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Photo taken by Louis DeCarlo
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The McCalmans
Theres many a promising student career been run aground by
the siren lure of music, but it doesnt often happen quite
as fast as it did for the McCalmans. The trios original line-up
of Ian McCalman, Hamish Bayne and Derek Moffat met in 1964 on their
first day at Edinburgh School of Architecture, played their first
gig within a fortnight - and you might say its members have been
leading each other astray ever since.
Somehow (despite their many self-told tales of bibulous excess in
those days), the McCalmans got it right early on - and have kept
on doing so, throughout one of the most enduring careers in Scottish
music. Its a simple enough recipe, in some ways, using tried
and tested ingredients: great singing, resonant harmonies, a diverse
repertoire of potently melodic, traditional and contemporary songs,
liberally seasoned with humour; served warm. But its a hard
one to perfect no matter how easy they might make it look.
The other key element, of course and regardless of their
still legendary fondness for a party is the Macs famously
consummate professionalism. It embraces every aspect of the gig,
from punctual, hassle-free soundchecks to carefully constructed,
continually renewed set-lists; from their unfailingly focused engagement
with both material and listeners capable of making the biggest
concert-hall feel like the cosiest club - to the freshness of their
jokes.
For while the band has long been established among the most important
acts to emerge from the 1960s Scottish folk-song revival, absorbing
and merging influences across the spectrum from the Corries to the
source-singers, music-hall to protest songs, they never forget their
role as entertainers. Its this old-fashioned commitment to
showmanship that underpins the McCalmans longevity, along
with the sheer love of songs and singing that shines through every
performance.
Another secret of their success must lie in the fact that there
have only been two line-up changes in the bands career, now
into its fifth decade. Hamish Bayne left in 1982, to be replaced
by multi-instrumentalist Nick Keir, and in 2001, tragically, Derek
Moffat died of cancer at the age of 54. It was Dereks insistent
wish, however, that the band carry on with a new third member, and
so Stephen Quigg joined to complete the current Macs line-up.
That same shared passion for song that distracted the McCalmans
from architecture all those years ago has since taken them virtually
all around the world, to share it in turn with audiences from the
Faroes to the Falklands. Despite their one-liners increasing
reference to disappearing hair and aching bones, the Macs
unique blend of timeless musical virtues looks to have plenty more
miles in it yet.
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to Hamish Henderson Services to Traditional Music Award
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