My '77 - Alex Lifeson

For Rush's guitarist, it was all about touring, punk and Panama hats - just don't mention the sheep

By Paul Elliot, Classic Rock #173, July 2012, transcribed by pwrwindows


1977: how was it for you?
It was a great year. For the first time, we made an album in the UK – A Farewell To Kings. That was exciting for us. All our favourite bands came from the UK – Led Zeppelin, The Who, Cream.

Your 1977 schedule – tour, album, tour – sounds tough.
Back then we were doing about 250 shows a year, plus making records. But we had youth on our side. We had the stamina.

You recorded A Farewell To Kings at Rockfield studio in Wales. What do you remember most about that place?
The sheep. We were working all day and night, and as we went to bed around noon the sheep were out in the fields, chatting away and keeping us all awake.

The album's most famous song is Xanadu – a classic 70s epic.
It was the first song we recorded, on the first day, and the engineer, Pat Moran, was blown away that we played this 11-minute song all in one take. We'd rehearsed it, we'd been playing it live, but Pat was astonished that we were able to just throw it down.

While you were in the UK, punk was exploding. What did you make of it?
I sensed that it was important on a cultural and musical level. And although it wasn't really aligned with what we were doing, I thought it was a good thing. It's important to shake things up.

Punks considered bands like Rush to be boring old farts, but you were only 24 in 1977.
Well, stylistically I could see where they were coming from. They were a younger generation, and everybody wants to have their own thing.

So you admit that you were an old fart at 24?
Oh yeah. And I still am.

What did you think of the year's biggest-selling albums, like Fleetwood Mac's Rumours and the Eagles's Hotel California?
Those records were so huge. The play that they got on the radio, when we were driving around from gig to gig, was unbelievable.

Were you jealous?
You'd love your records to be huge successes, sure. But our sales were increasing too. We went from touring in a station wagon to a van. We could gauge our success in those simple things that made our lives a little more comfortable on the road.

Were you still wearing your famous Panama hat in 1977?
Oh my god, what was I thinking with that stupid hat? Certainly our ‘stage look' was influenced by Robert Plant and Jimmy Page – the bell-bottoms and flowing robes. But I was a lot thinner then and had a lot more hair.

What's your favourite album from 1977?
Even In The Quietest Moments by Supertramp. They were spectacular.

In hindsight, how important a year was it?
There was a change in the wind, with punk coming into its own. And it was a pivotal year for us. 2112 had bought us freedom, and with A Farewell To Kings we were moving forward in the way we wanted to. I remember it as a great time.