(Post by Colin โJackieโ Jackson, of Glasgow โ February 2021)

Eleven vinyl LPs; one vinyl EP; two โbox setโ CDs; one triple CD set; twenty-one CDs; five DVDs and four Taste CDs.
Youโd be correct in assuming I like Rory Gallagher!
I recall the very first time I heard Roryโs music. It was sometime in 1972. I was playing Subbuteo at my palโs house. I was Chile, that day โ red shirt, blue shorts. I canโt remember what team Derek was, but it wouldnโt matter โ heโd have whooped my ass anyway. I was rubbish.
Derek shared a large bedroom with his older brother who at that time was a long-haired, senior school student, about four years older than me. Heโd been doing paper rounds for several years and so was โminted,โ as weโd say in Glasgow. And all his money it seemed, he spent on records, particularly the heavy end of the musical spectrum. Deep Purple and King Crimson I vividly remember being played. I know this because as a Slade, Sweet and John Kongos fan, (yes, John Kongos) I just couldnโt get into this new fangled โprogressiveโ music.
Anyway, as my Chilean right winger was about to take a corner, something new burst out the record player. It went on for ages, too. Wow!
โThatโs โโCatfish,โ my mate said. โBy a band called Taste. Alanโs just bought it. Like it?โ
โLike it?โ That was me. Hook, line and sinker.
So โ this is the Blues? A fourteen year old kid had just been enlightened.
The LP was โTaste. Live At The Isle Of Wight.โ With a little more prompting, I was told the band were no longer together, but the guitarist, Rory Gallagher, had embarked on a solo career. In fact, heโd already released three albums. Always late to the party, me.
A few weeks later, Iโd saved enough from my paper round to send away, through a โsmall adโ in the โSoundsโ paper, for a copy of Roryโs latest release, โLive in Europe.โ (Going to watch football on a Saturday normally accounted for most of my earnings.)
As it happens, I was fifty pence short in payment for the post and packing, but the nice record store still sent me the LP. They asked I just send a postal order for the shortfall, something I never got round to doing. I read a month or so later that the company had gone bust. I felt ever so guilty.
That was late 1972 and I still have that album. It remains my favourite of all my Rory recordings, although I have to say, the โCheck Shirt Wizard โ Live in โ77โ triple album pushes it very close.
The next stage in my Gallagher development was to see him play live and that opportunity came in March the following year, when my parents finally acceded my pleas to be allowed to go to a concert. And so shortly after the release of his fourth solo album, โBlueprintโ (my second favourite) I trooped up to Glasgow with a couple of pals to the Greenโs Playhouse (later to become the world famous Apollo.)
My seat was about eight rows from the front, just left of centre. Perfect. Until Rory came on stage and everyone jumped to their feet. I was a short-arse then, still am, and suddenly I was struggling to see my musical hero.
But the bouncers at Greenโs and even more so when it changed to The Apollo, had a fierce reputation. There was no nonsense. If you were told to sit down, you sat down. If not, youโd only be able to hear the gig from the alleyway at the back of the theatre. (This heavy handed approach always worked โฆ until The Clash came to town on 4th July 1978. But thatโs another story!)
The concert was everything I hoped it would be. And more. The relationship Rory had with the crowd was amazing. It was like a personal friend was putting on a show. There was no posturing. No garish showmanship. Just straight-up, blues infused rock โnโ roll with a tiny touch of folk influence.
Rory was dressed simply, in his trade-mark check style shirt and jeans, and although he wore a denim shirt on the cover of โBlueprint,โ I always associated him with the checks. It must be a โfirst impressionsโ thing, for I donโt recall seeing him wear that again on any of the other four occasions I was lucky enough to see him.

In the early to mid-seventies, bands would generally only hit your town maybe once a year although I was fortunate in that Rory did return to Glasgow later in โ73, at the end of November. After that though, it was December only, and โ74, โ75 and 1976 were my last shows. Itโs interesting to note that the most I paid for a ticket was the ยฃ2.50 in 1976.
I wonder how much youโd have to pay these days? Iโm sure Rory would have done all in his power to keep prices at a sensible level, but what with ticketing agencies these days โฆ. aargh! Donโt start me!
While my love of Rory Gallagher has been unflinching, I am not one of those fans who listens exclusively to their hero and that particular style of music.
Although I still rushed out to buy his immediate subsequent releases, โPhotofinish,โ โTop Priority,โ and โStage Struck,โ I was, from 1976 onward, more into the punk and second wave rockabilly scenes.
The only groups, however, that even then could come close in my overall โfavourite bandโ list were / still are, The Sensational Alex Harvey Band and The Rolling Stones. (Over forty albums of the latter in my collection.)
And of course, there is a close connection between all three bands with SAHBโs late great Ted McKenna latterly taking over on drums for Rory, and Rory himself famously auditioning for The Stones back in 1975 when Mick Taylor left.
I must say, Iโm so glad Rory decided not to hang around and wait for Mick and Keith to get back to him, and toured Japan as he had planned. I just couldnโt see Rory as anything other than a front man. Ronnie Wood is perfect for the role in appearance and style.
It doesnโt always follow that a group betters itself by absorbing โthe best.โ Look at The Eagles. Did Joe Walsh really add to what was already one of the most popular bands in the world? Did Joe Walsh lose a bit of his identity by joining The Eagles?
โNoโ and โyesโ would be my two answers.
But back to Rory.
It pained me to see him on The Old Grey Whistle Test or wherever as the rather large and bloated musician heโd become by around 1990 as drink and various prescription medications, administered to deal with the rigours of life on the road, had prematurely and noticeably aged him.
In the end, 1995, he perhaps cut a sad image โ the archetypal solo rock star, not necessarily fading as such, or clinging to past glories, but perhaps lonely and just sheer exhausted from all he gave.
And he gave so much. The vast majority of his fans, like me, never met him, but Rory came across on stage, and in media interviews, as a very personable and likable bloke. There were no frills. You got what you saw.
He was genius on guitar. He could literally turn his hand to make it gently weep; or laugh; or sing. He could make an audience dance โ in an ugly, uncoordinated, shaking-head, rocker style, maybe, but it still counts.
Best guitarist in the world? Many of us would say so.
I guess itโs all a matter of Taste.
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Really interesting – found your blog via the “Glasgow Apollo” group on Facebook and have enjoyed a few of your posts so far. Seen Rory numerous times myself!
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Thanks Jim .. nice of you to comment. Appreciated. ๐
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