Few hard rock bassists have been as influential
as Rush's Geddy Lee. Born Gary Weinrib on July 29, 1953, in Toronto, his
parents migrated from Europe to Canada and got his nickname "Geddy" from
when his mother would try to pronounce "Gary" in her
accent. Taking up bass as a teenager and influenced by the likes of the
Who's John Entwistle, Cream's Jack Bruce, and Led Zeppelin's John Paul
Jones, Lee hooked up with guitarist Alex Lifeson and drummer John Rutsey to
form the hard rocking trio Rush (Lee would also serve as the band's lead
vocalist). Although the band would eventually find success and fortune as a
progressive hard rock band, early on they were highly derivative of blues
rock/Led Zeppelin, as their self-titled 1973 debut proved.
But when Neal Peart replaced Rutsey one year later, the band's sound and
musical direction immediately changed. Gone were the long Zep-jams and in
came technically demanding and challenging hard rock, complete with
thought-provoking lyrics (courtesy of Peart) -- although Lee's high-pitched,
Robert Plant-esque wail remained. After honing their sound on a few albums,
the trio hit pay dirt with relentless touring and their 1976 sci-fi concept
album, 2112. Each successive release outsold it's predecessor (such prog
metal classics as A Farewell to Kings, Hemispheres, Permanent Waves), and by
1981's Moving Pictures, Rush had become one of the biggest rock bands on the
planet. Throughout the '80s, Rush explored more modern (almost new wave-ish)
sounds, yet their massive fan base remained in tact -- with Lee's vocals
becoming more restrained.
Rush cruised along throughout the '90s (returning to their earlier, organic
hard rock sound with such releases as 1993's Counterparts), issuing
successful albums and playing sold-out arena tours worldwide, until the band
went on indefinite hiatus in 1997. To combat the downtime, Lee issued his
first ever solo album in 2000, My Favorite Headache (who was joined by ex-Soundgarden
drummer Matt Cameron and ex-FM guitarist/violinist Ben Mink). Lee's
influence on rock bass can be heard in the playing of such wide-ranging
disciples as Primus' Les Claypool, Dream Theater's John Myung, and
Metallica's Cliff Burton. |


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