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The guitarist Mel
Galley was a member of the heavy rock group Whitesnake in the early
1980s. His membership of the group, which had been formed by the
former Deep Purple singer David Coverdale in 1977, coincided with
the recording of two classic albums, Saints & Sinners (1982) and
Slide It In (1984), both of which made the Top 10 in the UK. Galley
was also part of Whitesnake when the band made a headline appearance
at Castle Donington's Monsters of Rock festival in 1983, which was
filmed for video release. The previous year he had been a hired hand
helping build the stage.
A melodic player who came up
with many a catchy riff and could turn out a flashy solo when
needed, Galley co-wrote half the tracks on Slide It In (the album's
distinctive cover featured an image of a snake in a woman's
cleavage), in particular the rocky Top 30 single "Give Me More Time"
and the power ballad "Love Ain't No Stranger". Substantially
reworked for its US release, the record sold over two million copies
there and helped the band move from a bluesier style to their
subsequent reinvention as heroes of hair metal with the worldwide
success of the album Whitesnake 1987.
Unfortunately, Galley's tenure in the group proved
short-lived. On a drunken night out in Germany in the spring of
1984, he decided to leap on to a Volkswagen car; his fellow
guitarist John Sykes followed and Galley's left arm was broken when
they both fell off. Galley suffered nerve damage during surgery and
never recovered full use of his arm, having to fit a brace, which he
called "the Claw", to his hand in order to to play the guitar.
Born in Staffordshire in 1948, Mel Galley was a
leading light of the Midlands rock scene and played with the bassist
and vocalist Glenn Hughes and the drummer Dave Holland, first as
Finders Keepers, then forming the group Trapeze. In 1969, they
signed to Threshold, the Moody Blues label, and issued three
critically acclaimed albums. Hughes departed to join Deep Purple in
1973. Galley took over lead vocals and the group signed to Warner
Brothers and concentrated on the US market, where they developed a
substantial following for their robust rock. A high-water mark for
Trapeze was a support slot with the Rolling Stones and the Eagles in
front of 120,000 people at Dallas Cotton Bowl in July 1975.
After leaving Whitesnake in 1984, Galley helped
his brother Tom write songs for the AOR supergroup Phenomena, which
has issued four albums over the last 24 years. He briefly reformed
Trapeze with Hughes and also played with MGM, a band featuring the
Whitesnake alumni Bernie Marsden (guitar) and Neil Murray (bass).
In 2007, Galley made headlines in the Midlands
when he confronted a pensioner called Ken Grimley, who had been
impersonating Galley for over 10 years, signing autographs and
giving plectrums away. He posed as a fan himself before revealing
his true identity.
Mel Galley showed little bitterness about the
freak accident which had scuppered his career. "It was the most
devastating thing that could happen to a guitarist," he said. "One
minute I was playing with one of the biggest bands in the world,
next minute finding it very hard to even scratch my own arse.
Thankfully, with the aid of the Claw, even though told by doctors I
would never play again, determination made me prove them wrong."
David Coverdale, the Whitesnake frontman, has been
dedicating "Love Ain't No Stranger" to Galley on the group's current
tour. Glenn Hughes said: "Mel was my hero growing up as a kid in
Cannock. He was four years older than me and, along with Jimi
Hendrix and Eric Clapton, was one of my guitar gods. He taught me
music, and more importantly, he taught me how to live. After Cream,
Trapeze were the greatest English rock trio."
Pierre Perrone
Melville Galley, guitarist, singer and songwriter:
born Cannock, Staffordshire 8 March 1948; twice married (two sons);
died Cannock 1 July 2008.
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