Yeah, there's a good Rush documentary on Netflix where Neil said he was living at home and working in his dad's parts store when he auditioned. About the wives, I read in some rock n roll magazine back in the 70s that Alex Lifeson was married and he spent his free time building and painting model car kits. I was like, "WTH, the genius of odd and harsh electric guitar builds model cars?"
PCs
Dust to Dust (Stars Without Number) - Circuit Counsel Taavi Perttu Big Shiny Island (AD&D 1E) - Theo, low charisma ranger Samurai Adventures (Cold Iron) - Kiyoshi, ronin bushi
WW2 Supers d6 - Luther "Luke" Goodfox
Yeah hearing about their regular lives is always interesting. The Beyond the Lighted Stage documentary was great. Ged is a big baseball fan and collector, Alex a golf nut who bought a golf club near Toronto.
Wow! Kind of hard to picture Geddy playing softball.
Did you see in the Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage documentary that Geddy's real name was Gary. "Geddy" was how his Polish mother pronounced it, and his friends started calling him that. Kind of cool, I thought.
PCs
Dust to Dust (Stars Without Number) - Circuit Counsel Taavi Perttu Big Shiny Island (AD&D 1E) - Theo, low charisma ranger Samurai Adventures (Cold Iron) - Kiyoshi, ronin bushi
WW2 Supers d6 - Luther "Luke" Goodfox
Jemmus yes I have the documentary too. It's great. OM, Geddy is 5'10', maybe he's crouching a bit in that photo, or his team mates are all really tall?
To visualize him playing baseball:
In St. Petersburg, FL, at spring training, 1992. The Roll the Bones tour was that year.
The only time I've seen an accordian in a rock band was with Pere Ubu, an obscure art-geek-punk-something band who had an alternative hit "Waiting for Mary" in '89. They were an opener for... hard to remember, maybe the Pixies, at some club in Boston. It's all run together.