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Photo taken by Ian MacKenzie
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Hamish Henderson
If there were to be a top table in the Scottish folk music pantheon
not that hed hold with any such hierarchical nonsense
then Hamish Henderson would surely be seated at its head.
And itd be where the very best of the craic was, a happy hubbub
of carousing, debating, singing and playing, with Hamish at its
heart.
Any career as long, diverse and distinguished as Hamishs clearly
defies easy summation, but the eminent left-wing historian E.P.
Thompson identified the essence of the man as long ago as 1948,
writing to Hamish following the publication of his first poetry
collection, Elegies for the Dead in Cyrenaica: You, more than
any other poet I know, are an instrument through which thousands
of others can become articulate.
In defining his own approach to his lifes work as a
folklorist, poet, songwriter, philosopher, scholar, linguist, critic,
teacher, translator, broadcaster and activist Hamish himself
would often quote his beloved Gramsci: That which distinguishes
folksong in the framework of a nation and its culture is neither
the artistic fact nor the historic origin; it is a separate and
distinct way of conceiving life and the world, as opposed to that
of official society.
For Hamish, this alternative way of seeing originally inculcated
by his musical, Gaelic-speaking mother was crucially catalysed
by his experiences during World War II. In Italy, particularly,
where he served as an army intelligence officer, he not only first
encountered Gramsci, but also fell in love with the living folk
culture that inspired the local partisans to fight in its defence.
It was the living folk culture of Scotland, then generally thought
(when anyone thought of it at all) to be in its death-throes, that
Hamish introduced to the wider modern world, through his landmark
1950s collecting trips with US musicologist Alan Lomax. These expeditions
mined the fuel on which the Scottish folk revival is still going
strong today, both by bringing exceptional tradition-bearers like
Jeannie Robertson, Jimmy MacBeath, John Strachan, Willie Scott and
Flora McNeil to the international stage, and by presenting their
music not as any quaint museum-piece, but as part of a living, evolving
process feeding vitally into the here and now.
Through his decades of legendary scholarship at the School of Scottish
Studies, his lifelong political and humanitarian commitment, his
outstanding original contributions to the Scottish folk-song canon,
and his parallel belief in both nationalism and internationalism,
Hamish substantially helped to shape the contemporary Scottish folk
scene in his own complex, expansive, gloriously contradictory image.
And our world is all the better for it.
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