Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson on Rush's next chapter

Geddy Lee may now live a rock star's life, with some of his 350 bass guitars lining his home studio. But it's nothing he could've imagined, this son of Jewish immigrants, Holocaust survivors who'd courted at Auschwitz. "It's a miracle I'm sitting here and able to enjoy the fruits of my life, all because they held out and survived," he said.

His given name is Gary. "And my mom had a very thick accent, and so she said, 'Geddy, come the house.' That's how my name was born."

The life his parents' determination provided was changed forever in eighth grade, when Lee started chatting with a kid sitting nearby in the back of the room: Alex Lifeson.

Lee noted, "We were really goofy."

Axelrod asked, "It's so odd when he uses the word goofy; the future rock stars are always the coolest guys in the room."

"We wanted to be cool," laughed Lifeson. "But we were too goofy to figure out how to do that!"

A few years later, Lifeson was on guitar and Lee on bass when they held auditions for a drummer. "And to our everlasting good fortune, a lanky, shirtless, goofy guy pulled up in a Ford Pinto and started playing triplets like machine gun rattle," said Lee.

Neil Peart completed the lineup that would stay together for the next four-plus decades.

Rush's blend of musicianship, stagecraft and, yes, a little goofiness inspired intense loyalty from a crowd that was largely male teenagers in the early days. Though the 1981 album "Moving Pictures" had fan favorites like "Limelight" and "Tom Sawyer," hit singles were never their jam. Lee notes, "We used to say, 'Wow, that's a catchy tune we just wrote. If somebody else played it, it might be a single, but if we play it for sure, we'll f*** it up!'"

But they knew what they were doing, combining that big, progressive rock sound with Geddy's distinctive voice. One critic wrote, "If Lee's voice were any higher and raspier, his audience would consist entirely of dogs and extraterrestrials."

"That's a good one," said Lee. "I'll buy that!"

Theirs was a formula that would sell 40 million albums.

The lesson? "The lesson," said Lee, "is be yourself and stick to your guns."

Bassist Geddy Lee, drummer Neil Peart and guitarist Alex Lifeson of the Canadian progressive rock group Rush posing in a studio in London, June 1980.

And that might've been the whole story of Canada's most successful rock band ever. But in 1997 the music stopped. Neil Peart's daughter died in a car crash. "It's the worst pain, the worst possible pain, to lose your child," said Lee.

Ten months later, Peart's wife died of cancer. It would take five years for Peart to want to play again.

Lee said, "And we walked out on stage as three people that were really thankful that we had a second chance to do this. Rush 2.0 was a different band."

How? "More appreciative, looser. We just started saying yes to things we normally said no to."

Which is how they ended up in TV shows like "South Park," and movies like "I Love You, Man."

Lifeson also noticed a change in their audiences: "We'd see more women at our shows. Like, a lot more."

"But it was really interesting to see the growth of the band go from that kind of cliquey thing, culty thing to something more broader," Lifeson said.

Asked whether they'd considered finding another great drummer to go tour again, Lee said, "Have we talked about it? Yeah. It's not impossible, but at this point, I can't guarantee it."

Meanwhile, Lifeson strikes a more hopeful note. "It's just not in our DNA to stop," he said.

Rush fans should know, however they continue to collaborate, they'll do it the way they always have, as Lee says: "Do what you believe, because if you do what someone else believes and you fail, you got nothing. If you do what you believe and you fail, you still have hope."

32nd Annual Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame Induction Ceremony - Press Room

Photo: Getty Images North America


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