One of my earliest music loves was the Irish hard rock band Thin Lizzy. Like many of my generation, my introduction came in the song that would become their all-time classic, and the one you hear most on the radio (along with Whiskey In The Jar), namely The Boys Are Back In Town. This led me to go out and buy the album, Jailbreak, which I found out was their sixth studio album (released in March 1976) and thus I began my journey of discovering earlier albums and then subsequent albums as they came out. Phil Lynott was the creative force that led the band through their fourteen-year career, with drummer Brian Downey also a constant figure.
Formed in 1969, Thin Lizzy initially comprised Lynott, Downey, and guitarist Eric Bell (and to be technically correct, organist Eric Wrixon, though he left after a few months, leaving the band as a three-piece). The band’s music reflected multiple influences from blues and psychedelic rock to traditional Irish music through a solid hard rock lens, and adorned by Phil’s evocative lyrics that always have a story to tell; witness these poetic lines from the lead song of their second album, Shades Of A Blue Orphanage:
When we were kids we used to go over the back wall into old Dan’s scrapyard
Into the snooker hall where most us kids were barred
An’ into the Roxy and the Stella where film stars starred
That’s where me and Hopalong an’ Roy Rogers got drunk and jarred
And we might have been the saviour of the men
The captured captain in the devil’s demon den
And we might have been the magic politician in some kind of tricky position
Like an old, old, old master musician we kept on wishin’
We was headed for the number one hit country again
Eric Bell left in 1973 and was briefly replaced by Gary Moore, but it was the decision to replace Gary with two guitarists, Scott Gorham and Brian Robertson, that the classic line-up of my youth was formed. The twin guitar sound that Scott and Brian brought to the table would lead them to their greatest successes and break them in the US, that holy grail of band ambition. And it was Jailbreak that did it. Packed with great songs like the eponymous Jailbreak, The Boys Are Back In Town, Cowboy Song, and Emerald, the album was also thematically coherent As demonstrated so iconically by Jim Fitzpatrick’s great cover artwork, the album exudes themes of escape and rebellion, of the disenfranchised breaking free from the shackles of, well, you get the drift…
You can listen to the song Jailbreak here:

