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Released: | 6/3/2020 |
Condition: | New |
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GALLAGHER,RORY - CHECK SHIRT WIZARD: LIVE IN 77
Price:
€17.99
Format: Compact Disc
Availability:
Immediate Dispatch
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2 CD
2CD
Disc 1
1. Do You Read Me
2. Moonchild
3. Bought And Sold
4. Calling Card
5. Secret Agent
6. Tattoo'd Lady
7. A Million Miles Away
8. I Take What I Want
9. Walk On Hot Coals
Disc 2
1. Out On The Western Plain
2. Barley & Grape Rag
3. Pistol Slapper Blues
4. Too Much Alcohol
5. Going To My Hometown
6. Edged In Blue
7. Jack-Knife Beat
8. Souped-Up Ford
9. Bullfrog Blues
10. Used To Be
11. Country Mile
Rory Gallagher's most successful albums are his live ones, such as “Live! In Europe” and “Irish Tour '74”. He was an artist that came
alive when onstage and this album covers a previously undocumented live period. This 20 songs, previously unreleased, set is culled
from an early 1977 tour across the UK in support of his then latest album ‘Calling Card'. Featuring fantastic live versions of tracks from
that album as well as songs from the 1975 ‘Against The Grain' album and other career favourites. This new album has been mastered at
Abbey Road. The cover painting is by a young Irish graffiti artist Vincent Zara who has stenciled Rory's image across his home country.
Johnny Marr “The man who changed my musical life was Rory Gallagher, I picked up a guitar because of him.”
Slash “Rory didn't sound like anybody else…He had a very individual, independent kind of tone and approach and everything. He's
always been a big hero to me.”
Brian May “He was just a magician, he's one of the very few people of that time who could make his guitar do anything it seemed. It just
seemed to be magic. I remember looking at that battered Stratocaster and thinking “how does that come out of there?”
Ritchie Blackmore “Rory was probably the most natural player I've ever seen. In all the gigs we did together I don't think I ever heard
him play the same thing twice… He was the ultimate performer.”
Ed Sheeran “'A Million Miles Away' was the first song I learned on guitar. The story goes that when Jimi Hendrix was asked how it felt to
be the greatest guitarist in the world, he answered, “I don't know. Go ask Rory Gallagher.”
Eric Clapton “The man who got me back into the blues.”
Jimmy Page “I really liked Rory, he was fine guitarist and singer and lovely man”
Peter Frampton “When I was with Humble Pie and we were all just beginning to feel like we were getting it together, Rory was the one
to measure yourself against. To be able to play like that with such intensity was awesome and really the only other guitarist that had
that ability was Hendrix. I could never get a sound like that from my Strat no matter how hard I tried. He was a real credit to music and
pushed it to another level altogether.”
Alex Lifeson “It is truly remarkable how many guitarists over the years have cited Rory Gallagher as an influence. I was introduced to
his playing during the Taste years but it was during one of Rush's early tours opening for Rory in the fall of 1974 that left the greatest
impression. He oozed passion in his playing and I envied his ability to transcend the moment. I learned a lot from him as a guitarist but
it was his character that touched me most.”
Ace Frehley (Kiss) “Rory Gallagher he was a great player. I've seen him perform several times he just used to use a little Fender amp and
that beat-up old Strat, but boy, he could make that guitar talk. He was another guitar player who never got the credit he deserved, it's
incredible.”
Joe Bonamassa “As soon as I heard Cradle Rock, I was hooked. I thought, ‘This is what I want to be when I grow up.'”
Bill Wyman “There's very few true blues people. Rory stood out because he did it all the way through his life, that's what he did. Who
else is there? I can't think of anyone that stands out as a real true honest follower of the blues and singer of the blues as Rory was.”
Larry Coryell “There's blues players, you know some guys who play some blues licks but was like improvising with that scale. He was
improvising on the quarter tones, improvising on the feedback, improvising on the vibrato. If you close your eyes and take out the
rhythm section and hear him playing it's right up there with avant grade jazz music. I see a strong similarity between the approach to
improvising over the blues between Rory and Jimi Hendrix. They were both virtuosos who were able to manipulate even the minutest
aspect of the blues and do things that had never been played before.”
Bob Geldof “It's not too much to say that what like Hendrix did for the electric blues, Rory did in an Irish context. You know Hendrix was
the great originator, he sought of did field hollers for the pace age you know. But Rory absolutely injected some Irish thing into it.”
Rock/Pop
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