
Neil at Irvine Meadows, Orange County, CA. Photo: Paul Lasiter
liveDaily.com Interview: Neil Peart of Rush
By Don Zulaica, liveDaily Contributor
Although the group--bassist-keyboardist-vocalist Geddy Lee, guitarist Alex
Lifeson and drummer-percussionist Neil Peart--doesn't have an album of new
material out, it recently released "Feedback," an EP of covers that includes
The Who's "The Seeker," Buffalo Springfield's "For What It's Worth" and The
Yardbirds' "Heart Full of Soul."
Over their three-decade career, the Canadian rockers sponged musical
influences from progressive rock and fusion to funk and reggae, and
persevered through a cloudy period after the well-documented tragedies of
the late '90s, when Peart lost his daughter in an automobile accident and
his wife to cancer less than a year later. The band hung tough and released
"Vapor Trails," and the subsequent tour was documented on the Juno-winning
CD/DVD "Rush in Rio."
St. Catharines, Ontario native Peart actually played piano before he took up
drums at the age of 13. Besides being something of a drumming icon today, he
also is Rush's lyricist.
liveDaily: So did you get your first drums when you were 13?
Neil Peart: No, no drums. For my 13th birthday, I got a pair of sticks and a
practice pad. My parents said, "Once you show that you're going to stick
with it for a year, then we'll get you some drums." That's the way that went
down. Fair enough. I'd do the same thing.
Once you got that first pad, was it a galvanizing thing right away?
Oh yeah, it was before that, really.
When did you say to yourself, "This is what I'm going to do"?
Well, I was never that sweepingly unrealistic, but it certainly was what I
wanted to do. And even without drums, I would take magazines and lay them
out on my bed, and pretend they were drums and cymbals, and beat the covers
off them. It became total obsession.
What was the idea behind "Feedback?"
Our vision was 1966, when we were teenagers. We just decided to pick songs
from our youth that we liked and make a tribute album to the people we grew
up on. For instance, we did "Summertime Blues" and kind of combined the
arrangements of Blue Cheer and The Who, and did Buffalo Springfield's "For
What It's Worth," and this other obscure '60s band called Love, a song
called "Seven and Seven Is." All of us loved being freed from the
material--in other words, not being responsible to think it up. And we did
it our own way, of course, but we paid a little due respect to the times. We
called the project "Feedback" because when Geddy and Alex were working on
demos, they decided to have feedback and backwards guitar on every song.
After seeing the "Rush in Rio" DVD, it seems amazing those shows happened
at all. Explain how they came together, the weather, and everything else.
We went there with the wide-open expectation that it would be out of our
control, basically, and that we wouldn't have our usual tight reign on
everything, technologically and personally, as we can in the United States
or Canada. So we went there very much open-minded, with an attitude of:
whatever happens, we'll deal with it along the way. There were three shows,
all outdoors in big soccer stadiums, and it constantly rained.
The first day they couldn't get the monitor board working at all, and they
were figuring out how to move the house mixing board down beside the stage
so our front-of-house mixer could mix live sound and the monitors from the
side of the stage. It was about problem solving. The electronics went out on
the second night in Sao Paolo, where we were in front of 60,000 people and
it had been raining off and on, and blowing rain right in our faces--it was
surreal. It was something you might see in a video, but not in real life.
How did you deal with that?
That night in Sao Paolo--when all of the electronic drums and MIDI marimba
and everything were gone--immediately my mind was thinking ahead, not only
getting around the parts that night, because it was like, "Okay, what am I
going to do tomorrow night? How am I going to play my solo without those
things?" I'd be thinking ahead to the next song, "What do I do? Okay, I
won't have that sound. Here's how I can imitate it or get around it or
whatever." I was already starting to orchestrate a new solo that wouldn't
have those things, because that's what you have to do.
And the next day in Rio, the trucks were late and didn't arrive until late
afternoon, and we're filming and recording the last night of the tour, our
one and only chance that we really wanted to capture on that tour. So this
was the last and final chance under the most ... impossible is not too
strong a word. No sound check. Minutes before we went on, [drum tech] Lorne
[Wheaton] came up to tell me the electronics were actually working. They had
no sound check for the recording truck, no test for the cameras, everybody
had to adopt that attitude of, "Okay, here's what we do." And did.
One telling anecdote that I love, the carpet that we used on stage got so
soaking wet during those days that we had to leave it behind. It was too
heavy to ship home. It was so waterlogged that it would have cost way more
than it was worth to ship it home, so we just left it there. It's in some
Brazilian guy's living room. [laughs]
Without naming names, there are a lot of veteran bands putting out
product that don't look like they're having near the amount of fun you were
having on the DVD.
It was one of those magical nights, despite all. I not only remember that
show now, I knew at the time it was going really well. And, yeah, in
retrospect I really like the way the video came out. Alex spent a lot of
work on the audio trying to rescue all that went wrong in that truck during
the course of the show. There was a lot of technical fixing up to do that
took him a lot of work. But in the final analysis it was a piece of work I'm
proud of.