logo
'Slash froze when he saw Rory's guitar'

'Slash froze when he saw Rory's guitar'

RORY Gallagher is goin' to his hometown... one more time.
The life of the legendary bluesman will be celebrated in Cork, where he was reared, with a series of events over the next few weeks to mark the 30th anniversary of his death.
It's an emotional time for Dónal Gallagher, the late guitarist's brother and long-time manager.
'It's very satisfying, compared to some times when it almost seemed like Rory was being airbrushed out of rock music history,' says Dónal.
'To see newer generations finding him now is quite incredible. 30 years on, that he's getting honoured in such a manner of different ways is great.'
On Saturday, a new road at Cork Airport will be named in his honour and three exhibitions dedicated to Gallagher's life and music will open in the city where he grew up as part of 'Cork Rocks For Rory'.
'The one at City Hall is a photographic exhibition of his early years,' says Dónal.
'The library are doing one about his songwriting and also about how he'd become a bit of a hidden cult figure in the world of comics in the US.
'The museum is the more general one with posters and guitars. There's quite a collection of guitars. And that rolls into the Joe Bonamassa dates.'
Blues great Bonamassa will play Gallagher's music for three nights at the Marquee in Cork next month and there have been rumours Rory's famous Fender Stratocaster guitar will make an appearance.
'I've no idea,' says Dónal, laughing. 'I'm sure Joe would love that to happen, but it's in the hands of the museum people and they have their work to do.
'There's so many of the other of Rory's instruments have been offered around, so I'm sure he won't be short on guitars.'
The Strat was bought at auction last year for over €1m and gifted back to the State to be displayed at the National Museum in Dublin.
Dónal is still amazed at the effect the battered Strat has on some of the world's greatest guitarists.
'Johnny Marr's a great guy. He used to ring up to get a 'fix' of playing Rory's Strat,' said Dónal.
'He'd take it out, either at my house or the office, and he'd sit there in a corner just playing it. It was wonderful to see.
'The instrument, while it's not human, you feel it's orphaned. So it's great to see it get a good cuddle of sorts, especially from a guitarist like Johnny.
'Instruments need to be played. I don't play, so I couldn't do that. I think other family members were intimidated in some ways.
'I remember seeing Slash and the guitar was brought across to Dublin some years ago when he was playing.
'The guitar went to his dressingroom and he couldn't actually play it. He sort-of froze.'
Gallagher was born in Ballyshannon, before moving to Cork at a young age, where he later cut his teeth on the showband circuit.
Dónal collected a huge amount of material during his brother's career, going right back to the earliest days and went through much of it for the RTÉ documentary Calling Card last year.
'Very emotional, you're going back in your life as well as forwards,' said Dónal. 'It's not just about the career, it's sharing your life with your brother, it's loss as well. Particularly as we were the only two siblings. That leaves quite a void.
'I'm more fortunate than most that it's such a well-recorded life.
'We used to perform together at a very early age, do church socials, until I got fired! Even from nine or 10 years old Rory was destined for things. I found I'd collected something on everything he was doing.
'He had such an amazing life. He achieved what he wanted to achieve as a musician, which was his primary goal.'
Gallagher died on June 14, 1995, at the age of just 47.
30 years after his death his music is still finding new fans and still inspiring new generations of musicians.
He's even on this year's Leaving Cert.
'A cousin of mine, his daughter, who is a budding musician herself. She couldn't believe it to see the question on the Leaving Cert Irish exam,' said Dónal.
'That's quite something when you come into a Leaving Cert. I wish I'd got one like that.'
Cork Rocks For Rory starts on June 14

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Five For Your Radar: Cork gigs, Glastonbury, Squid Game, and more...
Five For Your Radar: Cork gigs, Glastonbury, Squid Game, and more...

Irish Examiner

time2 days ago

  • Irish Examiner

Five For Your Radar: Cork gigs, Glastonbury, Squid Game, and more...

Cork concerts: Duran Duran, etc Musgrave Park, Live at the Marquee, Cork, Friday-Thursday, June 27-July 3 What a week of gigs ahead. Duran Duran, supported by Nile Rodgers and Chic, play Musgrave Park (Virgin Media Park) on Tuesday, July 1, while the same night Live at the Marquee on the docklands, renowned blues player Joe Bonamassa plays Rory Gallagher on the first of three shows (next Thursday's show still has some tickets remaining). The Conoras play the Marquee on Friday, while the legendary Christy Moore returns on Saturday - expect classics and songs off last year's acclaimed album, A Terrible Beauty. Talk: Gerry McAvoy The Blue Angel, Cork Opera House, 2pm, Saturday, June 28 With the aforementioned Joe Bonamassa in town and Cork Rocks for Rory series of events continuing around the city, Gerry McAvoy, who played bass with Gallagher for 20 years, is in conversation on Saturday afternoon. Expect tales from the road and the recording studio. It's presented by Feedback Promotions as part of Gallaghers Music Festival, who are also staging a bus tour on Tuesday, July 1, of sights and landmarks associated with Rory. (Full disclosure... I'm the one interviewing McAvoy) Streaming: Squid Game Netflix, Friday, June 27 Netflix's number one non-English language series of all time, Squid Game returns for its third and final season on Friday. Gi‑hun (Lee Jung‑jae) returns wounded, vengeful, and ready to dismantle the Squid Game empire from within. He will be forced to make some important choices as he and the surviving players are thrust into deadlier games that test everyone's resolve. With each round, their choices lead to increasingly grave consequences. TV: Glastonbury 2025 BBC, Friday-Sunday, June 27-29 The cliche goes that the best way to experience Glastonbury is on your couch rather than in the usually muddy field of Somerset with over 250,000 people. Neil Young (his set won't be televised), Olivia Rodrigo (who played Dublin on Tuesday), and the 1975 headline, but the act everyone is talking about is Kneecap. It's unlikely their set will be shown on Saturday, however. Coverage begins on BBC Two at 5pm, while Kneecap's set on the West Holts stage is scheduled for 4pm to 5pm. Comedy: Dara Ó Briain Live at the Marquee, Sunday, June 29 It's a busy weekend of comedy in Cork, with Jarleth Regan doing a second night at the Opera House on Friday and Katherine Ryan playing a sold-out show there on Saturday. Meanwhile, on Sunday, Dara Ó Briain returns to the Marquee with his latest tour, Re:Creation, about the search for his biological father. Like the story itself, expect to be taken on a laugh-filled journey by one of the best standups around. Read More Tom Dunne: My six favourite albums of 2025 so far

Kardashians, Trumps, Oprah and celebrities arrive for Bezos and Sanchez's wedding in Venice
Kardashians, Trumps, Oprah and celebrities arrive for Bezos and Sanchez's wedding in Venice

Irish Independent

time2 days ago

  • Irish Independent

Kardashians, Trumps, Oprah and celebrities arrive for Bezos and Sanchez's wedding in Venice

Oprah Winfrey, Kris Jenner, and Kim and Khloe Kardashian were among the latest arrivals, while U.S. President Donald Trump's daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner, who showed up on Tuesday, have used the extra time for sightseeing and shopping. Some 200-250 A-listers from show-business, politics and finance are expected to take part in what has been widely dubbed "wedding of the century", estimated to cost €40 million to €48 million ($46 million to $56 million). Bezos and Sanchez landed in Venice via helicopter on Wednesday and took up residence in the luxury Aman hotel, where rooms with a view of the Grand Canal go for at least €4,000 per night. The couple was spotted around dinner time as they left the hotel in a water taxi, waving at photographers and crowds, with Sanchez blowing air kisses in a vintage Alexander McQueen dress. Guests will gather on Thursday evening in the cloisters of Madonna dell'Orto, a medieval church in the central area of Cannaregio that hosts masterpieces by 16th century painter Tintoretto. The city council has banned pedestrians and water traffic from the area from 4.30 p.m. (1430 GMT) until midnight, blocking out protesters who have pledged to spoil the party. Bezos and Sanchez are set to exchange vows on Friday on the small island of San Giorgio, opposite the main St Mark's Square, in a ceremony which, according to a senior City Hall official, will have no legal status under Italian law. Some have speculated that the couple have already legally wed in the United States, sparing them from the bureaucracy associated with an Italian marriage, such as it having to take place in an approved venue and the local town hall needing to be notified in advance. Celebrations will conclude on Saturday with the main wedding bash to be held at one of the halls of the Arsenale, a vast former medieval shipyard turned into an art space in the eastern Castello district. The "No Space for Bezos" movement is planning demonstrations against an event they see as a sell-off of Venice to the uber-wealthy while the needs of ordinary citizens are ignored - but by no means all the locals are hostile. Politicians, hoteliers and other residents say high-end events, rather than multitudes of low-spending daytrippers, are a better way to support the local economy, and dismiss the protesters as a fringe minority. "We're not talking about hundreds or thousands of people, we're talking about a few dozen," said Daniele Minotto, vice president of the Venetian Hoteliers Association. Davide Busato, an archaeologist behind the "Yes Venice Can" pro-Bezos group, said billionaire tourism gives the city a chance to show off its specialities. "The idea that a 'morality office' should decide who gets to marry in Venice is a disturbing concept, unworthy of a free city," he wrote on Facebook. Venice has hosted scores of VIP weddings. U.S. actor George Clooney and human rights lawyer Amal Alamuddin tied the knot there in 2014, and Indian billionaires Vinita Agarwal and Muqit Teja did so in 2011, without significant disruptions. Bezos, executive chair of e-commerce giant Amazon and No. 4 on Forbes' billionaires list, got engaged to Sanchez in 2023, four years after the collapse of his 25-year marriage to MacKenzie Scott.

'Churlish' Rory McIlroy next golf star to get book treatment from Alan Shipnuk
'Churlish' Rory McIlroy next golf star to get book treatment from Alan Shipnuk

Irish Daily Mirror

time19-06-2025

  • Irish Daily Mirror

'Churlish' Rory McIlroy next golf star to get book treatment from Alan Shipnuk

Phil Mickelson's biographer Alan Shipnuck is writing a book about Rory highly entertaining 'LIV and Let Die' chronicled the rise of the rebel golf tour, while his Mickelson tome 'Phil' lifted the lid on the divisive six-times major winner's career. The Californian author is fascinated with the life and times of the sport's newest Grand Slam winner and his book on McIlroy is due on the shelves in March 2026. "I've spent the last year thinking about Rory McIlroy because he's going to be my next book, and I'm probably 60% done," said the famed American writer. "I have many thoughts about Rory. It's been fascinating to watch this existential crisis he's going through since the Masters and everyone has a theory." Shipnuck revealed to the Indo Sport podcast that he had tried to involve McIlroy in the process but the 35-year-old didn't want to be interviewed specifically for the book. "It's going to be fun to read because I'm having fun writing it, that's always my test," he said. "As a writer you have to be your hardest critic but I've had a lot of fun writing it. He's had a big colourful life and has touched a lot of people along the way. "I said this to Rory, that the last two books I did were big and controversial but I'd like this to be a bit more fun and celebratory because I think there's a lightness to his being. I'm not getting sucked into the recency bias, I'm looking at the whole scale of his career and there's been a lot of joy there. It's going to be an intimate portrait. "We actually had a conversation in the parking lot in Oakmont on Sunday that was really fascinating. I've got to save it for the book but a lot of things were revealed, I'll say that, and it told me so much about Rory. It was very helpful for the book. "A huge part of the Rory brand is the down to earth or human superstar - and a lot of us hope he doesn't lose that because then he loses some of his appeal." After winning at Augusta for the first time in April, thus completing the fabled Grand Slam after a 14-year wait, McIlroy refused to talk to the media during the next major tournament - the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow. He did a press conference ahead of the US Open at Oakmont last week but didn't talk again until Saturday, when he was uncharacteristically short with his answers and seemed fed up, although he perked up after his final round 67 as he looked forward to The Open's return to Portrush next month. "I think there's a few things going on and he talked about it, it's just the let down of chasing this dream," said Shipnuck. "But when Phil won the Masters in 2004 to break through after about a dozen years of being the best player with a major, and all the questions about him, that was as cathartic a win as Rory's was. "And Phil just kept going, he had his best year that year and came back and won majors the next year and the year after - you don't have to have a huge let down."Rory's an emotional player, just like Phil was, and I think he's just out of emotion. He just looks so flat on and off the golf course. This churlish version of Rory, is this the real Rory and for 18 years it's been this incredible facade and he was so widely admired and so classy and everyone admired him? "We thought that was the real Rory, but was that all pretend? It makes your head spin thinking about how much he's changed in such a short period of time." Shipnuck can't wait to see how McIlroy reacts to his Portrush return after the drama of his missed cut there in 2019. "I think Portrush is going to be fascinating, and he alluded to this as he was leaving Oakmont," he said. "Like, if he can't summon any energy or emotion to play The Open at Portrush, the course where he shot 61 when he was 16 and that really began his legend, and after what happened last time around when he made eight on the first hole and that incredible Friday when the entire island of Ireland was cheering him on to try to make the cut and the tears, if he goes back there and he just doesn't look like he's into it, then you really have to question what is this last act of his career going to look like. "Clearly it would have been better for Rory if the Masters was on in September and he could have just taken six months off. "I can't believe he's playing this week (at the Travelers) in Connecticut, why is he doing this to himself? Why is he putting himself through it? It's incredible. He just looks so miserable on the golf course and obviously it's affecting his play. "Portrush is just going to be fascinating theatre and if he can dig deep and find something if doesn't, I'm definitely concerned for what this means going forward." Shipnuck claimed that the emotional reaction to McIlroy's Masters triumph was less about the golf played than the appreciation of the Holywood man as a person, and how he has carried the burden of trying to complete the slam. "He had worn this burden and had let us into his heart and soul. That's why the Masters resonated so much," he stressed. "It's the way Rory has let us in that has made people so invested in his accomplishments - and his failures. "So it's been interesting to read on social media how people have quickly said, 'I'm kind of over this guy'. Eighteen years of goodwill, a lot of it has been incinerated in two months."He can get it back, of course, but there's been this sense of let down, it's almost taken away from some of the Masters win. The feelings we all had in April, they've been diminished and now there's these weird questions and weird energy. "It's totally self-induced, it just feels like it's not as much fun as it was. Rory made it fun to be a golf fan and it's less fun right now, and it's not good for anyone."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store