Gun Gallus review
Album details

Album Details

Release date: March 30th, 1992
Label: A&M
Producer: Kenny MacDonald

Musicians:

  • Mark Rankin (vocals)
  • Giuliano Gizzi (lead guitar)
  • Alex Dickson (rhythm guitar)
  • Dante Gizzi (bass, backing vocals)
  • Scott Shields (drums)

Singles:

  • Higher Ground
  • Steal Your Fire
  • Welcome To The Real World

Chart performance:

  • #14 UK Album Chart

Total sales: 10,000
Certification: n/a
Score: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Gun – Gallus (1992) Review

How do you follow an acclaimed debut when the rock landscape has shifted beneath your feet?

Many bands panicked.

Others scrambled to chase whatever trend looked safest.

Gun did neither – they doubled down.

Their mature second LP confirms that the Scottish rockers’ initial success was no fluke. The towering rhythm section remains intact, the blue-collar lyricism still grounded and direct. You could argue that, if Taking On The World was the album that kicked the door open, then Gallus proved they could survive once the building had collapsed.

Gun_Gallus

Searching For Higher Ground

Three years had passed since Taking On The World announced their arrival.

The band had now cemented their reputation as a formidable live act – even touring with The Rolling Stones – but by the time they returned to the studio, the world around them had changed dramatically.

Grunge was mercilessly sweeping aside much of rock’s old guard, and many expected these Scottish rockers to be lost in the shuffle.

They weren’t.

If anything, Gun had already shown a willingness to resist prevailing trends. For their debut had rejected late-’80s excess during the peak of the hair metal era in favour of muscular, riff-driven rock – and it had succeeded on its own terms.

Gallus therefore wasn’t about reinvention, it was about reinforcement.

The result is an album that sounds tougher and more aggressive than its predecessor, trading some of its transatlantic polish for a heavier, less radio-conscious edge.

Gun Gallus album review
Gun Steal Your Fire

I Don’t Need Nobody Praying For Me

Lead single Steal Your Fire stands as the album’s defining moment.

It’s one of the few points on Gallus where Gun recapture the urgency of their debut, but this time with a harder edge and greater control.

Mark Rankin’s distinctive baritone – somewhere between Billy Idol’s sneer and U2’s arena-sized conviction – anchors the track, delivering lyrics that feel quietly defiant amid a shifting musical climate. Behind him, Scott Shields’ galloping drums lock tightly with Giuliano Gizzi’s typically restrained guitar work, proving once again that Gun’s power lies less in flash than in cohesion.

The single became their highest-charting release to date, peaking at No. 24 in the UK – a sign that even in turbulent times, their formula still resonated.

Gun Gallus 1992
Gun Gallus review

Scattered Highlights

Gun’s more mature songwriting is evident throughout the record.

Second single Higher Ground leans fully into their new hardened approach, its driving groove and tightly coiled riff providing the perfect platform for Rankin’s measured vocal delivery. It’s direct and purposeful, the kind of track that reinforces the band’s reliability rather than redefining their ceiling.

The anthemic Reach Out For Love offers more melody, reminding listeners that Gun hadn’t abandoned their instinct for accessible hooks – yet even here, the songwriting feels controlled.

Elsewhere, Welcome to the Real World, Borrowed Time, and Long Road further underline Giuliano Gizzi’s disciplined approach to the guitar. Instead of chasing extended solos or grandstanding flourishes, he favours direct riffs that prioritise momentum and cohesion, serving the song as oppposed to dominating it.

Long Road, in particular, features a melody so effortlessly natural it feels almost inevitable – the kind of riff that slips into the ear with such ease you wonder how it hadn’t already been written. It’s simple and beautifully constructed, audible proof that Gun’s strength lies not in complexity, but in knowing precisely when to let a hook breathe.

Gun Higher Ground
Iron Maiden Steve Harris Gun Gallus

Friends In High Places

If further proof of the band’s credibility were required, it arrived in unlikely form.

Iron Maiden’s Steve Harris became an outspoken supporter of Gallus, frequently seen wearing the album’s T-shirt and even inviting Gun to join a heavyweight touring bill alongside Maiden, Pantera and Megadeth.

They may have looked stylistically out of place on paper, but the invitation spoke volumes. For among their peers, Gun were recognised not as trend-followers, but as musicians with substance.

Their ability to win over metal crowds with their brand of blue-collar rock ‘n’ roll resulted in huge exposure, placing the band on the radar of more commercially aligned acts, with both Def Leppard and Bon Jovi later offering support – a sign that Gun’s steady persistence was beginning to pay dividends.

Gun Gallus album review

Gun: Gallus

Gallus may not possess the sense of arrival that defined their debut, but it stands as proof that the Scottish rockers’ success was built on sturdier foundations than fashion.

Heavier, leaner and more self-assured, it captures a band consolidating their identity at a volatile moment in rock history.

The commercial response backed that up. A No. 14 peak on the UK Albums Chart and three Top 40 singles confirmed that Gun were more than a passing trend – they were well-equipped to weather the storm of the early ’90s.

Gallus didn’t seek to redefine the genre, it simply refused to be swept aside by it.

“11” Re-worked Tracklist

>> Gallus is part of our Gun album review series.

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5 responses to “Gun – Gallus (1992) Review”

  1. […] already amassed a decent following on their solid first and second records, Scottish rockers Gun took things to an entirely new level this time […]

  2. […] amassed a decent-sized following by this point in their career thanks to their solid first and second LPs, and that they’ve also established themselves as one of the UK’s most dependable […]

  3. […] sound, with the production striking a satisfying middle ground between the understated grit of Gallus and the towering scale of […]

  4. […] in-your-face riffs in the band’s catalogue, while the devilishly catchy Black Heart taps into a Gallus-like bite. Elsewhere, Tragic Heroes goes widescreen, its towering scale and chiming atmosphere feeling […]

  5. […] first listen it draws comparisons with Steal Your Fire from the band’s second album Gallus (1992), but just as you’re about to accuse Gun of ripping off, err, Gun it opens up into the best […]

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