Y a eu des rotissoires, aussi, et je ne sais plus trop quoi. La raison donnée en général est bien une question d'arrière-plan, mais...
Citation:
Geddy Lee: When I came to rehearsals for one of our recent tours our guitarist
Alex had just built up his monolithic amp set-up on his side of the stage. That looked like one single gigantic Rock'n'Roll cliché.
My bass amp set-up, in contrast, had the epic extent of a suitcase which looked ridiculous compared to the rock-god setup on the other side of the stage. My Roadie and I therefore searched for a possibility to fill up my part of the stage and, at the same time, have Alex's cliché-tower look as ridiculous as it really was. That was the start of it all. And it wasn't even inconvenient to play a rock show and, at the same time, doing the laundry for the whole entourage (laughs).
bq: This time you had chicken rotisseries on the stage as amp-replacement. Did you really grill real chicken during the show?
Geddy Lee: This is a stage secret which I can't reveal due to certain health regulations in each country which make it hard to grill chicken. Unfortunately we weren't able to share our chicken with the audience.
bq: What will be your next amp replacement?
Geddy Lee: Well, for how long will I be able to pull off the same gag? That's the question. Perhaps I should come up with something completely new. But you have to admit it was a cool idea to furnish the Marshall amp logo with the word Henhouse. I like the smell of barbecue chicken and find it inviting especially as it put vegetarians to flight. Okay, I like basses too.