RUSH - Drummer NEIL PEART's Official Website Get A Facelift

November 19, 2007, 16 years ago

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The following RUSH update comes to BW&BK; courtesy of RushIsABand.com:

" Neil Peart's official website recently underwent a major design makeover. The new design theme is based on Neil's red Snakes & Arrows drumkit. The flash intro now has a drumhead image that gets run over by a motorcycle when you click to enter the site. Once inside, if you close the News section on the home page you are presented with a cool picture of Neil sitting onstage (see image on left) at the Hollywood Bowl with his BMW motorcycle in front of his Snakes & Arrows kit (there's even a mic set up next to the bike's engine). Although the design has changed, there's no new content other than the onstage picture."

As previously reported, the following story is courtesy of Frank Ahrens from the Washington Post:

In a rundown walk-up in Silver Spring, MD class begins to rock.

On a recent Tuesday night, about 15 teenagers are taking turns approximating a pretty good RUSH cover band at Paul Green's School of Rock, one of a number of rock 'n' roll schools popping up around the region and the nation.

There are at least three rock schools in the Washington area. The nascent sector got a boost with the 2003 film "School of Rock," in which a failed rock musician, played by real-life rocker Jack Black, impersonates a school teacher at an elite prep school and teaches a gang of middle-schoolers the only thing he knows: how to rawwwk.

Now, in real life, classically trained musicians, working session guys and aging rockers are discovering that there is an emerging business to be made in teaching kids the music of STEVIE WONDER, LED ZEPPELIN and KISS, INSTEAD OF BEETHOVEN, MOZART and BACH.

At the Silver Spring School of Rock, a charmingly disheveled space across from the AFI Silver Theatre, a teenage drummer, guitarist, bassist, keyboardist and vocalist are playing on a makeshift stage under fluorescent black light, rocking a muscular version of 'Tom Sawyer', the 1981 anthem by Canadian math-rock trio Rush.

The song, like many in the Rush catalogue, is among the harder songs a rock band can attempt. There is no three-chord simplicity here. 'Tom Sawyer' showcases Neil Peart's uncanny polyrhythmic percussion.

Read more here.


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