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Skid Row (Irish band)

Skid Row were an Irish blues rock band of the late 1960s and early 1970s, based in Dublin and fronted by bass guitarist Brendan "Brush" Shiels. It was the first band in which Phil Lynott and Gary Moore played professionally before finding greater fame with Thin Lizzy.

Skid Row
OriginDublin, Ireland
Genres
Years active
  • 1967–1972
  • 1973–1979
  • 2012
LabelsCBS
Past membersBrendan "Brush" Shiels
Phil Lynott
Bernard "Bernie" Cheevers
Noel "Nollaig" Bridgeman
Robbie Brennan
Gary Moore
Paul Chapman
Ed Deane
Eamonn Gibney
John Wilson
Kevin McAlea

History edit

Origins edit

The band was formed in August 1967, comprising Brendan 'Brush' Shiels on bass guitar, Noel 'Nollaig' Bridgeman on drums, Bernard "Ben" Cheevers on guitar,[1] and Phil Lynott on vocals. Shiels and Cheevers had played together in a number of groups in Dublin before forming Skid Row. The band's first gig was in September 1967 in a basement club in Lower Abbey Street in Dublin 1. Cheevers left the band in September 1968 to continue working full-time in the electrical industry. Before his departure, the search for a suitably proficient guitarist resulted in Gary Moore joining the band as a fifth member. Moore and Cheevers both played in the band for a short 'hand-over' period. Robbie Brennan temporarily replaced original drummer Bridgeman until June 1969 and Cheevers was replaced by the 16-year-old Gary Moore in mid 1968, and the band recorded a single, "New Places, Old Faces" / "Misdemeanour Dream Felicity", for the Irish Song Records label (the only released recording of Lynott with Skid Row).

Later that year Shiels dropped Lynott from the line-up, converting Skid Row to a power trio by making himself the lead vocalist.[2] By way of compensation, Shiels gave him a bass guitar he had bought from former musician Robert Ballagh for £49 in 1967 while with the Uptown Band, he taught Lynott to play bass and, after a stint with 'Orphanage', Lynott went on to international fame as founder, bassist and vocalist for Thin Lizzy.[3][4] The band recorded a second single for 'Song', "Saturday Morning Man" / "Mervyn Aldridge". These two singles, plus three tracks from a BBC recording, were issued on the 'Hux' label as Live and on Song in April 2006. At the end of 2006 a number of Skid Row demo tapes featuring Phil Lynott were discovered. These were his earliest recordings (from 1968) and had been presumed lost for decades.[5]

Skid and 34 Hours edit

With the returning Bridgeman, Skid Row played support to some of the great rock groups of the 1960s, including Fleetwood Mac in January 1970. Moore was influenced by the Fleetwood Mac guitarist Peter Green, who was in turn impressed by Moore's guitar playing and introduced him to the Columbia/CBS record company. A third single, "Sandie's Gone (Part 1)" / "Sandie's Gone (Part 2)", was released on the band's new label in April 1970, and a number of sessions and concerts were also recorded for the BBC during this period. The band released its first album Skid, in October 1970. A second LP, 34 Hours – so called because it took them a mere 34 hours to record it – was released in early 1971, preceded by the single "Night Of The Warm Witch" / "Mr. De-Luxe". Skid Row performed on the legendary German TV music show Beat Club on 18 March 1971. There were short tours of Europe (October 1970, with Canned Heat) and of the USA (October/November 1970 and August and October 1971).[6] A widely bootlegged show billed as "The Whiskey, Los Angeles, August 5, 1970", and featuring John Bonham as a guest, is more likely from August 1971.[7] A third album was recorded in the Autumn of 1971 but Moore left the band in December 1971 just before another planned US tour. He was temporarily replaced by Eric Bell (from Thin Lizzy) for some live appearances before Paul Chapman became the band's full-time guitarist. Moore later played with Thin Lizzy, replacing Eric Bell. Chapman overdubbed Moore's guitar tracks on the unreleased album but neither version was made public for almost twenty years. As the band faltered, Chapman left in July 1972 (later joining UFO). Shiels then teamed with drummer John Wilson (ex-Them, Taste and Stud) and future Sparks guitarist Adrian Fisher to form a band named simply 'Brush'.

Changing lineups edit

Skid Row reformed in Ireland in 1973, initially with Shiels, Wilson, singer Eamonn Gibney (ex-Alyce) and guitarist Ed Deane, later adding keyboard player Kevin McAlea. Gibney would later join Colm Wilkinson and Helen Jordan to sing as The Dajacs at the 1980 Irish final for the Eurovision Song Contest placing 7th. Shiels/Deane/Wilson line-up released the single "Dublin City Angels" / "Slow Down". John Wilson was replaced by Paddy Freeney before the band split again in early 1974. For the next few months Shiels played in the 'Bell-Brush Band' with Eric Bell and Timmy Creedon (drums, ex-Orphanage), sometimes joined by Eamonn Gibney. At the end of the year Shiels, Moore and Bridgeman briefly reunited for a series of gigs, and a 1975 line-up of Shiels (guitar/vocals), Bridgeman, Jimi Slevin (lead guitar/vocals, ex-Alyce, ex-Peggy's Leg) (born June 1950, Dublin), Timmy Creedon (second drummer/vocals) and Johann Brady (bass) recorded the Skid Row single "The Spanish Lady" / "Elvira".[8] In 1976 Jody Pollard (guitar, ex-Elmer Fudd) replaced Pat O'Farrell in a line-up with Shiels (vocals/mandolin), Bridgeman (drums), John Brady (bass) and Dave Gaynor (drums), recording the Phil Lynott-produced double A-sided single "Coming Home Again" / "Fight Your Heart Out" and unreleased track "Skid Row Flashback".[9] The 1976 double-disc live album of Rock n' Roll standards Alive And Kickin featured Shiels, Bridgeman, Brady, Pollard, Gaynor and Ian Anderson. In 1978 Pollard rejoined, this time replacing Eric Bell alongside Shiels, Bridgeman, Brady and Joe Staunton (guitar, ex-Orphanage).[9]

Legacy edit

Skid Row had little commercial success outside Ireland and the UK, although Skid reached No.30 on the UK Albums Chart.[10] More of their recorded material was released between 1990 and 2006.

Phil Lynott died of septicaemia in January 1986, John Brady was killed in a car accident on 15 February 1993, and Gary Moore died from a heart attack in February 2011. Noel Bridgeman went on to perform studio work with Clannad, The Waterboys and Altan and was part of Irish folk singer Mary Black's band in the late 1980s and early 1990s. He died in March 2021.

Shiels still occasionally performs as 'Brush Shiels' Skid Row', as recently as February 2005.

Brush Shiels returned to his Skid Row legacy once more releasing Mad Dog Woman (originally titled Skid Row Revisited) – an album of new material and re-recordings of Skid Row songs – through his website in June 2009. He also thanked the other Skid Row "for the generosity of spirit in acknowledging the contribution of the original Skid Row" by using the name.[11] In January 2012 Shiels issued a public request to Jon Bon Jovi via YouTube to contact him about the use of the name 'Skid Row'. This was connected to Shiels having recently recovered the rights to his own songs recorded with the original Skid Row.[12]

It was reported that in 1987, Jon Bon Jovi asked Gary Moore to sell the name 'Skid Row' to the American heavy metal band for $35,000 (Bon Jovi part-owns the music publishing rights of this band). Lead singer Sebastian Bach recalled,

When (Skid Row) got signed to Atlantic, Gary Moore heard about it and said we could have the name for $35,000 U.S. dollars. "We have to pay Gary Moore 35 grand to use the name," and so we, as a band, did buy the name from Gary Moore. We were all glad to do it because it is a great name for a band. I remember saying, "Wow, that's a lot of $, but we gotta do it!"[13]

However, Shiels maintains that Moore simply referred the band to Shiels to discuss the rights to the name, but that it was never followed up.[12]

They were managed in the 1970s by Oliver Byrne.

Band members edit

  • Brendan "Brush" Shiels – bass, vocals (1967–1972, 1973–1976, 2012)
  • Noel "Nollaig" Bridgeman – drums (1967, 1969–1972, 1975–1976)
  • Bernard "Bernie" Cheevers – guitars (1967)
  • Phil Lynott – vocals (1967–1968)
  • Gary Moore – guitars, vocals (1968–1971)
  • Robbie Brennan – drums (1968)
  • Eric Bell – guitars (1971)
  • Paul Chapman – guitars (1971–1972)
  • Eamonn Gibney – vocals (1973–1974)
  • Ed Deane – guitars (1973–1974)
  • John Wilson – drums (1973)
  • Kevin McAlea – keyboards (1973–1974)
  • Johann Braddy – bass (1975–1976)
  • Paddy Freeney – drums (1974–1975)
  • Timmy Creedon – drums (1975)
  • Dave Gaynor – drums (1976)
  • Jimi Slevin – guitars (1975)
  • Pat O'Farrell – guitars (1976)
  • Jody Polland – guitars (1976)

Discography edit

Albums edit

  • Skid Row (CBS, May 1970)[14]a.k.a. Dublin Gas Comy. (text on cover photo)
  • Skid (CBS, November 1970) – Reached No.30 in the UK Album Chart
  • 34 Hours (CBS, 1971)
  • Alive and Kicking (Release Records, June 1976)
  • Skid Row (Essential Records, 1990) – a.k.a. Gary Moore/Brush Shiels/Noel Bridgeman (artist credited on cover & spine), this is the Gary Moore version of the unreleased third album, recorded late 1971.
  • Live and on Song (Hux, 2006) – Compilation: includes both sides of Skid Row's first two singles on the 'Song' label recorded 1969, plus a BBC 'In Concert' recording from 1971
  • Bon Jovi Never Rang Me (Bruised Records, 2012)

Singles edit

  • "New Places, Old Faces" / "Misdemeanour Dream Felicity" (Song, 1969)
  • "Saturday Morning Man" / "Mervyn Aldridge" (Song, 1969)
  • "Sandy's Gone (Part 1)" / "Sandy's Gone (Part 2)" (CBS, April 1970)
  • "Night of the Warm Witch" / "Mr. De-Luxe" (CBS, April 1971)
  • "Living One Day at a Time" / "Girl from Dublin City" (CBS, February 1972)[15]
  • "Dublin City Girls" / "Slow Down" (Hawk, 1973)
  • "The Spanish Lady" / "Elvira" (Dude Records, 1975)
  • "Coming Home Again" / "Fight Your Heart Out" (1976)[9]
  • "House of the Rising Sun" / "Buckfast Tonic" / "Let It Roll" (1981)[16]
  • "Mr. Diablo" / "Bring Them Back Alive" (Bruised Records, 1987)[16][17]
  • "Comin' Home Again" / "Flight of Earls" (Bruised Records, 1990)

References edit

  1. ^ . Irishshowbands.net. Archived from the original on 16 June 2018. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  2. ^ A Brief History of Skid Row on the Brush Shiels – Skid Row website 17 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Hot Press: Special Philip Lynott Issue (24 February 2011)
  4. ^ "HIStory of the Brush". Mrdeluxe.tripod.com.
  5. ^ "Fans' joy as Lynott demos unearthed". Rte.ie.
  6. ^ "Skid Row tour dates, 1971". Garymoorefc.com.
  7. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 August 2011.
  8. ^ . 20 February 2012. Archived from the original on 20 February 2012.
  9. ^ a b c "Jody Pollard – Singer Songwriter". Jodypollard.com.
  10. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 505. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
  11. ^ "Brush Shiels on MySpace Music". Myspace.com.
  12. ^ a b Did Bon Jovi give Skid Row a 'Bad Name'? – Examiner (17 January 2012)
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 February 2011.
  14. ^ This contains recordings the band made with producer Mike Smith in London in December 1969. CBS pressed it as their debut album in May 1970, but swiftly withdrew it from circulation when it was decided to re-record certain songs and add new material to create the "Skid" LP (issued in September 1970). "Skid Row". Discogs.com.
  15. ^ . Irish-showbands.com. Archived from the original on 29 September 2011.
  16. ^ a b "Skid Row discography". RateYourMusic.com.
  17. ^ Strong, Martin C. (2000). The Great Rock Discography (5th ed.). Edinburgh: Mojo Books. p. 887. ISBN 1-84195-017-3.

External links edit

  • Discography at Discogs.com
  • Skid Row at WorldMusicDatabase
  • Fleetwoodmac.net
  • Alexgitlin.com

skid, irish, band, skid, were, irish, blues, rock, band, late, 1960s, early, 1970s, based, dublin, fronted, bass, guitarist, brendan, brush, shiels, first, band, which, phil, lynott, gary, moore, played, professionally, before, finding, greater, fame, with, th. Skid Row were an Irish blues rock band of the late 1960s and early 1970s based in Dublin and fronted by bass guitarist Brendan Brush Shiels It was the first band in which Phil Lynott and Gary Moore played professionally before finding greater fame with Thin Lizzy Skid RowOriginDublin IrelandGenresBlues rockhard rockYears active1967 19721973 19792012LabelsCBSPast membersBrendan Brush Shiels Phil Lynott Bernard Bernie Cheevers Noel Nollaig BridgemanRobbie Brennan Gary MoorePaul ChapmanEd DeaneEamonn GibneyJohn WilsonKevin McAlea Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Skid and 34 Hours 1 3 Changing lineups 1 4 Legacy 2 Band members 3 Discography 3 1 Albums 3 2 Singles 4 References 5 External linksHistory editOrigins edit The band was formed in August 1967 comprising Brendan Brush Shiels on bass guitar Noel Nollaig Bridgeman on drums Bernard Ben Cheevers on guitar 1 and Phil Lynott on vocals Shiels and Cheevers had played together in a number of groups in Dublin before forming Skid Row The band s first gig was in September 1967 in a basement club in Lower Abbey Street in Dublin 1 Cheevers left the band in September 1968 to continue working full time in the electrical industry Before his departure the search for a suitably proficient guitarist resulted in Gary Moore joining the band as a fifth member Moore and Cheevers both played in the band for a short hand over period Robbie Brennan temporarily replaced original drummer Bridgeman until June 1969 and Cheevers was replaced by the 16 year old Gary Moore in mid 1968 and the band recorded a single New Places Old Faces Misdemeanour Dream Felicity for the Irish Song Records label the only released recording of Lynott with Skid Row Later that year Shiels dropped Lynott from the line up converting Skid Row to a power trio by making himself the lead vocalist 2 By way of compensation Shiels gave him a bass guitar he had bought from former musician Robert Ballagh for 49 in 1967 while with the Uptown Band he taught Lynott to play bass and after a stint with Orphanage Lynott went on to international fame as founder bassist and vocalist for Thin Lizzy 3 4 The band recorded a second single for Song Saturday Morning Man Mervyn Aldridge These two singles plus three tracks from a BBC recording were issued on the Hux label as Live and on Song in April 2006 At the end of 2006 a number of Skid Row demo tapes featuring Phil Lynott were discovered These were his earliest recordings from 1968 and had been presumed lost for decades 5 Skid and 34 Hours edit With the returning Bridgeman Skid Row played support to some of the great rock groups of the 1960s including Fleetwood Mac in January 1970 Moore was influenced by the Fleetwood Mac guitarist Peter Green who was in turn impressed by Moore s guitar playing and introduced him to the Columbia CBS record company A third single Sandie s Gone Part 1 Sandie s Gone Part 2 was released on the band s new label in April 1970 and a number of sessions and concerts were also recorded for the BBC during this period The band released its first album Skid in October 1970 A second LP 34 Hours so called because it took them a mere 34 hours to record it was released in early 1971 preceded by the single Night Of The Warm Witch Mr De Luxe Skid Row performed on the legendary German TV music show Beat Club on 18 March 1971 There were short tours of Europe October 1970 with Canned Heat and of the USA October November 1970 and August and October 1971 6 A widely bootlegged show billed as The Whiskey Los Angeles August 5 1970 and featuring John Bonham as a guest is more likely from August 1971 7 A third album was recorded in the Autumn of 1971 but Moore left the band in December 1971 just before another planned US tour He was temporarily replaced by Eric Bell from Thin Lizzy for some live appearances before Paul Chapman became the band s full time guitarist Moore later played with Thin Lizzy replacing Eric Bell Chapman overdubbed Moore s guitar tracks on the unreleased album but neither version was made public for almost twenty years As the band faltered Chapman left in July 1972 later joining UFO Shiels then teamed with drummer John Wilson ex Them Taste and Stud and future Sparks guitarist Adrian Fisher to form a band named simply Brush Changing lineups edit Skid Row reformed in Ireland in 1973 initially with Shiels Wilson singer Eamonn Gibney ex Alyce and guitarist Ed Deane later adding keyboard player Kevin McAlea Gibney would later join Colm Wilkinson and Helen Jordan to sing as The Dajacs at the 1980 Irish final for the Eurovision Song Contest placing 7th Shiels Deane Wilson line up released the single Dublin City Angels Slow Down John Wilson was replaced by Paddy Freeney before the band split again in early 1974 For the next few months Shiels played in the Bell Brush Band with Eric Bell and Timmy Creedon drums ex Orphanage sometimes joined by Eamonn Gibney At the end of the year Shiels Moore and Bridgeman briefly reunited for a series of gigs and a 1975 line up of Shiels guitar vocals Bridgeman Jimi Slevin lead guitar vocals ex Alyce ex Peggy s Leg born June 1950 Dublin Timmy Creedon second drummer vocals and Johann Brady bass recorded the Skid Row single The Spanish Lady Elvira 8 In 1976 Jody Pollard guitar ex Elmer Fudd replaced Pat O Farrell in a line up with Shiels vocals mandolin Bridgeman drums John Brady bass and Dave Gaynor drums recording the Phil Lynott produced double A sided single Coming Home Again Fight Your Heart Out and unreleased track Skid Row Flashback 9 The 1976 double disc live album of Rock n Roll standards Alive And Kickin featured Shiels Bridgeman Brady Pollard Gaynor and Ian Anderson In 1978 Pollard rejoined this time replacing Eric Bell alongside Shiels Bridgeman Brady and Joe Staunton guitar ex Orphanage 9 Legacy edit Skid Row had little commercial success outside Ireland and the UK although Skid reached No 30 on the UK Albums Chart 10 More of their recorded material was released between 1990 and 2006 Phil Lynott died of septicaemia in January 1986 John Brady was killed in a car accident on 15 February 1993 and Gary Moore died from a heart attack in February 2011 Noel Bridgeman went on to perform studio work with Clannad The Waterboys and Altan and was part of Irish folk singer Mary Black s band in the late 1980s and early 1990s He died in March 2021 Shiels still occasionally performs as Brush Shiels Skid Row as recently as February 2005 Brush Shiels returned to his Skid Row legacy once more releasing Mad Dog Woman originally titled Skid Row Revisited an album of new material and re recordings of Skid Row songs through his website in June 2009 He also thanked the other Skid Row for the generosity of spirit in acknowledging the contribution of the original Skid Row by using the name 11 In January 2012 Shiels issued a public request to Jon Bon Jovi via YouTube to contact him about the use of the name Skid Row This was connected to Shiels having recently recovered the rights to his own songs recorded with the original Skid Row 12 It was reported that in 1987 Jon Bon Jovi asked Gary Moore to sell the name Skid Row to the American heavy metal band for 35 000 Bon Jovi part owns the music publishing rights of this band Lead singer Sebastian Bach recalled When Skid Row got signed to Atlantic Gary Moore heard about it and said we could have the name for 35 000 U S dollars We have to pay Gary Moore 35 grand to use the name and so we as a band did buy the name from Gary Moore We were all glad to do it because it is a great name for a band I remember saying Wow that s a lot of but we gotta do it 13 However Shiels maintains that Moore simply referred the band to Shiels to discuss the rights to the name but that it was never followed up 12 They were managed in the 1970s by Oliver Byrne Band members editBrendan Brush Shiels bass vocals 1967 1972 1973 1976 2012 Noel Nollaig Bridgeman drums 1967 1969 1972 1975 1976 Bernard Bernie Cheevers guitars 1967 Phil Lynott vocals 1967 1968 Gary Moore guitars vocals 1968 1971 Robbie Brennan drums 1968 Eric Bell guitars 1971 Paul Chapman guitars 1971 1972 Eamonn Gibney vocals 1973 1974 Ed Deane guitars 1973 1974 John Wilson drums 1973 Kevin McAlea keyboards 1973 1974 Johann Braddy bass 1975 1976 Paddy Freeney drums 1974 1975 Timmy Creedon drums 1975 Dave Gaynor drums 1976 Jimi Slevin guitars 1975 Pat O Farrell guitars 1976 Jody Polland guitars 1976 Discography editAlbums edit Skid Row CBS May 1970 14 a k a Dublin Gas Comy text on cover photo Skid CBS November 1970 Reached No 30 in the UK Album Chart 34 Hours CBS 1971 Alive and Kicking Release Records June 1976 Skid Row Essential Records 1990 a k a Gary Moore Brush Shiels Noel Bridgeman artist credited on cover amp spine this is the Gary Moore version of the unreleased third album recorded late 1971 Live and on Song Hux 2006 Compilation includes both sides of Skid Row s first two singles on the Song label recorded 1969 plus a BBC In Concert recording from 1971 Bon Jovi Never Rang Me Bruised Records 2012 Singles edit New Places Old Faces Misdemeanour Dream Felicity Song 1969 Saturday Morning Man Mervyn Aldridge Song 1969 Sandy s Gone Part 1 Sandy s Gone Part 2 CBS April 1970 Night of the Warm Witch Mr De Luxe CBS April 1971 Living One Day at a Time Girl from Dublin City CBS February 1972 15 Dublin City Girls Slow Down Hawk 1973 The Spanish Lady Elvira Dude Records 1975 Coming Home Again Fight Your Heart Out 1976 9 House of the Rising Sun Buckfast Tonic Let It Roll 1981 16 Mr Diablo Bring Them Back Alive Bruised Records 1987 16 17 Comin Home Again Flight of Earls Bruised Records 1990 References edit The Intruders Irishshowbands net Archived from the original on 16 June 2018 Retrieved 23 November 2019 A Brief History of Skid Row on the Brush Shiels Skid Row website Archived 17 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine Hot Press Special Philip Lynott Issue 24 February 2011 HIStory of the Brush Mrdeluxe tripod com Fans joy as Lynott demos unearthed Rte ie Skid Row tour dates 1971 Garymoorefc com The Gary Moore Bible PDF Archived from the original PDF on 30 August 2011 Jimi Slevin Audio Samples 20 February 2012 Archived from the original on 20 February 2012 a b c Jody Pollard Singer Songwriter Jodypollard com Roberts David 2006 British Hit Singles amp Albums 19th ed London Guinness World Records Limited p 505 ISBN 1 904994 10 5 Brush Shiels on MySpace Music Myspace com a b Did Bon Jovi give Skid Row a Bad Name Examiner 17 January 2012 Sebastian Bach on the BlabberMouth Net website Archived from the original on 13 February 2011 This contains recordings the band made with producer Mike Smith in London in December 1969 CBS pressed it as their debut album in May 1970 but swiftly withdrew it from circulation when it was decided to re record certain songs and add new material to create the Skid LP issued in September 1970 Skid Row Discogs com Skid Row Irish showbands com Archived from the original on 29 September 2011 a b Skid Row discography RateYourMusic com Strong Martin C 2000 The Great Rock Discography 5th ed Edinburgh Mojo Books p 887 ISBN 1 84195 017 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Skid Row Irish band Discography at Discogs com Skid Row at Irish Showbands com Skid Row at WorldMusicDatabase Fleetwoodmac net Alexgitlin com Gary moore com Discography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Skid Row Irish band amp oldid 1204154552, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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