As Rush’s guitar player for over 40 years, Lifeson played electric and acoustic guitars and stringed instruments such as mandola, mandolin and bouzouki. He also performed backing vocals in live performances and occasionally played keyboards and bass pedal synthesizers. Instrumentally, Lifeson is regarded as a guitarist whose strengths and notability rely primarily on his signature riffing, electronic effects and processing, unorthodox chord structures and a copious arsenal of equipment used over the years that has befitted him the title by his bandmates as “The Musical Scientist.”
While the bulk of Lifeson's music work has been with Rush, he has contributed to a body of work outside of the band as a guitarist, producer and, with the release of his 1996 solo album Victor, a solo artist. In addition to music, Lifeson is a painter, an avid golfer and a licensed aircraft pilot. He is also known for his comedic virtues, highlighted in various cameo film roles over the years, including the Canadian-cult mockumentary series The Trailer Park Boys.
Lifeson was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1996. In 2012, he received the Governor General’s Performing Arts Award, Canada’s highest artistic honor, and in 2013, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Lifeson ranks third in the Guitar World Readers poll of ‘100 Greatest Guitarists’ and is also included in Rolling Stone’s ‘100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time’.
Lifeson actively participates in various charities and causes close to his heart, including Casey House, The Kidney Foundation and the Domenic Troiano Foundation, which funds guitar scholarships.
Lifeson has been married to his high school sweetheart Charlene for over 40 years and has two sons and two grandsons.