The Rory Story
Welcome to the Rory Gallagher Timeline. Explore a few key events in Rory’s life by clicking and dragging the timeline, or clicking below to jump directly to a time period.
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1940
- 1948 Rory Gallagher born March 2nd in Ballyshannon, County Donegal, Ireland
- 1949 Gallagher family move to Derry
- 1956 Gallagher family move to Cork. Rory gets his first instrument: a plastic-ukulele
- 1957 Rory, age 9, gets an acoustic guitar as a gift from his parents and teaches himself to play
- 1958/59 Rory performs in Parish Centres and School Halls around Cork
1960
- 1960 Rory, age 12, wins a talent contest in Cork and spends prize money on an electric guitar
- 1963 Rory buys his '61 Strat, joins Fontana Showband
- 1964 Fontana tour
- 1966 Rory returns to Cork. He forms "Taste"
- 1967 Taste perform in Hamburg and return to tour Ireland
- 1968 Taste MK I perform in UK and split
- 1969 Taste MK II tour US and Canada, as support act to Blind Faith
1970
- 1970 Taste perform at The Isle Of Wight Rock Festival
- 1971 Taste split. Rory forms The Rory Gallagher Band
- 1972 'Live In Europe' released
- 1973 'Blueprint' & 'Tattoo' albums released, Rory tours USA, Canada & Europe twice
- 1974 Tony Palmer films Irish Tour doc. Extensive touring
- 1975 Rory records with "The Rolling Stones", 'Against The Grain' album released
- 1976 'Calling Card' released
- 1977 Rory performs on 1st Rockpalast Eurovision
- 1978 "Photo Finish" released, Ted McKenna Rod De`Ath & Lou Martin leave band.
- 1979 "Top Priority" released
1980
- 1980 'Stage Struck' released
- 1981 'Jinx' released, Brendan O'Neill on Drums
- 1982 Tours Europe, USA and Canada
- 1983 Tours USA/Europe. Guest musician on 'Jammin` With Albert'
- 1984 Guest musician on Box Of Frogs', concerts in Europe & USA
- 1985 Tours Eastern Bloc countries, Europe, USA & Canada
- 1986 Guest musician Box Of Frogs' album, concerts & Aid Festival
- 1987 Releases 'Defender' album, Capo Records
- 1988 Ireland/UK & festival-concerts in Germany
- 1989 Guest artiste on several albums, individual concerts, Europe
1990
- 1990 'Fresh Evidence" album released. Tours UK & TV concerts in Germany
- 1991 World tour Japan, Australia & USA, 'Edged In Blue', compilation relased
- 1992 Forms New band
- 1993 Performs at The First Cork Jazz Festival
- 1994 Featured on 'Rock'n The North' TV programme, Play first Templebar Blues Festival
- 1995 Tour interrupted due to illness, Rory passes away June 14th, London
- 1996 First Annual Rory Gallagher Rock Musician Award to The Edge of U2
- 1997 Cork Corporation renames Paul Street Plaza as Rory Gallagher Place
2000
- 2000 Brithplace plaque for Rory is unveiled in Ballyshannon
- 2002 AN Post issues stamp featuring Rory
- 2003 'Wheels Within Wheels' is released, an acoustic album of Rory's songs
- 2005 'Big Guns - The Very Best Of Rory Gallagher' released
- 2006 Bronze of Rory's Strat placed at Rory Gallagher Corner, Dublin's Temple Bar
- 2007 Rory Gallagher catalogue in Japanese edition vinyl replica sleeves is released
- 2008 'The Essential Rory Gallagher' Double CD & Guitar Tablature book released
2010
Rory Pics

Biography
Rory Gallagher is the man who, without question, spearheaded and influenced the entire Irish rock movement. Remarkably, nearly 15 years after his untimely passing in June 1995, Rory's music is as popular as ever with his legion on faithful followers. Rory's music was his religion. The conviction and sincerity with which he projected it have assured him a place in rock history and earnt him critical acclaim as one of the greatest torchbearers of driving, effusive rock and blues.
Born in 1948 in Ballyshannon and raised in Cork, Gallagher's rock 'n roll odyssey began at an early age when he saw Elvis Presley on TV and became inspired to get his first guitar. Rory would listen and learn from the likes of Lonnie Donegan, Woody Guthrie, Leadbelly, Chuck Berry, Muddy Waters and Jerry Lee Lewis, many of whom Rory went on to record with. While still at school during his early teens, Rory began playing with professional show bands throughout Ireland, whose repertoires included all the popular hits of the day. Not musically satisfied with this, Rory converted his latter showband The Impact into a six-piece R'n'B outfit and headed for Hamburg in the mid-1960s. On arrival, this line-up was soon trimmed down to his first trio.
Rory went on to form Taste in 1967 a band who soon met with wide acclaim, and subsequently headed for London where they were an immediate success at London's famed Marquee Club, counting among their fans John Lennon.
When Taste disbanded at the end of 1970, Gallagher went on to a successful solo career. From his first solo album in 1971 through to 1990's acclaimed "Fresh Evidence" and beyond, Rory Gallagher sold many millions of albums worldwide and toured the globe several times, mounting more than 25 tours in the US alone.
Following extensive tours of Europe, throughout 1972, Rory followed up with the album "Live In Europe," a top ten triumph both in the UK and internationally. While touring the US solo for the first time, he was voted Melody Maker's Top Musician Of The Year, and to cap off 1972 "Live In Europe" became Rory's first gold album, and his second chart album success in the States.
In 1973 Rory changed the line-up of his band and released a further two successful albums, "Blueprint" and "Tattoo". Later in the same year he achieved another personal high when he was invited to guest on Muddy Waters' "London Sessions" album on Chess. At the end of '73, Rory toured his native Ireland, an almost legendary tour that happily was caught on film via a documentary made by Tony Palmer.
In 1974 The Rolling Stones invited Rory to Holland to record with them, following the departure of Mick Taylor. The film documentary of "Irish Tour 1974" was released in conjunction with a double live set also entitled "Irish Tour 1974" and soon became his most successful album ever in the US, winning worldwide acclaim and prompting a tour of the far East later in the year.
On his return, Rory was invited to guest on an album by yet another of his heroes, Jerry Lee Lewis (a double album recorded in London), and went on to the Montreux Jazz Festival to record with Albert King on his "Live In Montreux" album, then guested with jazz/blues giant Chris Barber.
Having completed his contract with Polydor, Rory signed with Chrysalis in 1975 and released "Against The Grain". After an extensive worldwide tour, Rory returned to the UK to headline the Reading Festival (one of his many performances at this festival for which Rory held the record during his lifetime for number of appearances).
"Calling Card" was recorded, with the aid of Roger Glover, at Musicland Studios in Munich, and charted worldwide on its release. Gallagher then returned to the States for yet another tour.
Rory made television history as the first ever artist to appear on Rockpalast, transmitted live to some fifteen countries with an estimated audience of 50 million. In 1978 he returned to Germany to record the critically acclaimed album "Photo-Finish" at Dieter Dierks' studios in Calogne. Following his lengthy worldwide tour, Rory returned to Dierks' Studios in '79, sticking with the same successful formula to record "Top Priority". The album was released and followed up with an extensive touring schedule which resulted, in 1980, with the landmark live album "Stage Struck".
In 1982, Rory released his final album for Chrysalis, "Jinx", released by PolyGram in the US, and then returned to where he was happiest, the stage, and a successful tour of the world. After the return of his entire catalogue in 1985, Rory formed his own label and publishing company, Capo, and began recording the "Defender" album, released in 1987, which charted strongly in many countries. The 1990 release of "Fresh Evidence" saw Gallagher opening the ears of an even wider audience.
In ‘91 Gallagher undertook another World tour at the end of which saw the dissolution his old band. With a new line-up formed in ’93 (Richard Newman drums, David Levy bass, Gerient Watkins keyboards / accordion and retained Mark Feltham on harmonica), delighted with his new sidemen Gallagher undertook an extensive European tour, after which the musician intended entering the studios to record two further albums simultaneously; one acoustic and one with his new band. But Rory’s ‘Walkin’ Blues Tour’ was curtailed in Holland, January 1995 due to illness.
Following his admission to hospital, Rory underwent transplant surgery. Sadly, though having made a strong recovery, he died on June 14th from an infection.
Tributes to the great musician came from people throughout the World, locations were named in his honour but importantly his music was not to forgotten with an array of tribute bands, gigs, festivals, songs and poems dedicated to him. Fender Instruments produced a tribute in the form of a Rory ‘Stratocaster’ and Martin Guitars made an acoustic in his honour.
Garnering Rory’s musical legacy, his brother Donal went into the studios with Tony Arnold (whom Rory was planning to record with), to restore and re-master the Gallagher recordings, whilst putting many of Rory’s filmed appearances to DVD. Placing these and the Capo label through BMG, later to become Sony, making it one of the best selling artist catalogues and scoring no 1 places and platinum status for the DVDs – selling some five million copies since reissue.
Whilst in the studio with Tony Arnold, Donal realised more of his sibling’s designs on an acoustic album and undertook the task of in someway fulfilling that desire. Derived from existing recordings and incorporating some guest musicians (Lonnie Donegan, Martin Carthy, Bert Jansch), 2003 saw the release of “Wheels, Within, Wheels.” The record publicly showed the spectrum of Gallagher’s guitar work and writings as never before and featured as Guitarist’s album of the year.
As an artist favoured by ‘pirates & bootleggers’, Capo Records revived their G-Men series, releasing “A Meeting With the G-Man”, this ‘official’ bootleg recording featured his last line-up. To follow, a tribute compilation marking his tenth anniversary titled “Big Guns”, for the first time the track listings would incorporate some of his Taste material, the record was also technically reproduced in 5.1.
Switching some of it’s catalogue distribution in North America to Eagle Rock, Capo Records have just released a twenty-four track compilation “Crest of A Wave”, celebrating the diversity of Gallagher’s musical legacy.
June 2010 is the 15th anniversary since Rory’s passing, his legacy will be commemorated in Ballyshannon by the unveiling of a statue of him in action by renowned Scottish sculptor David Annand’s. This precedes the annual four day festival ‘Rory’ festival of that town. Adding to the civic honours of; Cork’s Rory Gallagher music library and Institute of Technology naming their theatre after local hero, Belfast placing a plaque at the Ulster Hall, to name but a few.
Currently, a documentary on Rory nears completion and is expected to have it’s ‘premier’ screening with RTE in June. Concurrent to that footage, work has commenced with director Declan Quinn to produce a film on Rory’s life and times. Further audio-material of Rory’s American recordings are being worked on in the studio and Polydor Records are to issue a box-set celebrating 40+ years since Rory founded his Taste – Rory Forever.
