lifeson have opened up in a ...
Nearly 10 years since Rush’s final show, the group's two surviving members haven't ended their creative partnership ...
Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson reflected on Rush's 2015 farewell tour in a new interview, apologizing for cutting it short for European fans.
Trump eyes an end to new windmill production under second term, says they are 'driving the whales crazy' ...
Geddy Lee has reached out to British and European fans to explain why Rush's final tour, 2015's R40 Live: 40th Anniversary ...
The upcoming February 2025 issue of Classic Rock Magazine (purchase here) celebrates the 50th Anniversary of Rush's debut ...
Rush may have opened up doors that no other prog band could, but they have had some strange detours that are a bit uncomfortable.
The R40 tour would essentially be a farewell tour for Rush as legendary drummer Neil Peart passed away in January 2020 from brain cancer. The band had fun playing the often three-hour sets, but Peart ...
After Rush drummer Neil Peart suffered dual tragedies in the late '90s, he took to the open road on his motorcycles. Now, his 2004 BMW is up for bid.
The band's booking agent chose the name Jethro Tull at random, taking it from the 18th-century agriculturist and inventor of the seed drill.
Rush launched their final tour in 2015, which hit only the U.S. and Canada, and surviving band members Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson ... extra shows and I was unsuccessful,” Lee tells Classic Rock in a ...