* En anglais uniquement
Principally known as founder and frontman of the Scottish retro-focused indie rock mainstay
Primal Scream,
Bobby Gillespie was also a key player in the Creation Records story. He turned the label's brainchild,
Alan McGee, on to numerous acts --
the Jesus and Mary Chain,
Teenage Fanclub,
My Bloody Valentine, and
Ride -- all of whom subsequently became household names in discerning indie circles.
Gillespie's brief tenure as drummer in an early incarnation of
the J and M Chain saw him contribute to their 1985 classic
Psychocandy.
Primal Scream's third and most iconic record -- 1991's pioneering, platinum-selling, acid house-infused
Screamadelica -- began their run of seven consecutive albums that reached the U.K. Top Ten. Later, 2021 brought
Gillespie's first significant musical project outside of
Primal Scream in decades, a jointly billed set titled
Utopian Ashes, with
Jehnny Beth of
Savages fame.
Gillespie attended Kings Park Secondary School, on Glasgow's south side, where he formed Captain Scarlet & the Mysterons with
McGee, inspired by
Iggy Pop,
Sham 69, and
the Clash. After leaving school, he worked as a roadie for
Altered Images, and it was that band's original guitarist, Gerard McInulty, who subsequently asked him to play bass in his next project, the post-punk Factory signees the Wake. Although that role was short-lived,
Gillespie had formed
Primal Scream with
Jim Beattie by 1982. At this early stage it was only an occasional project and so, when his friend Douglas Hart asked him to join
the Jesus and Mary Chain in late 1984 -- fresh off their debut single --
Gillespie jumped at the chance. His rudimentary drumming style using only a floor tom and a snare suited a band that gave equal credence to
the Velvet Underground and
the Shangri-Las. However, the period between the completion of
Psychocandy and its release didn’t just produce
Primal Scream's debut single, but also saw
Gillespie decide to make his own group his sole concern.
It was the inclusion of the
Primal Scream B-side "Velocity Girl" on NME's genre-defining C86 cassette that brought the band a lot of early attention. Following their further dalliance with jangle pop on 1987's
Sonic Flower Groove -- and a hard-rocking sidestep on 1989's self-titled record --
Andrew Weatherall helped
Primal Scream find the sound that would come to define their commercial and critical high point, 1991's sample- and beats-driven
Screamadelica. Notable singles from that record included "Loaded," "Come Together," and "Movin' on Up." However, their highest-charting U.K. singles were still to come, in the form of 1994's
Stones-inspired "Rocks," 1997's "Kowalski," and the 2006 number five hit "Country Girl." Four further
Primal Scream albums were released in the decade that followed, helping to consolidate their fan base in the U.K., Japan, and the Nordic countries. Although his 2021
Jehnny Beth collaboration,
Utopian Ashes, featured key members of
Primal Scream on guitar, piano, and drums, the record brought a fresh dynamic to
Gillespie's canon, nodding to material from classic male-female duos such as
Lee Hazlewood and
Nancy Sinatra. ~ James Wilkinson