Longtime Rush lighting director Howard Ungerleider was a recent guest on the Gib Gab podcast to talk about his long career as Rush's lighting director, and what the band might have in store for fans on their upcoming Fifty Something tour, which Howard says will be something completely different than what I've ever done (thanks Don C). You can listen to the entire 1-hour interview below or on YouTube. From the episode description:
Step inside five decades of rock history with lighting legend Howard Ungerleider, the man who's been designing and directing Rush's light shows since 1974. Hear how a $75-a-week mailroom gig at American Talent International - where he pulled off a rogue booking of Fleetwood Mac before he was even an agent - turned into a lifetime behind the console. Get the story of Howard landing in Toronto to babysit "a club band called Rush," sleeping on the floor at the manager's house with a St. Bernard, freezing his hand to a car door at -40 in Cochrane, Ontario, and later jamming with Neil Peart at his house to Genesis and Supertramp records. Howard also talks designing Roll The Bones (the one Rush tour he couldn't operate), embedding at See Factor to build custom gear nobody else could get, and how Blue Öyster Cult first put him in front of a laser: the same craft he now brings to Foo Fighters, Tool, and Janet Jackson.
Then the conversation turns to the upcoming Rush Fifty Something tour - a four-piece now with Anika Nilles on drums and Loren Gold on keys, freeing Geddy to focus on bass and vocals. Learn why Howard still "plays" the lighting console live with two boards and thousands of touch cues, how robotic spots are quietly changing the craft, and why he and Phish's Chris Kuroda will be swapping rigs at Madison Square Garden. You'll also hear the Paul McCartney moment in the Taylor Hawkins tribute dressing room that may have sparked the whole tour, and why Howard insists this is a rejuvenation, a celebration, and proof that no matter the rig, the room, or the era, you've gotta ALWAYS BE PERFORMING.
Because it's what we do.
