Rush Fans

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  • Rush Fans

  • Male
  • Last Login: 12/9/2009

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Interests

  • General

    Welcome to the Rush fans site. This site is for the FANS of the amazing band RUSH.
    Please take a look around and if you want to be be added as a friend then send a request, we'd love to have you onboard.
    This site is a Fan site and therefore is nothing without you the fans and your contributions.
    Feel free to comment,reply to blogs or message us with ideas of your own to help us grow further.
    Thanks for your support.
  • Music



    The Spirit of Radio


    Limelight



    Red sector A


    Subdivisions


    Neil Peart Drum solo




    All photos contained herein this site (including the photo gallery) are protected under copyright law. Therefore if anyone owning any of the photos does not want them on our page please message us in the first instance and we will remove them unoffended. Thanks to those of you who have already given the permission to use the images.
    Rush Collage wallpaper used with kind permission from
    http://darksideofcollages.blogspot.com/
    Homepage: http://coroflot.com/adames

Blurbs

About me:



We have recently asked YOU to vote for your all time TOP Rush ALBUMS and here they are in order:
1. Moving Pictures
2. 2112
3. Permanent Waves
4. Hemispheres
5. Farewell to Kings
6. Exit stage Left
7. Hold your fire
8. Counterparts
9. Fly By night
10. Power Windows

The 'Rush Fans' playlist. (Click ''show video'' on the widget!!)

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Check out our Gallery for more pics of RUSH.









Who I'd like to meet:

Biography

Over the course of their decades-spanning career, the Canadian power trio Rush emerged as one of hard rock's most highly regarded bands; although typically brushed aside by critics and although rare recipients of mainstream pop radio airplay, the group nonetheless won an impressive and devoted fan following while their virtuoso performance skills solidified their standing as musicians' musicians.

Rush formed in Toronto, Ontario, in the autumn of 1968, and initially comprised guitarist Alex Lifeson (born Alexander Zivojinovich), vocalist/bassist Geddy Lee (born Gary Lee Weinrib), and drummer John Rutsey. In their primary incarnation, the trio drew a heavy influence from Cream, and honed their skills on the Toronto club circuit before issuing their debut single, a rendition of Buddy Holly's "Not Fade Away," in 1973. A self-titled LP followed in 1974, at which time Rutsey exited; he was replaced by drummer Neil Peart, who also assumed the role of the band's primary songwriter, composing the cerebral lyrics (influenced by works of science fiction and fantasy) that gradually became a hallmark of the group's aesthetic.

With Peart firmly ensconced, Rush returned in 1975 with a pair of LPs, Fly by Night and Caress of Steel. Their next effort, 1976's 2112, proved to be their breakthrough release: a futuristic concept album based on the writings of Ayn Rand, it fused the elements of the trio's sound -- Lee's high-pitched vocals, Peart's epic-length compositions, and Lifeson's complex guitar work -- into a unified whole. Fans loved it -- 2112 was the first in a long line of gold and platinum releases -- while critics dismissed it as overblown and pretentious: either way, it established a formula from which the band rarely deviated throughout the duration of their career.

A Farewell to Kings followed in 1977 and reached the Top 40 in both the U.S. and Britain. After 1978's Hemispheres, Rush achieved even greater popularity with 1980's Permanent Waves, a record marked by Peart's dramatic shift into shorter, less sprawling compositions; the single "The Spirit of Radio" even became a major hit. With 1981's Moving Pictures, the trio scored another hit of sorts with "Tom Sawyer," which garnered heavy exposure on album-oriented radio and became perhaps their best-known song. As the 1980s continued, Rush grew into a phenomenally popular live draw as albums like 1982's Signals (which generated the smash "New World Man"), 1984's Grace Under Pressure, and 1985's Power Windows continued to sell millions of copies.

As the decade drew to a close, the trio cut back on its touring schedule while hardcore followers complained of a sameness afflicting slicker, synth-driven efforts like 1987's Hold Your Fire and 1989's Presto. At the dawn of the 1990s, however, Rush returned to the heavier sound of their early records and placed a renewed emphasis on Lifeson's guitar heroics; consequently, both 1991's Roll the Bones and 1993's Counterparts reached the Top Three on the U.S. album charts. In 1996, the band issued Test for Echo and headed out on the road the following summer. Shortly thereafter, Peart lost his daughter in an automobile accident. Tragedy struck again in 1998 when Peart's wife succumbed to cancer. Dire times in the Rush camp did not cause the band to quit. Lee took time out for a solo stint with 2000's My Favorite Headache; however, rumors of the band playing in the studio began to circulate. It would be five years until anything surfaced from the band. Fans were reassured in early 2002 by news that Rush were recording new songs in Toronto. The fruit of those sessions led to the release of Rush's 17th studio album, Vapor Trails, later that spring. Following this the band played and released the show from Rock in Rio.Then the 'Feedback' covers album followed this and now the band are still promoting their awesome last album 'Snakes and arrows'.



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