Geddy Lee has said he would be open to a Rush reunion with bandmate Alex Lifeson.
Fans assumed the band had broken up for good after the death of drummer Neil Peart in 2020, who quietly battled brain cancer for three years.
Opening up in a new interview with The Washington Post, the musician reflected on the band having a reunion of sorts at the Taylor Hawkin’s tribute concerts last year in memory of the Foo Fighters drummer.
āIt had been a taboo subject,ā he said of the experience. āAnd playing those songs again with a third person was the elephant in the room, and that kind of disappeared.ā
During the tribute shows in Los Angeles and London, Lee and Lifeson played Rush songs alongside a host of musical friends including the Foo’s own Dave Grohl, Tool‘s Danny Carey, Red Hot Chili Peppers‘ Chad Smith and Omar Hakim.
Lee said: āIt was nice to know that if we decide to go out, Alex and I, whether we went out as part of a new thing, or whether we just wanted to go out and play Rush as Rush, we could do that now.ā
Following Peart’s death, Lee seemed to suggest that Rush’s touring days were definitely behind them.
āThatās finished, right? Thatās over,” he told Rolling Stone early in 2021. “I still am very proud of what we did. I donāt know what I will do again in music. And Iām sure Al doesnāt, whether its together, apart, or whatever. But the music of Rush is always part of us.
“And I would never hesitate to play one of those songs in the right context. But at the same time, you have to give respect to what the three of us with Neil did together.ā
In July, Lifeson reiterated this, saying there was āno way Rush will ever exist againā without Peart.
Speaking on SiriusXMās āTrunk Nation with Eddie Trunkā (per Blabbermouth), the guitarist said: āI know Rush fans are a unique bunch, and I love them. It was a really good two-way relationship. But I think, really, Rush ended in 2015. Thereās no way Rush will ever exist again because Neilās not here to be a part of it.”
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