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Lightbody later co-wrote "What Are You Waiting For" on the album Strangest Things, with Anu Pillai for Freeform Five. [16] [19] "What Are You Waiting For" was written before Snow Patrol released Final Straw, during a time when Lightbody was staying over at the band's place for a few days. Pillai had to literally drag a hungover Lightbody to the ...
Songs for Polarbears is the debut studio album by Northern Irish–Scottish alternative rock band Snow Patrol, released on 31 August 1998 in the United Kingdom and 12 October in the United States. [7] The album charted at #143 in the UK and did not sell well upon its initial release. However, its re-release eventually went Gold in the UK.
Gary Lightbody – vocals, guitar, keyboards; Mark McClelland – bass, keyboards, backing vocals; Tom Simpson – keyboards, piano, samples (touring) Jonny Quinn – drums, percussion; Songs for Polarbears (1998) remaining tracks; When It's All Over We Still Have to Clear Up (2001) March 2001 – spring 2002 Gary Lightbody – vocals, guitar ...
Conor Bruen, 19, sang Snow Patrol's hit Chasing Cars alongside the band's Gary Lightbody.
Snow Patrol are a Northern Irish–Scottish rock band formed in 1994 in Dundee, Scotland, [1] consisting of Gary Lightbody (vocals, guitar), Nathan Connolly (guitar, backing vocals), and Johnny McDaid (piano, guitar, keyboards, backing vocals); Lightbody is the band's sole remaining original member.
The Reindeer Section are a Scottish indie rock supergroup formed in 2001 by Gary Lightbody of Snow Patrol, which released albums and gigged in 2001 and 2002.. Lightbody describes the band's sound as "pretty much all very slow, quiet, folky-type stuff.
Tired Pony was an indie folk supergroup consisting of Gary Lightbody, Richard Colburn, Iain Archer, Jacknife Lee, Peter Buck, Scott McCaughey, Tom Smith and Troy Stewart.. Lightbody formed the group out of his appreciation for country music, and has during the early planning phase described the group's music once as "country-tinged" but explained later that in the end the album's development ...
At the time of the release of the album, Snow Patrol.com posted a section featuring a discussion of the song with the band's lyricist, Gary Lightbody discussing the new songs, which was initially a Lightbody interview to RTÉ. [2] About "If There's a Rocket Tie Me to It", he said that the song "was a love record rather than a break up record".