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Snow Patrol

Snow Patrol

Scottish-Irish alt-rock outfit Snow Patrol broke into the mainstream with their 2003 major-label debut Final Straw, a collection of earnest tunes aligned with the sounds of contemporaries like Coldplay, Keane, and Travis. They followed up with the multi-platinum success of 2006's Eyes Open, which featured the international hit single "Chasing Cars," and continued with a pair of U.K. Top Ten platinum efforts, 2008's A Hundred Million Suns and 2011's Fallen Empires. After an extended six-year hiatus during which time frontman Gary Lightbody worked as a songwriter for pop artists, the band returned with 2018's Wildness, hitting the U.K. Top Five. Their sixth album, the Fraser T. Smith-produced The Forest Is the Path, arrived in 2024.

Although originally from Northern Ireland, co-founders Gary Lightbody and Mark McClelland relocated to Scotland during their teenage years to attend college. While studying at the University of Dundee in 1994, they began composing music under several different band names, including Shrug and Polar Bear. The duo eventually adopted the Snow Patrol moniker and enlisted Jonny Quinn to play drums in 1997. One year later, Snow Patrol signed with Jeepster Records, a small label based in London, and released the debut effort Songs for Polar Bears.

As Snow Patrol's audience modestly expanded, the trio relocated to Glasgow upon graduation. Their second full-length album, When It's All Over We Still Have to Clear Up, was released in April 2001. Jeepster dropped the band from its roster that same year, however, prompting Lightbody to blow off steam by forming the Reindeer Section, a Scottish supergroup featuring members of Mogwai and Belle and Sebastian. He also continued writing songs for Snow Patrol, including a promising ballad entitled "Run." After guitarist Nathan Connolly joined the group in 2002, Snow Patrol signed a contract with Fiction Records and began recording a new album alongside producer Chris Lord-Alge. With the power ballad "Run" serving as its lead single, Final Straw became the band's breakthrough hit album, spinning off four Top 40 singles in the U.K. (including "Spitting Games") and eventually selling more than four million copies worldwide.

Despite the band's growing success, founding member Mark McClelland left in March 2005, effectively downgrading Snow Patrol to a trio comprising Lightbody, Quinn, and Connolly. Shortly thereafter, former Terra Diablo bass player Paul Wilson and touring keyboardist Tom Simpson were permanently added to the lineup, and the group honed its expanded sound by opening shows on the European leg of U2's Vertigo Tour. Upon the tour's completion, they returned to the studio and created the slickly commercial Eyes Open, which was released worldwide in May 2006. Riding the strength of a Grey's Anatomy feature, their single "Chasing Cars" became a worldwide smash hit, helping Eyes Open notch gold certification in the United States. It later rose to platinum status, becoming the band's most successful release in America to date. Snow Patrol also became the first U.K. rock act in 13 years to break into the Top Five of the Billboard singles charts, a feat they sought to revisit with the release of 2008's A Hundred Million Suns.

Led by the single "Take Back the City," A Hundred Million Suns arrived in October 2008. It featured an emphasis on positive, romantic lyrics, something that Gary Lightbody had pointedly shunned in the past. More singles followed, including "Crack the Shutters" and "If there's a Rocket Tie Me to It," just as the album peaked at number two in the U.K. and became the group's first to crack the Top Ten of the Billboard 200.

The band joined U2 on the road once again, this time playing stadiums in Europe and America during the summer of 2009. Rather than record another album after the tour, however, they chose to release the comprehensive Up to Now, a compilation spanning Snow Patrol's 15-year history. Lightbody and Simpson also teamed up to compile a mix album, LateNightTales, which featured the band's own take on INXS' "New Sensation."

Lightbody admitted to a frustrating bout of writer's block before embarking on the group's sixth studio album, 2011's Fallen Empires, which featured the single "Called Out in the Dark." The album marked the group's first with pianist/guitarist Johnny McDaid, who initially guested on the album, but was an official member by the end of the album tour. Singer Lissie also supplied backing vocals on several tracks. The album hit number three in the U.K. and number five on the Billboard 200.

Following the release of 2013's Greatest Hits set, Snow Patrol fell silent. After Simpson parted ways with the group, they returned to the studio, teasing new music over the years without any official releases. Members went on to start families and embark on new side projects, as well as producing and songwriting for other artists like Faith Hill, Tim McGraw, Robbie Williams, Ed Sheeran, P!nk, Kodaline, and Taylor Swift.

New material from Snow Patrol would not arrive until 2018. Their fifth straight effort with producer Jacknife Lee, Wildness came into being following Lightbody's newfound sobriety, and addressed themes of a primal nature in the modern age on singles like "Empress" and "Life on Earth." The album returned them to the top five in the U.K., while it reached 59 on the Billboard 200.

The next year, they marked 25 years as a band with a standalone single, "Time Won't Go Slowly," and recorded fresh versions of much of their back catalog for compilation project Reworked. In 2023, both drummer Quinn and bassist Wilson left the band to pursue other creative opportunities, leaving Snow Patrol as a trio with Lightbody, Connolly, and McDaid.

In May 2024, they released "The Beginning," the first single from the group's sixth studio album, the Fraser T. Smith-produced The Forest Is the Path. ~ Andrew Leahey & Neil Z. Yeung

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