But the Canadian trio's endeavors 50 years ago marked what guitarist Alex Lifeson considers "a new start" for the band. That year, 1975, featured not one but two impactful studio albums for Rush.
Envy of None’s second album Stygian Wavz proves Alex Lifeson was right to work with other artists - might it make Geddy Lee ...
The Canadian guitarist sits down with Q’s Tom Power to reflect on his life and career — and how he knew at 17 that he was ...
Other never-before-heard live cuts found on Rush 50 include “Bad Boy” and “Garden Road,” both of them recorded from the ...
The famed guitarist was three years into his music career and just a few years from getting his first taste of success at the ...
In an interview with Postmedia's Mark Daniell, Rush guitarist Alex Lifeson talks about ‘Stygian Wavz,’ the new album from his ...
Alex Lifeson has come a long way from the early days of Rush when the band was working with an initial maximum eight tracks for recording and eventually, 16 tracks and beyond. But even as the ...
Heart’s Nancy Wilson, Slash, Rush’s Alex Lifeson are among the stars who are saluting Canadian power trio Triumph on a new ...
“ The first record really got me going again. After coming off Rush and (late drummer) Neil (Peart’s) illness, this is the ...
Every time I hear it, I'm really happy with it." In addition to diving into Stygian Waves, Lifeson reflected on the history of Rush and how they started playing together in Canada in the late-'60s ...
When former Rush guitarist Alex Lifeson recorded the debut self-titled album of his new band Envy of None, which was released ...