Thursday 16 March 2023

34 - I Could've Had Religion

 


I Could've Had Religion, The Marquee, 1972


Album – Live! In Europe, 1972

See also – Deuce 50th Anniversary box set, Radio Bremen version.

 

He wanted his next album to be a live album and it made the executives at Polydor somewhat twitchy – a live album wasn’t quite the stuff of hit material. But then again, Rory Gallagher wasn’t exactly bidding pop idol material about to get the right haircut, the right clothes, drape himself in supermodels and mime on Top Of The Pops. He recorded performances of his European tour of February and March 1972, releasing them as Live! In Europe on 14 May that year.

It didn’t get him on Top Of The Pops, and then there’s the tale of Rory’s less than positive response to the exec who presented him with an edited version (not edited  by Rory!) of ‘Going To My Hometown,’ declaring it to be a hit single. But Live! In Europe was his biggest charting album of all three of his solo albums at that point and it is still spoken of in hallowed tones by a host of highly respected successful musicians who regard it as a seminal influence.

Outside of ‘Going To My Hometown’, ‘I Could’ve Had Religion’ is one of the legendary songs off the album. Bob Dylan had planned to include it on one of his albums in the early 1990s and requested a copy of Live! In Europe, which he was sent with a copy of the then most recent album Fresh Evidence. As it was, Dylan never used the song. When asked why when he caught up with Rory at the 1994 Montreux Festival, Dylan replied that he thought it was an old traditional song, not realising that Rory had written it himself.

Rory had found the verses that he expanded into ‘I Could’ve Had Religion’ in a poetry book, and to that end, apparently regarded it as a traditional number. He thought Dylan should have recorded it anyway, but Dylan didn’t want to take the song away from Rory. Being a massive Dylan fan, Rory probably would have been delighted if it had been used by the American legend.

It’s easy to see why Dylan took the song as part of the traditional cannon. It has all the hallmarks of an old blues song: a man done wrong by a woman on the road to some personal hell, who originally was aiming for a life in the church. Interestingly, in the hey day of the country blues, the church regarded the music as being from hell itself. There were many bluesmen caught up in the juxtaposition, with Eddie ‘Son’ House perhaps being a famous case. He was a preacher at one point but fell back into the blues. His singing style was thought to have been influenced by his time as a preacher.

It's also astounding that the song was put together by a 23-year-old. Rory had a very strong faith himself and was a practicing Catholic. It’s mere supposition, but perhaps the themes of  blues allowed him to explore another side of life from a safe vantage point. Unlike many of his peers, Rory hadn’t fallen prey to the sexual mores and drugs that beset the music industry of the late 1960s and early 1970s. He had probably witnessed enough of that chaos to be able to channel it into a classic blues song of his own.

As good as it was, ‘I Could’ve Had Religion’ doesn’t seem to have remained in Rory’s live repertoire beyond the early 1970s. But decades later, in the 1990s, it made a return to Rory’s set and the passing of time only seems to have added to its potency. The guitar sound became even more wretched and angry, with Mark Feltham’s otherworldly harmonica giving it an added dimension. At the 1994 Montreux Festival – that same one where he met Dylan again – Rory also adds to the lyrics something that could only have been gleaned from lived experience. This later version comes across as one that is truly spoken from the heart. Rory did have the odd penchant at times to cook up new lyrics seemingly on the spot as he played live. This is no exception and perhaps for him, an incredibly shy and reserved person offstage, it was a way in which he could safely express what was on his mind.


I Could've Had Religion, Montreux 1994