‘live in europe’ (lp by rory gallagher) – hall of fame induction.

(Post by Colin โ€˜Jackieโ€™ Jackson of Glasgow โ€“October 2021)

(Click for the dedicated page, and all items inducted to the Hall of Fame.)

The first item to be inducted into the Once Upon a Time in The โ€˜70s Hall of Fame is my copy of the โ€˜Live In Europe,โ€™ LP by Rory Gallagher. (Iโ€™m nothing if not predictable.)

I donโ€™t know why, but I bought this for the going rate of around ยฃ2.25 (in postal orders) via some mail order record store advertised in Sounds magazine. I can vividly remember the excitement I felt whenever I came home from school. For about ten days, I was disappointed, but then it arrived  โ€ฆ with a note stating my remittance was (I think) about 25p short. Yet the nice, ever so trusting people at the record store just asked I send another postal order with my next order.

However, by the time Iโ€˜d saved enough from my paper round to buy my next LP, Iโ€™d discovered Listen Records and Virgin Records in Glasgow. I never did order from the MO store again.A few months later, I read in Sounds, the company had gone bust! Was it my 25p that sent them over the edge?

Iโ€™ve carried that burden of guilt now for forty-nine years!

(LP cover – back.)

The record itself, though: this was โ€˜big boysโ€™โ€™ music!

A mix of self-penned and rearranged standards, the seven tracks blew me away with their intensity. Driven by the furious bass playing of Gerry McAvoy, and crashing drums of Wilgar Campbell, Roryโ€™s searing Stratocaster playing cuts through like a knife. His playing has everything โ€“ little flecks of jazz inspired backing to his quieter vocal moments; big, chunky heavy riffs, like in his own composition, โ€˜Laundromat,โ€™ and of course, the blues! Whether it be fast and loud as in the openingโ€™ โ€˜Messinโ€™ With The Kidโ€™ or the slower, almost metronomic โ€˜I Could Have Had A Religion,โ€™ Rory pre-empted, and answered, the query posed by Deacon Blue, seventeen years later: yes โ€“ not only can a white man sing the blues, he can damn well play them too!

(Recording from The Marquee Club, London, 6th April 1972.)

Yet, though heavily blues influenced, โ€˜Live In Europeโ€™ has such a variation in sounds that it remains fresh and exciting from start to finish โ€“ even after almost fifty years of regular play!.

โ€˜Pistol Slapper Bluesโ€™ is an acoustic cover of Blind Boy Fullerโ€™s song from โ€˜nineteen twenty something or other,โ€™ as Rory himself says; โ€˜Going To My Home Townโ€™ is one of Roryโ€™s own compositions โ€“ a real stomper of a track, the famous Strat being swapped for a mandolin. โ€˜In Your Own Townโ€™ is another of Roryโ€™s, this time almost ten minutes of heavy blues and spectacular guitar playing. Album closer is โ€˜Bullfrog Blues,โ€™ another โ€˜traditionalโ€™ blues song written the Twenties and re-arranged by Rory. Itโ€™s a truly explosive ending, with terrific bass and drum solos thrown in for good measure.

The production and sound quality is top notch, something that canโ€™t be said for many โ€˜Liveโ€™ albums and I can attest the album truly replicates the sound and atmosphere of a Rory concert.

Not only was โ€˜Live In Europeโ€™ my proper introduction to heavy rock, it also took me down the rabbit hole of blues music โ€“ a tunnel I am still exploring. Itโ€™s influenced my music of choice from a spotty fourteen year old to grumpy old git, and remains the most treasured record in my collection.

It unequivocally deserves a place in the Hall of Fame.


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