Neil Peart ― Discography: Solo and with other
musicians
On this page, you'll find projects Neil Peart has
played on as a solo artist or with other musicians.
Max Webster - Universal Juveniles, 1980
Neil, Alex, and Geddy played with Max Webster on
the song Battlescar.
Max Webster often opened for Rush in the 1980s,
and Max Webster's lyricist Pye Dubois co-wrote lyrics for several Rush songs,
including Tom Sawyer, Force 10, Test for Echo, and Between Sun and Moon.
In the Moving Pictures Tourbook, Neil wrote:
"Toronto, July 28, 1980. An intense thunderstorm raged outside all day long,
while indoors a storm of a different kind was brewing. In the studios of Phase
One, two complete sets of equipment crammed the room, and two complete bands
filled the air with a Wagnerian tumult, as Max Webster and ourselves united to
record a song for their album, called Battlescar."
Jeff Berlin - Champion, 1985
Neil plays on the song Champion (of the World) and with
Steve Smith on Mirabi. Note that Steve does most of the drumming on
Mirabi.
Champion (of the World) shows off Neil's Rush chops, with some
interesting side stick and bass drum syncopation at the beginning.
Pieces of Eight - Modern Drummer Soundsheet,
1987
Pieces of Eight was a solo project for Neil to show off his
new Ludwig drums (see "The
Quest for New Drums") and was a sound supplement
included in the May 1987 Modern Drummer.
This song showcases Neil's compositional abilities, with him
playing his malletKAT and other assorted percussion. The result is dynamic and
interesting, with echoes of Natural Science in the verses.
During the Hold Your Fire tour, Neil would add the "verse" section
of Pieces of Eight to his drum solo as call
and response between the malletKAT and his acoustic drums. On the Vapor Trails
tour, he added the chorus section of Pieces of Eight.
In the May 1987 Modern Drummer article, "The Quest for New
Drums" Neil wrote:
"Like many percussionists, I had long harbored a secret
wish to create a piece of music using only percussion instruments, and this
looked like the key to that dream! I practiced with the KAT for a few days
and then, when I had a free day, recorded a "demo" of a marimba piece I had
been working on over the summer.
...The piece is entitled "Pieces Of Eight" because of all the
different time signatures it ended up meandering through. I hadn't thought
about that too much just playing the marimba, until I had to learn it on
drums! With only a day to record it all, I didn't really have time to play
it more than a couple of times through, so that, too, was a good challenge.
I find it interesting as a drummer to work with a melodic
instrument and think melody as well as rhythm. You can really get into some
wild areas! In a way, I wish I hadn't been so obsessed with drums alone in
the beginning and had acquired more knowledge of music theory. But I suppose
in this day and age you do have to specialize!"
Credits:
Recorded and mixed at Elora Sound Studios Engineered by Jon
Erickson
Technical Assistance by Jim Burgess, Larry Allen, and Tony
Geranios
Rheostatics - Whale Music
- 1992
"Guns" (co-drummer), "Rain Rain Rain" (percussion) and
"Palomar" (percussion)
"... the Rheostatics recorded with Rush's Neil Peart in 1992.
He came down to Reaction Studios while we were making Whale Music and set up a
little yellow jazz kit in the corner. The Barenaked Ladies were there, too;
they'd laid in their background vocal to "California Dreamline" earlier in the
day and together we watched Neil warm up, a chimeric figure in his beaded
African hat under the low studio lights. Head lowered, torso centered, feet
kicking, his hands glancing over the drums, Neil played all afternoon. His touch
was soft when it had to be, but propulsive, too, like a distance runner tugging
the flow of blood to his heart. It's one thing to see your hero perform from a
distant seat in Maple Leaf Gardens, but it's something else to feel close to his
work, as I did that day. At one time in my life, I'd dreamed of what it would be
like to simply attend a Rush concert, and there I was at the studio, not 20 feet
from where he was crafting a part for a song that would appear on our
album.....As Neil commanded his kit, he painted my adolescence before me,
evoking everything about it." - Dave Bidini, The Rheostatics (Toronto Star, Jan.
6, 2002)"
Momo's Dance Party from A
Work in Progress
Like Pieces of Eight, Momo's Dance Party is solo piece.
Once again, the melodic instrument that he uses is the malletKAT. It was never
formally released, except as the soundtrack over the credits of the DVD "A Work
in Progress." The influences are African, as was the inspiration for the song.
Neil writes of this song in Traveling Music: The Soundtrack to My Life and
Times:
"One hot night in a village in Togo called Assohoum, in
November 1989, I laid out my sleeping bag on an adobe rooftop and lay looking up
at the bright stars in the perfect silence of an African night
― no traffic, no television, no radio, just scattered
conversations of distant dogs. As I was dozing off, a drum rhythm echoed from
across the valley, two hand-drummers playing an interlocking pattern, and it
stuck in my head, only to emerge later as the basis for a rhythm I used in a
Rush song called "Heresy."... Later, the same rhythm became the foundation of a
solo piece I created in the early 90s to serve as a backing track while I
practiced my marimba playing, called "Momo's Dance Party." A version of that
little etude appears at the end of my instructional video, A Work in Progress.
Momo's Dance Party" was also inspired by a real-life
experience on that same African journey, a trip with guide David Mozer and his
Bicycle Africa tour group through Togo and Ghana, which ended with me cycling on
alone to meet my family in the Ivory Coast, at (of all places) a Club Med. ...
David had visited Agbo Kope once before, when he reconnoitered this tour, and
had met Momo, and ambitious young man who had received some education away from
the village. Momo seemed to be the only villager who spoke the colonial language
of French, and he seemed to be trying to put his village on the tourist map.
...The woman of the village cooked nearby on clay firepits,
preparing us the usual dinner of rice and "mystery meat" stew (which I had
dubbed in Cameroon as "rice with junk on it"), and in the evening, the entire
village gathered to put on a show for us... The grand finale was the village
choir, the rich voices of the men and women, harmonizing beautifully,
accompanied only by one man playing a shaker, and another playing a metal disc
with a stick. This syncopated pattern hypnotized me at the time, and remains in
my memory as one of the most music performances I have ever heard. Even fourteen
years later, I can still conjure the aural image of those blended voices and
that simple percussion accompaniment."
Since Neil wrote this song, he's performed the melody in his
drum solo.
Burning for Buddy - Volume I - 1994
Songs: Cotton Tail (drums) and Pick Up the Pieces (percussion)
In 1992, Neil participated in the Buddy Rich Scholarship
concert, a move that astonished most in the drumming community. Neil is first
and foremost a rock drummer, but with the Buddy Rich Band he was stretching into
Jazz and doing pretty well. After that experience, Neil was inspired to play
more music with a big band.
In an interview in the February 1995 Modern Drummer with
William F. Miller (WFM below), Neil (NP) explained how the project came about:
"NP: ...It came around full circle for me, when, in 1991, Buddy's daughter, Cathy, asked me to perform with the big band for the scholarship show. While I was very intimidated by
it sounded like an enormous challenge and an opportunity to actually play some
of this music I loved. I went into that experience for that reason, basically as
a good way to challenge myself. I hate when things get too safe.
WFM: But what led you from that point to getting so involved
in a much larger project like Burning?
NP: Actually, to be perfectly honest, all I wanted was a very
selfish thing—the chance to play big band music again! In my darkest little mean
heart of hearts all I wanted was to feel the excitement of kicking a big band. I
wished somebody would make a record so I could have the opportunity to play with
Buddy's band again under more controlled circumstances than a live concert, and
I guess I realized I was the one to do it! That truly was the germ of the whole
thing."
Burning for Buddy - Volume II - 1997
Song: "One O'clock Jump" (drums)
"Burning for Buddy - Volume II" was released after
the first volume sold reasonably well. In all, thirty-nine songs were recorded for the
Burning for Buddy sessions. Seventeen were released with Volume One and 13 were
released with Volume II. (If you do the math, this means there are still nine
unreleased songs from the Burning for Buddy sessions.)
One thing to note on this CD is that Neil actually
went back in to the studio with Buddy's band after the original sessions and recorded
One O'clock Jump. One reason for this was that Neil had studied with Freddie
Gruber for over a year and wanted to mark his progress with a Jazz recording.
|