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Shane Gallagher
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Key Information
Shane Gallagher (born December 30, 1973) is a musician who played guitar for the bands +44, Mercy Killers and The Nervous Return.[1]
Background
[edit]In 2005, Gallagher left The Nervous Return to join Mark Hoppus and Travis Barker (both of blink-182 fame) and guitarist Craig Fairbaugh to form +44.[citation needed] He was brought in as a replacement for Carol Heller as guitarist in +44 after she left the band to start a family. In 2007, he officially became a member of The Mercy Killers and he went on tour with them.[citation needed] Once +44 took a break so Mark and Travis could focus on the new blink-182 record, Shane worked on several different musical projects—including the Noise Chapter, which consisted of ex-members of one of his previous bands, called the Scrimmage Heroes—as well as the instrumental, acoustic act A Death To Stars.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ Hatschek, Keith (2005-10-10). The Golden Moment: Recording Secrets from the Pros. Hal Leonard Corporation. pp. 154–. ISBN 9780879308667. Retrieved 30 July 2012.
Shane Gallagher
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Birth and upbringing
Shane Gallagher was born on December 30, 1973, in Jakarta, Indonesia.[1] He is the son of Chong Suk Gallagher, who was born and raised in Seoul, Korea, and Michael Gallagher, giving him Korean and European descent.[6][7] Gallagher has a sister named Heather.[6] He spent his early childhood in Jakarta, where his family resided during that period.[6][7]Relocation to the United States
Shane Gallagher relocated from Jakarta, Indonesia, to Rialto, California, with his family during his childhood, marking the end of his early years abroad and the beginning of his life in the United States.[6] Born to a Korean mother, Chong Suk Gallagher, and an American father, Michael Gallagher, who had met while serving in the Army, he adjusted to a new environment alongside his sister, Heather.[7] Upon settling in Rialto, a working-class suburb in San Bernardino County, Gallagher attended Eisenhower High School, from which he graduated in 1992.[8] This period allowed him to acclimate to American public education and the diverse cultural influences of inland Southern California, laying the groundwork for his future pursuits.Musical career
The Nervous Return
Shane Gallagher joined The Nervous Return around 2003 as the band's lead guitarist, transforming the group from its original trio configuration into a quartet. The core members at the time included Jason Muller on rhythm guitar and vocals, Anthony Crouse on bass and vocals, and Greg Gordon on drums, with Gallagher replacing the previous guitarist Rob Grad to bolster the band's sound.[9][10] Gallagher played a key role in the band's dynamic live performances, which earned a reputation for high energy and unpredictability, often featuring intense stage presence and audience engagement during club shows across North America.[11] His contributions helped solidify the quartet's cohesive alternative rock style, emphasizing raw post-punk influences in their evolving setlists and stage dynamics. Under Gallagher's tenure, The Nervous Return expanded their reach through extensive touring, including headlining European dates in 2004 and supporting major acts on high-profile bills. Notably, the band opened for No Doubt and Blink-182 during their co-headlining summer tour that year, performing at venues like Shoreline Amphitheatre and Tweeter Center, which exposed them to larger audiences and enhanced their professional profile.[12][13] These opportunities, including additional European legs with Blink-182, highlighted Gallagher's adaptability in high-stakes environments and contributed to the band's growing cult following.[14] Gallagher left The Nervous Return in 2006 to focus on new ventures, marking the end of his involvement with the group after approximately three years of active contributions to their live circuit and development.Mercy Killers
In 2004, Shane Gallagher co-founded the goth-punk band Mercy Killers in Los Angeles alongside guitarist and vocalist Craig Fairbaugh, bassist Sam Soto, and drummer Colin Barill.[15][16] The group emerged from the local punk scene, with Gallagher contributing as the second guitarist to create a raw, atmospheric sound blending gothic rock influences with aggressive punk energy, drawing from bands like The Damned, T.S.O.L., and The Clash.[17] Thematic elements centered on dark, introspective motifs of compassion amid violence, reflected in the band's name and lyrical explorations of mercy and destruction.[17][16] Gallagher played a key role in the band's creative process, participating in recording sessions for their early material and navigating label interactions. The group secured a debut EP release on Rancid Records in 2005, followed by a full-length deal with the affiliated Hellcat Records imprint—run by Rancid's Tim Armstrong—for their 2006 album Bloodlove.[17][18] These efforts highlighted a shift from Gallagher's prior alternative rock work toward a more shadowy, post-punk aesthetic, with the band's live performances emphasizing brooding intensity and thematic depth.[15][16] Mercy Killers disbanded in 2008, as members pursued other musical endeavors, including overlaps with the pop-punk supergroup +44.[15][16]+44
In 2005, Shane Gallagher was recruited by Mark Hoppus and Travis Barker to join their new project +44 as lead guitarist, replacing Carol Heller who had departed the band to start a family.[19][20] This addition came after initial electronic demos featuring Heller's vocals, shifting the band's sound toward a more traditional rock lineup with Gallagher and rhythm guitarist Craig Fairbaugh.[21] Gallagher contributed to the songwriting and recording of +44's debut album, When Your Heart Stops Beating, forming a dual-guitar setup alongside Fairbaugh that emphasized layered riffs and harmonies.[22] His involvement helped shape the album's production, which began in earnest after the full lineup solidified, blending electronic elements with punk-rock energy during sessions in 2005 and 2006.[23] Gallagher participated in +44's worldwide tours from 2006 to 2007, including a prominent slot on the Honda Civic Tour alongside Fall Out Boy, performing across North America and Europe to support the album's release.[24][25] The band entered inactivity in 2009 following the reunion of Blink-182, with Gallagher having no further involvement in the project thereafter.[26]Later projects
In 2008, as +44 wound down its activities, Shane Gallagher joined the short-lived project The Noise Chapter, featuring him on guitar alongside ex-members from one of his previous bands. The band performed several local gigs in Southern California that year, including shows at Angels Roadhouse in Yucaipa on March 14, 2008, Spaceland in Los Angeles on March 16, 2008, and Goodfellas in Rancho Cucamonga on April 19, 2008.[27] Studio sessions followed in Los Angeles, where they completed laying down the music tracks, with vocals, keyboards, and additional elements recorded at Bionic Ear studio in Costa Mesa, California. The group anticipated releasing new songs within 4-6 weeks and planning subsequent tour dates, though no official album or singles were ultimately released.[5] Since the dissolution of The Noise Chapter around 2009, Gallagher has maintained a low-profile presence in the music scene, with no documented major releases, collaborations, or solo endeavors as of 2025.Discography
With The Nervous Return
Shane Gallagher joined The Nervous Return as lead guitarist in 2003 and contributed to the band's key releases during his tenure through 2005, providing guitar parts and backing vocals that defined their post-punk sound blending glam and synth elements.[28] His most prominent work was on the band's debut full-length album, Wake Up Dead, released in 2004 on CD by La Salle Records. Gallagher played guitar and backing vocals across all 10 tracks, including "Dramahead," "Siberian Queer," "Red Camaro," "Murder Weapon," and the title track "Wake Up Dead."[29][1] In 2005, Gallagher contributed guitar to the promotional EP The Sex The Drugs, issued on CD by La Salle Records. This five-track release featured his playing on "Bad Girl," "Hell In A Handshake," "Flip A Bitch," "Got A Bleeder," and "Dennis Woodruff (Actor)," serving as an early showcase of material from the band's subsequent sessions.[30] That same year, La Salle Records released the 7" single "Bad Girl" b/w "Snow In Berlin" as a promotional pressing on white vinyl (45 RPM), with Gallagher handling lead guitar duties on both sides. It highlighted the band's raw energy and marked their only vinyl single during his involvement.[31] Gallagher's final contributions to the band came during the 2005 recording sessions for 144 Hours, their second album, though he departed before its completion. Released in 2018 on vinyl (LP, stereo) by CyKiK Records, the album includes his guitar performances, preserving his role in the project's foundational sound.[32][1] No additional guest appearances or live recordings tied specifically to Gallagher's era with The Nervous Return have been documented in official releases.[28]With Mercy Killers
Gallagher served as the lead guitarist for Mercy Killers on their debut self-titled EP, released in 2005 by Rancid Records.[33] The four-track EP, issued in a digibook-style case, previewed material from their forthcoming album and featured his rhythm and lead guitar parts throughout.[33] The EP's tracklist is as follows:- "Lust For Hope"
- "End Transmission"
- "Not About You"
- "I'm Not Wasted"
- "Hollow" (3:13)
- "Pamint De Mort" (2:40)
- "Lust For Hope" (3:13)
- "Wash Over Me" (2:47)
- "As Far Apart" (2:54)
- "I'm Not Wasted" (1:22)
- "Bloodlove" (3:33)
- "End Transmission" (3:41)
- "Pure Life" (3:15)
- "Not About You" (2:33)
With +44
Shane Gallagher contributed lead guitar to +44's sole studio album, When Your Heart Stops Beating, released November 13, 2006, on Interscope Records.[36] The album debuted at number 10 on the Billboard 200. Gallagher's guitar work, characterized by melodic riffs and layered textures, complements the band's electronic-infused pop-punk sound across all tracks, with credits shared alongside rhythm guitarist Craig Fairbaugh.[37] The full track listing is as follows:- Lycanthrope (3:57)
- Baby Come On (2:46)
- When Your Heart Stops Beating (3:12)
- Little Death (4:05)
- 155 (3:29)
- Lillian (4:38)
- Cliffdiving (3:39)
- Interlude (2:09)
- Weatherman (3:31)
- No, It Isn't (3:59)
- Make You Smile (3:32)
- Chapter Thirteen (0:45)
- 131 (hidden track) (0:43)[38]
