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rushfan4 ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: May 22 2007 Location: Michigan, U.S. Status: Offline Points: 66614 |
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Did anybody watch How I Met Your Mother tonight? A certain Geddy Lee made a few cameo appearances. It was pretty hilarious.
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infocat ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() VIP Member Joined: June 10 2011 Location: Colorado, USA Status: Offline Points: 4671 |
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Indeed! Those wacky Canadians!
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Frank Swarbrick Belief is not Truth. |
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ProgMetaller2112 ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: December 08 2012 Location: Pacoima,CA,USA Status: Offline Points: 3150 |
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F****** Canadians with their horrible music
![]() Edited by ProgMetaller2112 - February 04 2013 at 23:51 |
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“War is peace.
Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.” ― George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four "Ignorance and Prejudice and Fear walk Hand in Hand"- Neil Peart |
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zumacraig ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: December 10 2011 Status: Offline Points: 1301 |
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they seem to be buddies with jason seigal. i'd like to see a rush reality show. alex's sense of humor is priceless!
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Stardust we are.
-Roine Stolt |
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Mr. Mustard ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: May 06 2012 Location: Maine, USA Status: Offline Points: 207 |
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Just found this and thought it was pretty funny/ridiculous: |
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Catcher10 ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() VIP Member Joined: December 23 2009 Location: Emerald City Status: Offline Points: 17980 |
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Eria Tarka ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: December 17 2011 Location: BC, Canada Status: Offline Points: 5856 |
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^ haha I forgot about that one
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rushfan4 ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: May 22 2007 Location: Michigan, U.S. Status: Offline Points: 66614 |
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Rush is to be inducted into the Rock N Roll Hall of Fame tomorrow night. An article in the Detroit Free Press about it. http://www.freep.com/article/20130417/ENT/304170089/Rush-inducted-into-Rock-and-Roll-Hall-of-Fame |
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progbethyname ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: July 30 2012 Location: HiFi Headmania Status: Offline Points: 7868 |
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Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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rushfan4 ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: May 22 2007 Location: Michigan, U.S. Status: Offline Points: 66614 |
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Oooh that is cool. Next time I visit Toronto I will have to be sure to hit the post office for a souvenir.
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Catcher10 ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() VIP Member Joined: December 23 2009 Location: Emerald City Status: Offline Points: 17980 |
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Rush stamps...cool!!
Wonder if the postal service will "rush" those letters faster to their destinations?
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rushfan4 ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: May 22 2007 Location: Michigan, U.S. Status: Offline Points: 66614 |
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A CNN article about Rush. http://www.cnn.com/2013/04/18/showbiz/geek-out-rush/index.html?hpt=hp_c3
It's not cool to like RUSH. That's OKBy Ann Hoevel, CNN updated 10:37 AM EDT, Thu April 18, 2013
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![]() Sisters Ann and Nancy Wilson were two of the first women to find fame fronting a hard rock band. The female rockers dominated the video music scene in the 1980s with hits like "Alone," and "What About Love." Their band included guitarist Roger Fisher, bassist Steve Fossen, guitarist/keyboard player Howard Leese and drummer Michael DeRosier.
Albert King's husky vocals and signature Gibson Flying V guitar influenced several artists including Eric Clapton and avid fan Stevie Ray Vaughan. Known for such songs as "Don't Throw Your Love on Me So Strong" and "That's What the Blues Is All About," the Mississippi Delta native was selected for induction after his first nomination. He died in 1992.
Known as a funyman of music for his satirical lyrics, Newman has already won Grammys, Academy Awards and Emmys and can now add his induction to that list. He may be best known for his hits "I Love L.A." and "Short People."
As political as they were hip-hop pioneers, Public Enemy was led by frontman Chuck D. and showman Flavor Flav. Their 1988 album "It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back" and 1990 release "Fear Of A Black Planet" forever changed the landscape of rap.
"Queen of Disco" Donna Summer has five times before appeared on the ballot for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. She was the first female artist to have four No. 1 singles in a 13-month period with "MacArthur Park," "Hot Stuff," "Bad Girls" and "No More Tears." Summer died in 2012 after a battle with lung disease.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Editor's note: Ann Hoevel is the producer of CNN.com's nerd culture beat Geek Out! and has been a fan of RUSH since 1990. She enjoys "singing" along to "YYZ." (CNN) -- This is it: the night that RUSH fans have waited for since 1999, when the group was first eligible to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Thursday night, the Canadian trio -- a staple of classic rock radio stations -- will jam onstage with their fellow class of inductees. We should feel vindicated, right? For the last 13 years, fans of the band have been outraged as the Hall of Fame overlooked their heroes. From the moment RUSH was eligible for consideration, fans signed petitions and wondered what kind of critics could be keeping their heroes from the limelight. Even now, fans still feel slighted. You see, these are fans who are used to explaining -- and being summarily dismissed for -- their love of the band, said "RUSH: Beyond the lighted stage" documentarians Sam Dunn and Scot McFadyen. RUSH has been a band almost 40 years. Their music has encompassed genres ranging from heavy metal to new age. They even penned a rap once (and caught a lot of flak for it from fans, too.) Despite selling millions of records and achieving top-of-their-field musicianship, they've never really had the respect of music critics. By extension, neither have their fans. "I remember reading once (RUSH drummer and lyricist) Neil Peart got voted one of the worst lyricists of all time," Dunn said. "And I can't imagine the rage that that would inspire in a lot of fans," he said. Peart's lyrics are a major reason fans cite interest in the band's music, he said. They identify and connect with Peart's words so personally, "I absolutely think it's 'By attacking RUSH, you're attacking us,' " Dunn said. "And it's war." Likewise, Geddy Lee's vocals are an unavoidable hurdle to RUSH appreciation, which fans are well aware of. His singing voice is highly pitched, in the tradition of singers like Robert Plant or Roger Daltry, but in an extreme. "I think one critic said it sounded like a hamster in a blender," McFadyen said. When they were working on the documentary and discussed with people in the industry what they were doing, people would tell him, "Oh, I detest RUSH. They suck. I cannot stand Geddy's voice." He's heard that before. He knows Geddy Lee's singing has a polarizing effect on people. But if you love it, you love it for life, he said, and you don't mind that it's complex, nerdy music. At their core, RUSH is a trio of outsiders. They grew up in suburban Canada, where guitarist Alex Lifeson and bassist and singer Geddy Lee were both first-generation Canadians from immigrant families, doing the best they could to avoid being the target of bullies. They didn't graduate from high school. And although they forged a career as one of the best-selling rock bands in history, the only thing rock 'n' roll about them is their music -- no drug overdoses, no sex scandals, no trashing of hotel rooms. Ever. Musicologist, author and RUSH researcher Christopher McDonald said fans deeply identify with the band because of that nonconformity. While the first wave of RUSH fans in the 1970s were seen as a homogenous audience of jean-jacket-wearing, frowning boys, it soon became obvious that the fan base was far more diverse. RUSH was dismissed by critics for their complicated songs and epically tackling fantasy and sci-fi topics in their lyrics. According to McDonald, those same qualities won them the attention of a nontraditional fan base, people who loved Dungeons & Dragons. "RUSH didn't always go after the pop culture cliches," McDonald said. "The songs were sometimes very long, the song topics were sometimes overwrought. They would have songs that quoted Hemingway, songs with a science fiction theme, an album that drew ideas from Carl Jung," he said. "Who's going to be interested in something like that? It's going to be some of the people in the Chess Club." That's why 43-year-old Web developer and proprietor of RUSH Is A Band Ed Stenger likes them. He's the first to admit you can "count the number of RUSH love songs on one hand." Like many fans who were exposed to the music of RUSH before 1980, (including McFadyen) he was ushered into the fandom by an older brother. ![]() Ed Stenger and his son Zach meet Alex Lifeson, left and Geddy Lee, right, in Toronto, Canada. "When '2112' came out, he was 14 and the time and I was 6," Stenger said. "RUSH was the background noise to my youth." And once his older brother went to college, it was easy to dig up old RUSH LPs and cassettes. The science fiction-evoking titles caught his eye first. Then he noticed "2112" was a 20-minute song. "I was like, what?!" Stenger said, "A song can't be 20 minutes long!" So he listened, and the story of the lyrics and Geddy Lee's emotional delivery hooked him. He's been a RUSH fan ever since. The defining moment of his fandom was when RUSH played the entirety of "2112" in 1996 at Cleveland's Gund Arena. The RUSH fandom has many social divisions. As Dunn and McFadyen showed in their documentary, some people -- especially musicians -- are fans of the ideals RUSH stands for: virtuosic musicianship, fearless exploration as artists and certainly stamina and longevity.. Most easily recognized is their level of musical ability. Billy Corgan, Trent Reznor, Kirk Hammett and Les Claypool appreciate the complexity of the music and the skill it takes to execute something like the guitar solo from "La Villa Strangiato." "They're like musical superheroes," McFadyen said. "They do things on their instruments that mere mortals can't do." Ask any drummer, Stenger said, and they'll tell you Neil Peart is one of the best in the world. His drum kit is a virtual fortress of percussion, dwarfing any other professional drummer's setup, McDonald said. Peart's drum solos, which can last upwards of 10 minutes, are far from a good excuse to use the restroom during a concert. "There's people who come specifically to see his solo," Stenger said. "He's able to make sounds and you can't even see him make them," said Dunn of Peart's legendary drumming. Fans also appreciate the artistic integrity of the band, who has historically ignored concerns and direction from their record company -- and won autonomy. Suburban youth especially appreciate the appeal of RUSH. McDonald discovered that the experience of the band spoke deeply to many others who dreamed of escaping their bedroom communities. Songs like "Subdivisions" and "Middletown Dreams," from the album "Power Windows" became anthems for them, he said. But the albums themselves can also mark divisions in the fandom. When Geddy Lee introduced dominant synthesizers into the band's until-then heavy guitar sound, many fans stopped listening, Stenger said. "There's a cutoff at (the album) "Moving Pictures," Stenger said. RUSH's next album, "Signals" put the group solidly into synth-pop territory, "and a lot of people did not like that at all." But even so, he said, the group of RUSH fans who grew up with the band's music from the 1970s is still the largest group in the fandom. "Then you have the fans who grew up with their music from the 1990s. Their favorite albums are 'Presto,' 'Roll the Bones,' and 'Counterparts,' " he said. "I tell them my favorite album is 'Caress of Steel' and they say, 'what?' " "Counterparts" is another one of those divisions, McDonald said. "That was the exact moment when Nirvana and Pearl Jam hit and the alternative '90s really started to go," he said. "In some ways, the world RUSH had inhabited to great success in the '80s was ending. I think 'Roll the Bones' in '91 was their last million-seller," he said. Even specific songs in the RUSH repertoire divide the fandom. The aforementioned rap on the song "Roll the Bones" makes fans either roll their eyes or chuckle at the band's sense of humor. The song "The Trees" off the album "Hemispheres" either induces an "icky feeling," as Dunn puts it, or evokes a passionate speech about the epic qualities of the guitar-driven composition and political analysis of Peart's fable-like lyrics. RUSH probably won't play "Roll the Bones" or "The Trees" during the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony, but it's a safe bet there won't be a single unlit Zippo in the group's fanbase when Peart breaks into his solo. Edited by rushfan4 - April 18 2013 at 14:14 |
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Vibrationbaby ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Joined: February 13 2004 Status: Offline Points: 6898 |
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I actually like the band and have a lot of their albums especially the earlier ones. Hell I was in high school before they really made it with Moving Pictures. Those 3 guys are cultivated, well spoken, modest gentlemen. For me Hemispheres is out of this world. Proof :
From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website
What I don't like about the band are the fans. The FANS. I've been to see them 6 times and I am not really interrested in seeing them any more because of the FANS. I hate them.. IT'S THE DAMN FANS! |
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Catcher10 ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() VIP Member Joined: December 23 2009 Location: Emerald City Status: Offline Points: 17980 |
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Alex is a riot.......classic!!
Show will be aired on HBO on May 18th. |
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ProgMetaller2112 ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: December 08 2012 Location: Pacoima,CA,USA Status: Offline Points: 3150 |
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Alex had me ![]() |
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“War is peace.
Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.” ― George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four "Ignorance and Prejudice and Fear walk Hand in Hand"- Neil Peart |
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infocat ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() VIP Member Joined: June 10 2011 Location: Colorado, USA Status: Offline Points: 4671 |
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How on earth did he keep up with that for so long!
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Frank Swarbrick Belief is not Truth. |
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geneyesontle ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 14 2012 Location: Quebec Status: Offline Points: 1266 |
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^
^ ^BEST, SPEECH, IN, THE, rock and roll hall of fame history.
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Poseidon wants to Acquire the Taste of the Fragile Lamb
- Derek Adrian Gabriel Anderson, singer of the band Geneyesontle |
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Cesar Inca ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: May 19 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 4888 |
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Neil Peart is the polite, verbally well-paced rationalist, who sees through poet's eyes and thinks with philosophical appreciations about things.
Geddy Lee is the prototypical gentleman with soft manners and a candid smile always ready to arise in his face, civil all the way through.
Alex Lifeson is...THE ULTIMATE BUFFOON!!
When you're merely focused on his continouous "bla-blaing", his speech parody seems too long and overwrought, but when you pay attention to the implicit meaning of his body language and dramatic gestures, then you can see the real speech under the parody:
- hi, it's so nice to be here
- we've worked hard for ages as rock musicians
- we've toured around the world
- we have received no support from the big industry or kind words from the most prominent music critics
- even the RHF has consistently snubbed us despite all the credentials of our historical input to the world of rock
- so we shouted "F.U.!!" to them and continued to work as hard as we have ever done, until...
- we recieved a phone call where they told us that we were inducted in the RHF
- in ecstasy, we dressed up, shaved our beards and attended the ceremony with a written speech
- it's oh so great to have these two guys as band mates
- thanks a lot to our families and our fans!
Pay attention to his faces and body language and you will "hear" all this... and then laugh histerically in the most hilarious moments. Edited by Cesar Inca - April 20 2013 at 19:36 |
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geneyesontle ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() ![]() Joined: January 14 2012 Location: Quebec Status: Offline Points: 1266 |
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Also, even though they were non-proggers, Dave and Taylor did an excellent job on the opening speech. Rush influenced countless generations of musicians including them:
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Poseidon wants to Acquire the Taste of the Fragile Lamb
- Derek Adrian Gabriel Anderson, singer of the band Geneyesontle |
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Cesar Inca ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: May 19 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 4888 |
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You can tell how moved David is: through all the joking, he is really about to cry with joy.
And let me tell you again: Alex's buffoon speech is a must, as well as a clever example of how you can mingle the idea that it is great to be properly acknowledged and the notion that this doesn't have to be taken too seriously, plus a big f.u. to the music industry's elite.
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