To the Irish
Embassy near Hyde Park Corner where a beat-up 1961 sunburst Fender Stratocaster guitar
with rosewood fretboard, worn and frayed like an old but comfortable leather
jacket, sits in a glass case beneath the winding staircase in the rather grand
reception area. At the top of the stairs the Irish Ambassador Dan Mulhall is at the head of a short receiving
line, and in a little while he will tell an assembled gathering how much he loves the music of the man who
owned and played that battered old Strat.
It belonged, of course, to Rory
Gallagher who toted it across stages the world over, its dog-eared condition a
testament to the amount of use it had. It became almost as famous as Rory
himself and when once it was stolen and the word put out that ‘Mr Gallagher
would like it back’, the next night someone lobbed it over the fence into Rory’s
back garden.
Rory Gallagher wasn’t lovesick
like Eric Clapton, caught in a web of romantic intrigue that inspired his weeping guitar
licks; he wasn’t covered in glory, leaping around stages dressed in suits
embroidered with the moon and stars like Jimmy Page; and he wasn’t a sonic
visionary and famously grumpy like Jeff Beck. He was just Rory, in his check
shirt and denim jeans, a down-home working bluesman, a traveller, rough and
ready, an anti-star who was never likely to become one, at least not like the
trio of Yardbird guitarists in whose path he followed a few years after they
made their mark. But he probably played more gigs in his lifetime than all
three of them put together.
Schooled in the early sixties in
the Irish Showband scene that he inevitably rejected as being too limiting, he
formed the blues rock trio Taste and when I joined MM in
1970 they were being whispered about in the same terms as any of the up-and-coming blues
bands, like Free and even Led Zeppelin. Then they split and Rory became his own
man, leading trios and quartets of musicians for the remainder of life, which
ended in 1995 when complications following a liver transplant – Rory liked a
drink – proved insurmountable.
The gathering at the Embassy was
to mark the release of a lavish box set of recordings and a DVD from Rory’s
Irish Tour of 1974. Rory made a point of touring Ireland once a year, and was
an inspiration to many in a country where rock – at least in the seventies –
was something of a rare commodity because of the Troubles. Leading a quartet
that included Jerry McAvoy (bass), Rod De’Ath (drums) and Lou Martin (keyboards),
he was in the peak of form, tearing through his blues rock workouts, Delta and Chicago style, expressive slide work and self-penned compositions.
I met Rory a few times back in the
seventies. He was immensely modest, shy and retiring off stage, electrifying on,
simply a working musician for whom fame and acclaim were unwelcome side-effects
of a life spent doing what he loved, playing the blues on that battered but beloved old Strat.
There would be no better way to keep Rory Gallagher's name and spirit alive across the world than by petitioning the relevant Irish Authorities to rename the existing Cork International Airport after Rory Gallagher…!
ReplyDeletePetition: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/Rename-Cork-Airport-after-Rory-Gallagher
Website: http://www.rorygallagherairport.com/
Rory has no equal. Truly the gold standard of players and people in general. Just the greatest to hit the stage. Period.
ReplyDeleteAnd not in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame??? For shame!
ReplyDeleteNice little write up about one truly great Irishman . . . !
ReplyDelete