Snow Patrol are a Northern Irish–Scottish rock band formed in 1994 in Dundee, Scotland by Gary Lightbody (vocals, guitar, keyboards), Mark McClelland (bass, keyboards), and Michael Morrison (drums) under the name Shrug. The band currently consists of Lightbody, guitarist Nathan Connolly (since 2002), pianist/guitarist Johnny McDaid (since 2011) and touring members Ben Epstein (bass) and Ash Soan (drums) (both since 2024).
Snow Patrol were formed in early 1994 by University of Dundee students Gary Lightbody, Mark McClelland, and Michael Morrison under the name Shrug. [1] In 1996, they changed their name to Polarbear to avoid clashing with any American bands that were also named Shrug. Shortly afterwards, drummer Michael Morrison left the group after suffering a breakdown and returned to Northern Ireland.
The drummer position was briefly filled by Richard Colburn, [2] before Jonny Quinn joined as full time drummer. In 2001, the band were joined on tour by songwriter Iain Archer, who performed guitar and backing vocals. [3] In 2002, Archer was replaced by Nathan Connolly who became an official member. [4] The band parted ways with McClelland, [5] he was replaced by Paul Wilson who had previously toured with the band on guitar and keyboards. [6] The band also added long-time touring keyboardist Tom Simpson as an official member. [7]
In 2007, Quinn was briefly replaced by Graham Hopkins (ex-Therapy?) after the drummer broke his arm. [8] Guitar tech Troy Stewart also played additional guitars from 2008 to 2013. In 2008, the band were re-joined by Colburn, who played percussion and keyboards from 2008 to 2009. [9] On the band's reworked tour in 2009, they were joined by Ruth O’Reilly on French horn and Stella Page on violin, [10] they were also briefly re-joined by Archer after Connolly suffered nerve damage. [3]
In 2011, the band were joined by Jonny McDaid on piano and guitar, initially as a guest musician, playing on Fallen Empires (2011) and it's tour, and later as a full-time member. [11] Tom Simpson left the band in August 2013. [12] This band's line-up stayed stable for 10 years.
In 2019, the band did another reworked tour, featuring many additional musicians, Archer and Colburn both returned, [13] alongside Miriam Kaufmann (keys, glockenspiel, vocals) who had toured with the band between 2006 and 2013, O’Reilly and Page, [10] both returned alongside trumpeter, Colm MacAthlaoich, second violinist Jote Osahn, [14] violaist Vince Greene and cellist Ivan Hussey. [15]
In 2023, the band parted ways with both Quinn and Wilson, [16] Quinn departed due to tensions with McDaid, [17] and Wilson to focus on his heavy metal project, Above as Below. [18]
Image | Name | Years active | Instruments | Studio release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gary Lightbody | 1994–present |
| all releases | |
Nathan Connolly | 2002–present |
| all releases from Final Straw (2003) onwards | |
Johnny McDaid | 2011–present |
| all releases from Fallen Empires (2011) onwards |
Image | Name | Years active | Instruments | Studio release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mark McClelland | 1994–2005 |
| all releases until Final Straw (2003) | |
Michael Morrison | 1994–1996 |
| The Yogurt vs. Yogurt Debate (1995) | |
Jonny Quinn | 1997–2023 | all releases from Songs for Polarbears (1998) to Wildness (2018) | ||
Tom Simpson | 2005–2013 (touring 1996–2005) |
| all releases from Eyes Open (2006) to Fallen Empires (2011) | |
Paul Wilson | 2005–2023 (touring 2000–2005) |
| all releases from Eyes Open (2006) to Wildness (2018) |
Image | Name | Years active | Instruments | Studio release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Richard Colburn |
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Iain Archer |
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Colm MacAthlaoich |
| trumpet | none | |
Miriam Kaufmann |
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Graham Hopkins | 2007 | drums | ||
Troy Stewart | 2008–2013 | additional guitars | ||
Ruth O’Reilly |
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Stella Page |
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Jote Osahn | 2019 | |||
Vince Greene | viola | |||
Ivan Hussey | cello | |||
Ben Epstein | 2024–present |
| The Forest Is the Path (2024) | |
Ash Soan | drums |
Period | Members | Studio releases |
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early 1994 – late 1996 |
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late 1996 – mid 1997 |
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mid 1997 – early 2001 |
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March 2001 – spring 2002 |
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spring 2002 – March 2005 |
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March 2005 – mid 2011 |
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mid 2011 – August 2013 |
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August 2013 – September 2023 |
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late 2023 – present |
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