Roger Quigley
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (August 2020) |
Roger Patrick Martin Quigley (17 March 1969 – 18 August 2020) was an English singer-songwriter and former drummer from Manchester, England, and one-half of the indie pop duo known as The Montgolfier Brothers.
Roger Quigley was born in Salford and studied fine art at the University of Sunderland.[1]
He released multiple recordings, including two LPs — 1969 Till God Knows When, and Quigley's Point. The latter recorded as 'At Swim Two Birds', the name taken from the title of a book by the Irish novelist, Flann O'Brien.
Quigley died suddenly on 18 August 2020. An obituary was published two weeks later in the Guardian.[2][3]
The Montgolfier Brothers' song, Between Two Points, a track written by Quigley and bandmate Mark Tranner, and issued as a single from their album Seventeen Stars, was covered by David Gilmour of Pink Floyd on his 2024 album, Luck and Strange. When he heard it and demoed it, Gilmour assumed the song was well-known. In May 2024, shortly before Gilmour's album was released, the Montgolfier Brothers' original version of Between Two Points had received only 25,000 plays on Spotify. [4]
References
[edit]- ^ "Roger Quigley obituary". www.theguardian.com. 31 August 2020. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
- ^ Obituary in The Guardian
- ^ "Muere a los 51 años Roger Quigley, voz sensible del 'indie' británico de los 90". Elpais.com (in Spanish). 19 August 2020. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
- ^ Uncut Magazine, June 2024
External links
[edit]- Roger Quigley... details on artist (German)
- At Swim Two Birds artist's page at Indiepop (Italian)
- Quigley artist's page at Acetone Records (French)
- Quigley's Point music review (Spanish)
- Roger Quigley at AllMusic