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Moving Pictures, Live Again: The Rush Tribute Project
With Rush no longer on the road after Neil Peart's passing, this band carries the catalog with care and guts. They frame the night around the trio's shift from 70s epics to 80s synth power, keeping tones crisp and tempos honest.
After the Silence
Expect anchors like Tom Sawyer, The Spirit of Radio, and YYZ, with a deep cut such as La Villa Strangiato when time allows. The crowd skews multi-generation, with teens in band tees next to parents comparing favorite eras and drummers quietly counting odd phrases.What You Might Hear
Trivia fans love that YYZ opens with the airport code in Morse rhythm, and that The Spirit of Radio took its name from CFNY-FM's slogan. Another nod appears when they mention Le Studio in Quebec, where much of Moving Pictures and Signals were tracked. The production is respectful, with tasteful video of era art and no chatter that breaks the flow. Note that setlist choices and cues described here are informed guesses, not a promise, since shows change city to city.Signals from the Faithful: The Rush Tribute Project Crowd
You will see vintage Moving Pictures and 2112 shirts next to simple black tees, plus a few denim vests with small enamel pins. Drummers in the crowd tap out the opening of YYZ on railings, while friends trade favorite fill moments from Tom Sawyer.
Shared Language, Quiet Pride
During The Spirit of Radio, people grin through the reggae break and clap on the off-beats without being asked. Parents point out era cues on the screen art, and kids learn the hand signs for the Hemispheres and Signals icons.Souvenirs and Stories
Merch leans classic: slim tour-date designs are replaced by album art themes, lyric fragments, and a tasteful star man nod. Conversation during set break is nerdy but warm, with quick debates over the best sequence to hear Moving Pictures live. After the show, folks linger to compare first-time moments with long-held memories, and you will notice how often people mention the sound as the hook.Craft and Thunder: The Rush Tribute Project's Live Mechanics
The vocals aim for Geddy's high glide but sit a touch lower when needed, keeping tone bright without strain. Bass drives the room with a gritty snap, often paired with foot-triggered pedal tones that mimic the old Moog Taurus swells.
Moving Parts, One Engine
Guitar shifts clean to crunch with chorus and delay for shimmer, then tight palm-mutes when riffs need bite. Keys fill the midrange with pads and sequenced parts, and the player covers extra lines via MIDI pedals rather than tracks when possible.Precision With Air
The drummer sticks to clear patterns, adding small extras like triangle, woodblocks, and bell tree hits to echo the original textures. Arrangements favor album maps, but they sometimes nudge tempos down a notch to let stacked parts breathe. A frequent live tweak is stretching the middle of YYZ into a short solo spot that nods to Peart's architecture without copying it. Lighting follows the music first, using crisp color swaps on section changes and brief strobes to underline big accents.Kindred Company: The Rush Tribute Project's Extended Family
Fans of Primus tend to show up for the nimble bass work and a love of odd grooves that still feel fun.