Jump to content

Geddy talks about his book in new Premier Guitar interview


blueschica
 Share

Recommended Posts

It's a short article, so I just copied it to here . . . link for those that like links . . . https://www.premierg...icent-obsession

 

Geddy Lee’s Magnificent Obsession

 

 

David Von Bader

March 05, 2019

 

mr3AMh5.png

 

"Last year, after four decades of touring and recording, prog-rock giants Rush came to a halt following Neil Peart’s retirement from drumming. While the trio remain close friends, and bassist and frontman Geddy Lee and guitarist Alex Lifeson haven’t ruled out the prospect of further collaboration, each of Rush’s members are currently living life as a solo act.

 

Lee is a voracious collector of everything from wines to baseball ephemera, and over the past decade has increasingly turned that interest toward vintage bass guitars. The virtuoso says he initially set out with the modest intention of chasing down nice examples of the instruments wielded by his musical heroes: a ’62 Fender Jazz bass like John Paul Jones used in Led Zeppelin, a Gibson EB-3 like Jack Bruce’s in Cream, and so on. However, Lee is afflicted with the curse of the completest, and his curiosity grew with the purchase of each old instrument. Questions about the evolution of particular models and the spaces they occupied in the relatively short history of the electric bass led Lee deeper down the rabbit hole.

 

Eventually, Lee, who had previously only purchased basses as tools to create music, amassed a collection of over 250 vintage examples. Next came the idea to document his incredible collection and passion for the instrument in a book. Thus, Geddy Lee’s Big Beautiful Book of Bass was published in December 2018.The volume features world-class photos and notes about the basses in Lee’s collection, interviews with some of the celebrated players that shaped his musical world—including John Paul Jones and the Rolling Stones’ Bill Wyman, and showcases Lee’s transition from collector to archeologist of the bass.

Premier Guitar spoke with Lee over the phone as he relaxed at home in Toronto with his beloved Norwich Terriers. The conversation covered Lee’s passion for collecting and his new book, some of the rare instruments he’s now the custodian of, the challenges of Rush’s music, and what the future may hold for him as a player.

“The bass collecting and this book really felt like the first time that I was paying something back to the instrument that’s given me my entire life.”

 

The collection of basses you’ve put together is pretty astounding.

It was no small task, and it was sort of a crash course for me. Considering that I’ve been playing for over 42 years, I probably should’ve known half of this stuff, but collecting vintage wasn’t really my thing. The whole vintage thing came to me over the last, maybe, 10 years. Prior to that, I was only looking at my instruments as tools to get me the sounds and playability that I needed to have onstage and in the studio.

When I was a kid, I collected stamps, and then when I got turned on to music, I had a big vinyl collection and I was pretty fanatical about that. Over the years, I got into first edition books, baseball stuff, and then there’s the wine“issue,” but the bass collecting and this book really felt like the first time that I was paying something back to the instrument that’s given me my entire life. It was a project that not only edified me in terms of what the world of instruments was like between 1950 and 1980, but it also was kind of a full circle for me as the first good instrument I ever bought was a 1968 Fender.

Was there a particular bass that catalyzed your transition from player to collector?

Yeah. The first instrument I bought as a collector was a ’53 Fender P bass, and I wanted that because it’s my birth year. Collectors seem to look for stuff from their birth year as a kind of ego thing. I guess everyone wants to celebrate their own entry into the world, right? So that’s where it started for me and that was a very important piece because, in researching that piece, I learned how early 1953 reallywas for the electric bass, having only been invented as a commercially available thing in ’51. That bass really got me thinking about that period, and, as a collector, it’s access to a window into history that really gets me motivated. Through that, I started learning about Leo [Fender] and I started being very interested in the changes that happened in the first 10 years of the P bass, because from ’51 to ’61 that instrument went through a lot of changes as Leo tweaked and looked for the ideal version of the Precision bass. Those early iterations and the modifications he made are interesting not only in learning about that instrument, but also learning about what made Leo Fender tick. Suffice to say Leo’s a fairly interesting character in the history of vintage instruments. That was one aspect that really got me turned on, and then I started casting my gaze to other instruments.

 

 

 

 

7ToyDJmm.png

TIDBIT: For
Geddy Lee’s Big Beautiful Bass Book
, he interviewed bassists like Bill Wyman and John Paul Jones who could talk with authority about buying basses during certain periods.

 

Ever since I started using my ’72 Fender Jazz bass as my main stage instrument in the early ’90s, I’ve been obsessed with finding a backup for it that matched it tonally. I had a really hard time finding one that sounded the same, and have always wondered why certain instruments have a particular tone and why it’s so difficult to find others that sound the same. That lead me on my Jazz bass hunt, and I had heard somany things about the pre-CBS era of Fender, I really wanted to understand what had happened from 1960 and 1972 to make my main Jazz bass what it is, and how many changes had that model gone through during those years. Was it the same thing the P bass had gone through in its first 10 years, with these really dramatic changes to the design? And it was those questions that really led me down the rabbit hole.

I love how wholly you’ve thrown yourself into the archeology of bass—especially when it comes to mavericks like Leo Fender.

These are products of humans, right? So when a bass hits my hands, I want to know the context. Who made it? Why did they make it? Where did it come from? Where did the idea for it come from? What stage of development in the guitarmaker’s mind was this instrument? Does it represent the ultimate product for him, or was it something that he made along the way to getting there? Those are burning questions for me, and they happen no matter what kind of man-made object I turn my gaze on … whether it’s wine or watches or whatever! All of these things are just entry points, but it’s about learning more about the world and celebrating the incredible achievements of human beings!

Was the book something you had in mind as you got deeper into collecting, or just a by-product of it?

The book was a by-product, and I didn’t intend to collect so many basses when I started. I originally set out to collect maybe a dozen basses that represented the models played by the guys that taught me everything through my listenings—my heroes. So I was after a Gibson EB-3 that represented Jack Bruce, a Hofner 500-1 Violin Bass that represented Paul McCartney, a ’62 Fender Jazz bass like John Paul Jones used on the early Led Zeppelin records. Those were what I set out to put together in a modest collection just to be able to have some fun with them, but when I get into collecting, I turn into sort of a completist. I get a few of these things and then get curious and have to answer the questions, like what was different on the model from the year before, and then the year after, and so it goes.

What I discovered over the course of building this collection is that there are stories connected to these instruments, and bits of minutia that maybe everyone doesn’t know. And there are people that I came into contact with through collecting that were fascinating to talk to and had rich stories to share. Those were the reasons I finally thought maybe I should put these things down in some sort of compendium so the stories are preserved and the joy of collecting is shared with other like-minded people."

  • Like 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Geddy has done more promo for this than for any tour that I can remember... I hope they sell a lot of books. I'm sure they will!
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

In relation to Geddy Lee mentioning Joe Bonamassa in the Premier Guitar article; Banger Films co-founders Sam Dunn and Scot McFadyen (who both put together RUSH: Beyond The Lighted Stage), also directed the 2009 Joe Bonamassa Live from the Royal Albert Hall concert DVD.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1mzm6j6Urk

 

Apparently Robert Plant was in the audience at the Bonamassa Royal Albert concert as well.

Edited by RushFanForever
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's a short article, so I just copied it to here . . . link for those that like links . . . https://www.premierg...icent-obsession

 

Hit the link, peeps. The interview is a lot longer than what's posted here.

Oh,shoot, you are right! :facepalm: Thank you, Clash! I did it on my phone and didn't see that it had more pages. I'll try to put them up, or as you said, people can go to the link. . .

Edited by blueschica
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Edited to add: It's actually a long article! I was posting this from my phone and didn't see that there were three pages to the interview. :facepalm: It would be really long to post it here, so above is the first page, and here is the link for the entire article. (I'm so sorry! :banghead: ). https://www.premierg...icent-obsession Edited by blueschica
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Geddy has done more promo for this than for any tour that I can remember... I hope they sell a lot of books. I'm sure they will!

 

The initial printings sold out incredibly fast. More printings are on the way. This book is a much bigger hit than anyone expected.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Gotta love the photo! And they say Alex is the one with the sense of humor . . . :LOL:

 

Have you read If I Ran the Zoo? It is, like, so deep.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

...My attitude is that I’ve been part of an amazing collaboration with two guys that I have so much respect for and for so many years, and we were very purposeful in our time together....Stylistically speaking, I never felt like I was missing anything in the context of Rush because anything goes in that group. When I jam, I jam all over the place, but whether or not I’m going to follow it any one specific direction in the future, I have no idea. I never had any musical frustrations in Rush. It was a totally fulfilling experience for me.

 

I feel bad for him. That sounds so sad to me - "we were..."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Geddy has done more promo for this than for any tour that I can remember... I hope they sell a lot of books. I'm sure they will!

 

He makes his own schedule now. He's free to do that since Rush is gone as a going concern.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Books need promo—everything is electronic/digital now, but authors have traditionally not been superstars until after they sold a ton of books, and the only way to do it when nobody has heard of you is to advertise. Being famous already the first time you publish a book makes advertizing easier, but its still a maiden voyage to some extent, so it makes sense to hit the book promo circuit hard, and the publisher I’m certain is encouraging him to sell a shit ton of units, because this is a one off for them (unless Geddy scrounges up another 250ish rare and exciting instruments to document) aside from the inevitable paperback edition that will replace it at some point.

 

It’s nice that Geddy hit a home run on the first swing—it was a lot of work and he put a great thing together. Having read the whole thing, I’d say I learned a lot, and I can’t say that about a lot of stuff I see written. You have to be a certain kind of nerd to read the whole book (either a Rush nerd, a Geddy nerd, a bass nerd or a gear nerd or all of those), but it really does add to the fund of knowledge out in the world for people to digest or access if they need to know something or are trying to authenticate a potential purchase. He was also smart enough to make it worth flipping through for any loyal Rush fan, and to put all those interviews in there to make it that much more interesting and tempting to read for people who aren’t particularly fans of Rush or Geddy Lee, but who love some of the other player-collectors he spoke with.

Edited by HalfwayToGone
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Books need promo—everything is electronic/digital now, but authors have traditionally not been superstars until after they sold a ton of books, and the only way to do it when nobody has heard of you is to advertise. Being famous already the first time you publish a book makes advertizing easier, but its still a maiden voyage to some extent, so it makes sense to hit the book promo circuit hard, and the publisher I’m certain is encouraging him to sell a shit ton of units, because this is a one off for them (unless Geddy scrounges up another 250ish rare and exciting instruments to document) aside from the inevitable paperback edition that will replace it at some point.

 

It’s nice that Geddy hit a home run on the first swing—it was a lot of work and he put a great thing together. Having read the whole thing, I’d say I learned a lot, and I can’t say that about a lot of stuff I see written. You have to be a certain kind of nerd to read the whole book (either a Rush nerd, a Geddy nerd, a bass nerd or a gear nerd or all of those), but it really does add to the fund of knowledge out in the world for people to digest or access if they need to know something or are trying to authenticate a potential purchase. He was also smart enough to make it worth flipping through for any loyal Rush fan, and to put all those interviews in there to make it that much more interesting and tempting to read for people who aren’t particularly fans of Rush or Geddy Lee, but who love some of the other player-collectors he spoke with.

 

Still savoring it. Thought I would like the interviews, but the pictures and explanations are my favorite part. I thought that would be the boring part, but it's really my favorite so far.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have a bit of that collector mentality myself, and have lusted after vintage gear as soon as my brother and I started to become obsessed with learning to play our respective instruments, and I got to borrow vintage paiste hihats, and a ludwig snare for a couple of months. Being around wannabe gear hoarders for most of my life, it’s fascinating to hear more inside info about how this stuff came into being. I never knew the founder of ampeg (company that made the easily most highly sought electric bass amp and speaker cabinet in my circle of musicians) was a vehement hater of electric bass and thought it would never catch on as a serious instrument. That actually blew me away a little bit
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have a bit of that collector mentality myself, and have lusted after vintage gear as soon as my brother and I started to become obsessed with learning to play our respective instruments, and I got to borrow vintage paiste hihats, and a ludwig snare for a couple of months. Being around wannabe gear hoarders for most of my life, it’s fascinating to hear more inside info about how this stuff came into being. I never knew the founder of ampeg (company that made the easily most highly sought electric bass amp and speaker cabinet in my circle of musicians) was a vehement hater of electric bass and thought it would never catch on as a serious instrument. That actually blew me away a little bit

 

I totally have a collector mentality, Fortunately there some focus to it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...