RIP Neil Peart

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Dark, dark day in Canuckistani rock and roll.

RIP to an incomparable drummer and I would highly recommended his books to any readers out there
 
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Selfishly, I retroactively feel like a terrible person for always wanting one more go around from this man who, in addition to the passing of his wife and daughter, suffered more than any of us knew.

He owed us nothing and he gave us everything.

Every album, every show - everything.
 
Crushed is the right word.

Fortunate to have seen Rush live three times, and his solos were something to behold. A ****ing clinic. RIP. Dammit.
 
Very sad to hear. I liked Rush over the years, though I wasn't a fanatic about it. However, I would just marvel at the drum playing in their songs when I would listen, and I'm not even a musician.
Not surprised that few people knew he was fighting cancer. He was always an extremely private person.
I saw the band's bio "Beyond the Lighted Stage," and I think I've posted on here before my favorite story from that film. They said that before joining Rush, Peart was content to leave his music dreams behind and start working with his Dad at a farm-equipment parts dealership. When he had the chance to join Rush, his dad sat him down and told him he needed to see his musical aspirations through and that he should take this opportunity, and the rest is history. So, RIP Neil and a salute to Glen Peart for letting us enjoy his son's talent.
 
Damn. I saw them twice, on the Power Windows and Hold Your Fire tours.

When I was in sixth grade, some of my latchkey friends rode their bikes from St. Charles to St. Louis to see Rush on the Moving Pictures tour. I was not so bold.

In their peak, Rush put out Permanent Waves, Moving Pictures and Signals in a two-year period. And in addition to being the gold standard for drumming, Peart also wrote most of the band's lyrics.
 
I was an awkward, somewhat lonely teenager in the 80s. I was shuttling between divorced parents' homes in two different parts of the country not feeling like I really fit in either place. I had interests that either classmates didn't share or if they did, they weren't interested the same way I was. And I didn't have a whole hell of a lot of social confidence. Pretty much the caricature of a Rush fan (hell the song "Subdivisions," which came out when I was 12, could have been about me). Needless to say Rush's music and Neil Peart's lyrics in particular really spoke to me and gave me a sense of escape and empowerment and provided an empathy that helped me through some challenging years. By the end of senior year I'd grown into myself and was in a much better place, but I've remained a huge Rush fan and I appreciate everything Neil gave us. Saw them at least a half-dozen times but I wish I could have seen them just once more.
 
So sad. I saw Rush twice and he was the best drummer I’ve ever seen. Thinking of 2112 right now.
 
Honestly, he was so great, the songs can never really be played again live. No one can match him.

It’s like Bruce trying to perform Jungleland without the Big Man, it will never be the same.
 

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