Rory Gallagher
Blueprint

Buddha    99709 2  (1973)

Rock/Pop
CD, 10   Tracks, 52:52  Length
01 Walk On Hot Coals Rory Gallagher 07:02
02 Daughter Of The Everglades Rory Gallagher 06:13
03 Banker's Blues Big Bill Broonzy 04:46
04 Hands Off Rory Gallagher 04:31
05 Race The Breeze Rory Gallagher 06:54
06 Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son Rory Gallagher 08:25
07 Unmilitary Two-Step Rory Gallagher 02:49
08 If I Had A Reason Rory Gallagher 04:30
09 Stompin' Ground Rory Gallagher 03:31
10 Treat Her Right Roy Head 04:11
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Guitar Rory Gallagher
Bass Gerry McAvoy
Keyboards Lou Martin
Drums Rod de'Ath
Producer Rory Gallagher
Engineer Phil Dunn; Andy Stephens
Personal Details
Index # 1258
Owner Dave
Tags Blues Rock
User Defined
Purchased Used
Notes
Kicking off with the furious "Walk on Hot Coals" where Rory Gallagher's stinging guitar and Lou Martin's insistent piano pounding spar within the context of one of Rory's classic rockers, the album presents a well rounded picture of Gallagher's eclectic influences. A jaunty, acoustic run through Big Bill Broonzy's "Banker's Blues" (oddly credited to Gallagher), the ragtime "Unmilitary Two-Step" as well as an unusually straightforward country tune "If I Had a Reason" with Rory on lap-steel and Martin doing his best honky-tonk, effectively break up the blues-rock that remains the soul of the album. The album's centerpiece, a brooding "Seventh Son of a Seventh Son" finds the band locked into a swampy groove for over eight minutes as Gallagher abbreviates his own solo providing room for Martin's aggressive piano. On "Hands Off" the guitarist even picks up saxophone, and he shows off his spooky Muddy Waters' inspired slide on the train chugging "Race the Breeze," one of the guitarist's best tunes. The final two bonus tracks tacked on for this reissue don't add much of interest; an early, shuffle version of "Stompin' Ground" lacks the tension of the song that later showed up as the only studio tracks on the live Irish Tour '74 album, and Roy Head's "Treat Her Right" sounds like a soundcheck warm-up, which it probably was. Concise track-by-track liner notes from Rory's brother Donal provide useful background information, and the remastered sound taken from the original tapes is a revelation, with Gallagher's guitar parts and especially vocals, clear and precise in the spiffed up mix. -- Hal Horowitz (allmusic.com)

Remastered Version
BMG 2000
2 Bonus Tracks
Original 1973