Artist's albums
Live In Tokyo 1978
2001 · album
The Gillan Tapes, Vol. 3
2000 · album
The Gillan Tapes, Vol. 2
1999 · album
Gillan Tapes, Vol. 1
1997 · album
The Very Best Of
1991 · compilation
Glory Road
1981 · album
Live At The BBC 79/80
1979 · album
Greatest
2012 · album
Live At The Reading Festival 1981
2010 · album
No Easy Way (Live Hammersmith 1980)
2008 · album
Live At The Marquee 1978
2008 · album
Magic
2007 · album
Double Trouble
2007 · album
Futureshock
2007 · album
Mr Universe
2007 · album
Glory Road (Bonus Track Version)
2007 · album
Mutually Assured Destruction: Live Glasgow 1982
2005 · album
Live Wembley, 17th December 1982
2004 · album
On The Rocks (Live)
2002 · album
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Biography
A separate entity from the Ian Gillan Band and distinct from Ian Gillan the solo artist, Gillan was a band bearing the ex-Deep Purple frontman's name which provided an outlet for his straight-ahead hard rock inclinations (as opposed to the prog rock tendencies of the Ian Gillan Band or Ian Gillan's more polished solo material of the 1990s). Gillan the singer put the band together in 1978, initially recruiting Steve Byrd (guitar), John McCoy (bass), Colin Towns (keyboards, ex-Ian Gillan Band), and Pete Barnacle (drums); this lineup proved short-lived, recording a self-titled Japanese-only album before disintegrating. Bernie Torme replaced Byrd, and Mick Underwood took over for Barnacle; this shift resulted in 1979's Mr. Universe, a surprise U.K. hit album. Further recordings followed in 1980's Glory Road and 1981's Future Shock and Double Trouble (the latter featuring one live record and one record of new studio material). Future Iron Maiden guitarist Janick Gers replaced Torme in 1981, in time for 1982's Magic, which would be the final Gillan album before Ian Gillan joined Black Sabbath. Following his 1990 solo record Naked Thunder, Ian Gillan reassembled a version of Gillan with guitarist Steve Morris for the 1991 LP Toolbox; however, the more polished approach was at odds with the old band's lean, down-and-dirty hard rock. Live albums and rarities continued to appear throughout the '90s, as Ian Gillan returned to making solo records. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi