A (Blak) Gat in the Hand: Rory Gallagher and the Continental Op
“You’re the second guy I’ve met within hours who seems to think a gat in the hand means a world by the tail.” — Phillip Marlowe in Raymond Chandler’s The Big Sleep
I just finished the intro for Volume 4 of Steeger Books’ The Continental Op series. I’ll post it here after the book comes out, of course. But being in an Op mood, I wanted to bring back an Op mashup post which I did waaaay back in 2018.
Rory Gallagher passed in 1995. Wow – that’s 31 years ago now. An Irish blues-rock guitarist and singer, he is still revered throughout Europe. I don’t mean ‘popular.’ Think Eric Clapton status. There are statues of, and public spaces named after, him, in Ireland.
Of course musicians in America know of him. But he is not popularly-remembered here. Ask someone to name their ten favorite guitarists, and I don’t think you’ll hear his name very often.
Which is a shame, because he was a spectacular musician. We can all name bands and musicians we feel are underappreciated. But Gallagher should be on the same pedestal we put Buddy Guy and Jimmy Page on. He should be at least as well-remembered and popular as Robert Cray is (still alive, of course). I strongly recommend listening to an album or two and just immersing yourself in his talent.









