Neil Peart’s Obituary

The Guardian posted Neil Peart’s obituary.  Click the link, or read it here.

The drummer Neil Peart, who has died aged 67 of brain cancer, enjoyed such a reputation for his deft, powerful drumming with the Canadian rock band Rush that he became adept at deflecting praise from interviewers on the subject. “What is a master but a master student?” was a common response on Peart’s part, a hint at his interests in esoteric philosophy as well as an indicator of the reflective thinking that made him also an acclaimed lyricist for the band.

The many songs that Peart wrote for Rush, for all but one of their 19 studio albums, were inspired by subjects as diverse as libertarianism, fantasy fiction, religious thought and the pressures of fame – the last of these expressed most clearly in the 1981 single Limelight, in which he used Shakespearean phrases to illustrate his points.

His drum parts on tracks such as Tom Sawyer (also 1981, both from the bestselling album Moving Pictures) and Spirit of Radio (1980), locked in with singer Geddy Lee’s bass-playing to form a complex rhythmic signature, which became renowned. Many fans flocked to see the band live because of the epic nature of Peart’s drumming, performed on a huge, futuristic, gold-plated kit that included wood blocks, timpani and gongs as well as the standard set.

In 2016 Rolling Stone magazine put Peart at No 4 in its list of 100 Greatest Drummers of All Time, after John Bonham, Keith Moon and Ginger Baker. As the Nirvana drummer and FooFighters frontman, Dave Grohl, said: “Neil Peart – that’s a whole other animal, another species of drummer”.

Born in Hagersville, near Hamilton, Ontario, to Betty and Glenn Peart, who sold farm equipment, Neil was the eldest of four children. Like many budding drummers, he had a habit of playing rhythms on household furniture, in his case with a pair of chopsticks: this led his parents to buy him a basic drum kit on his 13th birthday. A year later a full kit followed, accompanied by lessons at the Peninsula College of Music in British Columbia, and Peart debuted as a drummer at a school pageant.

A series of bands followed, including Mumblin’ Sumpthin’, the Majority, and JR Flood, with gigs at small venues in southern Ontario. Aged 18, he moved to London to try to make it as a musician while also selling jewellery in Carnaby Street, but met with little success and in 1972 he returned to Canada to work for his father’s business.

In 1974, while playing with a local band called Hush, he was persuaded to audition for Rush, a band similar in name but very different in style.

The other musicians, Lee (born Gary Weinrib) and the guitarist Alex Lifeson, had recorded a self-titled debut album that year, but their original drummer, John Rutsey, had left due to health issues. Lee described Peart’s audition in 2018: “He comes in, this big goofy guy with a small drum kit with 18-inch bass drums. Alex and I were chuckling – we thought he was a hick from the country. And then he sat down and pummelled the drums, and us. I’d never heard a drummer like that, someone with that power and dexterity. As far as I was concerned, he was hired from the minute he started playing.”

Rush’s first album with Peart, Fly By Night (1975), demonstrated the musical expertise and lyrical opacity typical of the band. Despite being dismissed by critics as making “music for nerds”, their 1976 album, 2112, was an enormous success. Its 20-minute title track featured lyrics written by Peart that were at least partly inspired by the writings of the controversial author Ayn Rand, adopted by many on the right of politics. Despite having been a young fan of the author, Peart later disavowed those beliefs.

The albums Permanent Waves (1980) and Moving Pictures (1981) saw Rush established as the epitome of prog (progressive) rock, which the subsequent world tours did nothing to dissuade. Live shows included a long drum solo that was the centrepiece of the band’s performance. Audiences responded with enthusiasm, but the introverted Peart did not enjoy being famous.

A major hiatus came after Peart’s 19-year-old daughter Selena was killed in a car accident in 1997 and her mother, Jacqueline Taylor, died 10 months later. The drummer took time away from Rush, seeking therapy in long motorcycle journeys through the Americas. He later recounted his recovery in the book Ghost Rider: Travels on the Healing Road and wrote six other volumes of non-fiction.

In 2000 he married the photographer Carrie Nuttall and settled in Los Angeles, becoming a US citizen. He rejoined Rush in 2001, when classic rock was experiencing a resurgence and the band’s profile was on the rise again, and they went on several world tours. Their last studio album, Clockwork Angels, was released in 2012; Rush celebrated their 40th anniversary with the R40 Live Tour three years later. Peart’s lengthy drum solos consolidated his reputation as one of the world’s greatest percussionists.

However, his unique playing style had created health problems, and in 2015 Peart stated that the band would no longer tour due to his tendonitis. It later emerged that he had also received his cancer diagnosis around this time.

Peart is survived by Carrie, their daughter, Olivia, his parents, and his siblings, Judy, Nancy and Danny.

 Neil Peart, drummer and writer, born 12 September 1952; died 7 January 2020

Band Practice, At Last

The band got together for the first time since November 30th and it was just as bad as you’d expect.  We had been talking about seriously trying to add a Rush song.  We had also been talking about goofing around on a Rush song.  We did neither.  Any time one of us finds a song that he can fudge his way though, some one else is unable to fight through the awesomeness.  What can you do, right?  Neil Peart was aware of the effect he had on cover bands.  We all desperately want to play their stuff, but they are just too good and the songs are too hard.

Still, earlier today me and my Gibson SG and my Vox MV50 and my Apple HomePod spent some quality time laughing at my inability to get through a whole slew of Rush songs.  Mike had mentioned New World Man and I sort of hyper focused on that one.  By the time I left for rehearsal I could get all the way through it.  Sometimes Rush is able to make a song sound really easy while still twisting your fingers into knots.  New World Man is a little like that.  I could play it.  Mike could almost play it.  Kevin tried and just laughed at how hard it was.  That’s how it is being a Rush fan in a cover band.  You try and try and it’s just beyond you.

Maybe we’ll come up with something.  The search is never ending.  Kevin played Stick it Out in a previous band.  I know for sure that back in the 90’s I could play that one.  It’s in dropped D tuning and the scale patterns are like a maze drawn by a crazy person, but at one point in the past I know I could do it.  That means the bass part is probably going to give Mike nightmares.

Whatever we try next, it will have to wait.  Turns out we have a gig on February 1st.  It’s another private party, but this time it’s in a public place.  We will be celebrating Greg the Singer’s birthday.  I have no idea what the parameters are.  Will we play an hour set again?  Will we play two?  No idea.  We’ll figure it out.

In gear news, I took all of the stay-at-home stuff to Mike’s house.  The little pedal board with the Tumnus and the OCD Ge and the Deluxe Reverb.  I plugged in the attenuator but I was getting a lot of noise and pulled it out.  It didn’t fix the noise though so it will probably go back.  I didn’t want to crank the amp, I still want a clean tone, but I want to run it much higher than I usually do.  Maybe have the volume at 5 or 6 instead of two.

That means I have the 18/30 watt Bassbreaker at home along with the big pedal board with the KTR and the OCD v1.7.  I have plans for that stuff and the plans are called The RPM Challenge… though there is now a gig in the way of that… soooo…. I don’t know what.  I’ll probably bring the big board to next Sunday’s practice and use that for the gig as usual.  Then I can bring it home for RPM.  I have visions of running two amps.  The 15 watt Bassbreaker paired with the 18 watt channel on the 18/30 watt Bassbreaker.  It will be a big bonanza of Bassbreaker.

I Forgot One Funny Thing

When I wrote a little bit about Neil Peart on stage yesterday I forgot the funniest moment. I can’t remember when or where this was, and I’m a little afraid it might actually be from one of their concert films but I don’t think it was…

Alex Lifeson was soloing at the end of a song and he just plain screwed up. It happens to all of us now and then, even to the greatest musicians on earth, it’s just much less often for them. As the song ended, but just before the lights dropped, I clearly saw Neil lean towards Alex and say something. I could read his lips perfectly. “You suck,” he said. Alex started laughing and the lights went dark and that was it.

Even the holy trinity trash talked on stage. Awesome.

Facebook Aftermath

When I heard about Neil I changed my Facebook pic to an old picture of him, post-mustache, pre-rat tail.

Since then I have received close to 40 friend requests from fellow fans/grievers. I give them a quick look. If there are mutual friends I’ll probably accept them. If there is anything trumpish they get deleted. One was from someone who was alarmingly Christian and he was deleted too.

I’m okay with all of this, but the second I start seeing pro-Trump anything you go right in the trash. Rush always had a way of pulling in the right wing (Neil went through quite the Libertarian phase, though he admitted to supporting Democrats after he moved to the US) and I have a strict zero-tolerance policy for crap like that from people I don’t know in real life.

The axe will fall and it will fall swiftly.

Obviously there are lots of Christian-ish posts flying around. He’s in a better place, he’s looking down at us, he gets to see his daughter, stuff like that. I don’t get it. Neil was very publicly an atheist. Viewing him in some Christian afterlife heavenly way seem like you are insulting him. That’s not how he saw the universe. Show him some fucking respect.

I Saw Rush 25 Times

I knew I had a list of shows somewhere online.  I had to go back to the Rush Forum site for the first time since 2015 to find it.  It still listed the last show as a future show, but it had ’em all.

1987-12-03 – Worcester Centrum – Worcester, MA
1990-05-10 – Worcester Centrum – Worcester, MA
1991-12-10 – Worcester Centrum – Worcester, MA
1994-03-11 – Worcester Centrum – Worcester, MA
1996-11-09 – Fleet Center – Boston, MA
1997-06-23 – Great Woods – Mansfield, MA
2002-07-12 – Tweeter Center – Mansfield, MA
2002-10-28 – Fleet Center – Boston, MA
2004-08-12 – Tweeter Center – Mansfield, MA
2007-06-27 – Tweeter Center – Mansfield, MA
2007-07-09 – Mohegan Sun Arena – Uncasville, CT
2007-09-06 – Marcus Amphitheater – Milwaukee, WI
2007-09-17 – Madison Square Garden – New York, NY
2008-06-15 – Comcast Center – Mansfield, MA
2008-07-05 – Saratoga Springs Performing Arts Center – Saratoga Springs, NY
2008-07-07 – Mohegan Sun Arena – Uncasville, CT
2008-07-11 – Verizon Arena – Manchester, NH
2010-09-14 – TD Garden – Boston, MA
2011-04-08 – Giant Center – Hershey, PA
2011-04-10 – Madison Square Garden – New York, NY
2012-09-07 – Verizon Wireless Arena – Manchester, NH
2013-05-09 – Mohegan Sun Arena – Uncasville, CT
2013-05-11 – Etess Arena – Atlantic City, NJ
2015-06-23 – TD Garden – Boston, MA
2015-06-29 – Madison Square Garden – New York, NY

The Professor

Just a bunch of random pics of Neil Peart that I took over the years.  The quality will be just as awful as you’d expect.

R40 at Madison Square Garden in New York, 6/29/15
DSCN0500

Snakes and Arrows in Saratoga Springs, NY on 7/5/08.
Rush 7-5-08 Saratoga Springs, NY 021

Snakes and Arrows at the Verizon Arena (it’s not called that anymore) in Manchester, NH on 7/11/08.
Rush @ Manchester 7-11-08 022

Opening night of the Clockwork Angels tour in Manchester on 9/7/12.
Untitled

Clockwork Angels at the Mohegan Sun Arena in CT on 5/9/13.
Untitled

Waiting for the drum stick to come back on the Clockwork Angels tour at the Taj in Atlantic City, NJ on 5/11/13.  Best seats I’ve ever had for a Rush show.
Untitled

R40 at the TD Garden in Boston on 6/23/15.  Second best seats I’ve ever had at a Rush show.  At least the second best seats I had at a show when I had a camera with me.  I had killer seats at a Snakes and Arrows show at Mohegan sun in ’07, and at a Presto show in ’90 at the Worcester Centrum, but no camera at either of those.
#rush #r40bos #r40live #r40

Time Machine Tour at the TD Garden in Boston on 9/14/10.
2010-09-14 - Rush at TD Garden 591

Neil was never one to show a lot of emotion on stage.  At least he wasn’t by the time I started seeing them. He would sometimes get a little goofy and make stupid faces at the other guys, things like that.  It was rare for him to let us see what he was thinking though.  You can’t blame him, he’s playing the most difficult drum parts any rock drummer has ever attempted.  It took a ton of concentration.

There was one moment that I clearly recall that I wish I had a camera for though.  A camera and a tape recorder.  It was in 2007 on the Snakes and Arrows tour at the Mohegan Sun arena.  I was sitting (standing) on the floor, reasonably close to the stage and I could see it clearly.  They were playing Mission and he had an equipment issue.  I think his MIDI Marimba thing failed or something like that.  As the song was ending he let a bit of frustration show on his face and he took it out on his drums.  He laid into a fill to close the song that literally (well, maybe not literally) shook the entire stage.  It was ferocious… and it was awesome.  When you are the best that’s ever lived you can do stuff like that.  He was the best whose ever lived.  Moon was great.  Bonham was great.  So many of them were great.  Neil was better.  You can’t argue it.  Neil was just better.

I saw Rush play live something like 20 times between December 1987 and June 2015.  I’ve lost track of exactly how many.  I think 22, maybe?  Whatever.  Each one was a gift.  Each one was a thrill.

Not Sorry

If you were just on rt 495 in Haverhill and heard Vapor Trails blasting out of some asshole’s car at obscene volume, that was me. I’m that asshole. It’s 64 degrees out in mid January and I was sure as shit opening all the windows. Zero fucks given.

Exit… Stage Left

It was the first album I bought. I think it was 1981, but it may have been ’82 by then. I’m pretty sure it was still the most recent record, but Signals may have been out by then.

That’s not the original copy though. I bought this one on eBay a few years ago. The original was on cassette and the tape broke shortly after I bought it. I’m pretty sure I was in school when it happened and I’m also pretty sure I cried a little.

I’ve never been a drummer, but part of me always wanted to be one. I still remember the first time I heard his drum solo on YYZ. Side one, track three. My jaw hit the floor. Not too long after that I heard the studio recording of YYZ when I bought the Moving Pictures album. Also side one, track three. I was really disappointed to hear that the huge drum solo was only two bars long.

Donna Harper tweeted that only a few people knew he was sick. He was a private guy to the end. The other two band members knew. I can’t fault him for his wish for privacy, but I very selfishly wish he had let the public know. We could have eased into it a little. That’s my problem though, not his.

I does feel silly to be heart broken over the passing of someone I never knew, but that’s how it is. What else can you do?