Garry Roberts, The Boomtown Rats’ Guitarist Dies At 72

Guitarist and founding member of The Boomtown Rats, Garry Roberts, has died aged 72, the band has announced. No cause of death has been revealed at the time of writing.

He was the “guy who summed up the sense of who The Rats are”, the Irish rock group said in a statement. It said they had known Garry since they were children and that they felt “strangely adrift” without him.

Lead singer Sir Bob Geldof fronted the Boomtown Rats which started in Dublin in 1975. The group said that to fans, Garry Roberts was “The Legend – and he was. For us he was Gazzer.”

The statement was signed by remaining members of the band including Sir Bob, drummer Simon Crowe and bassist Pete Briquette. The statement continued: “Safe travels Gaz. Thanks for everything mate.”


They said: “On a clear spring evening in 1975, in a pub in Dun Laoghaire, Co Dublin, Garry became the founding member of what turned out to be a great rock ‘n’ roll band, driven largely by that sound of his – a storm of massive considered noise that punched out from his overtaxed amplifiers and which animated not just the rest of the group but audiences he played to around the world.”

Roberts, as one of the group’s founding members, is said to have been instrumental in the band settling on the name Boomtown Rats. He is said to have threatened to quit unless they changed their name from The Nightlife Thugs. Their new name was chosen by Geldof after he read the phrase in US protest singer Woody Guthrie’s autobiography, Bound for Glory.

In a tweet, the band also described Roberts as: “A man who will be missed, a friend who will be remembered, a sound that will never been forgotten.”

Paying tribute, Hot Press’ editor Niall Stokes said: “Garry Roberts was every inch a rock ’n’ roller. The Boomtown Rats made a brilliant noise and it was Garry’s guitar which drove that. He was a fine musician, but he also embodied the spirit of rock music. He loved being in a band – and even more so being in a hugely successful band that changed the musical landscape in Ireland completely. The Rats’ fantastic, and extraordinarily quick success from 1977 onwards made it possible for Irish musicians to dream big – leading on to the success of U2, and all of the bands and artists that followed in their wake.

“Garry, and his ability as a guitar player, were central to that success – which arrived at its apotheosis when the band’s single “Rat Trap” hit No.1 in the UK, in 1978 – pushing “Summer Nights” by John Travolta and Olivia Newton John off the top of the UK charts.”

“It is a very sad day for Irish music – and for everyone who loved The Boomtown Rats, and who understood and appreciated what they achieved for this country culturally and musically.”

Discover

Sponsor

spot_img

Latest

Swedish Metal Icons MESHUGGAH Announce Monumental 2025 North American Tour 

Get ready for one of the most highly anticipated tours of 2025! Swedish metal juggernauts MESHUGGAH will make their triumphant return to North American...

Ariana Grande Announces ‘My Everything’ Tenth Anniversary Edition   

 My Everything, the 2014 album that cemented Ariana Grande’s status as pop royalty, is getting a deluxe reissue for its tenth anniversary. Dropping exactly...

Indianapolis Quartet IDENTITY UNKNOWN Melds Nü-Metal Roots with Modern Sound on Debut Album, “Nothing Left to Give”

Indianapolis Quartet IDENTITY UNKNOWN Melds Nü-Metal Roots with Modern Sound on Debut Album, Nothing Left to Give Nothing Left to Give Available Now For the members of up-and-coming Indianapolis nü-metal band IDENTITY UNKNOWN, whose...

Kanye West And Drake’s ‘Free Larry Hoover’ Concert To Stream On Amazon And In Imax Theaters

Amazon Music and Prime Video will live stream Kanye West’s first headlining show in five years, with special guest Drake. The “Free Larry Hoover”...

Happy Anniversary to Kansas’ ‘Point of Know Return’

Happy Anniversary to Point of Know Return, the fifth studio album from Kansas. They released it on October 11, 1977. Jeff Glixman produced the...