MY PROG HERO
ACE
Inspiring the wider music world…
Skunk Anansie’s guitarist struggled to master their technique as a youth, but Rush left a profound effect on him – and also on his bandmates.
You saved me: Rush taught Skunk Anansie’s Ace (inset) a valuable lesson in songwriting.
FIN COSTELLO/REDFERNS/GETTY IMAGES
PRESS
“I was about 12 or 13 when NWOBHM came along and I started learning guitar and Rush’s Moving Pictures came out about then. I bought it and I instantly fell in love with Tom Sawyer and then I got into Limelight, but the whole album I really loved. That album was a departure for Rush where they went into their Police-influenced stage. So I thought, what else is there by Rush? I first went to A Farewell To Kings, which is amazing because it’s got Xanadu on it, which is a classic piece of work. And then I went to the shop and bought Fly By Night, which I absolutely loved and my favourite song on that is In The End. It’s a very raw album. From there I went to 2112, which was the epic; the opus that everyone was listening to.