| Donald
MacPherson
In 2004, when a CD celebrating Donald MacPherson’s
piping mastery was given the title A Living Legend, this was no
record company hype. It wasn’t even a matter of opinion. It
was simply a statement of fact.
Donald’s performance over a truly remarkable
forty years at the top of competitive piping bears this out. Just
as important as his ability to compete, if not more so, however,
were the innate musicality in Donald’s playing, his feeling
for both pibroch and light music and the matchless quality of his
sound. This was a piper who, whenever he stepped onto a platform,
inspired a hush of anticipation.
Donald was born in Glasgow on September 5, 1922.
His father, Iain, was an army piper during World War l and later
received instruction from Pipe Major John MacDougall Gillies, a
former president of the Scottish Pipers’ Association. When
a hand injury curtailed his piping career prematurely, Iain transferred
his enthusiasm for piping and love of bagpipe music onto his sons,
Iain and Donald.
Donald’s first recollection of playing
bagpipes is when, at the age of twelve, he moved up from the Life
Boys to the Boys Brigade. His pride in being invited to join the
pipe band and at being given his first set of pipes was short-lived,
though. When Iain Snr. saw the half-sized set of pipes that an officer
had pieced together from an old sheepskin bag, a torn cover, some
green cord and a few old reeds, he wasn’t best pleased.
With new a bag and reeds installed, Donald began
learning from his father and would always be well prepared for the
next band rehearsal. His father’s gentle insistence that Donald
should always try and put a song in the music would stay with Donald
throughout his career.
Donald’s run of competition successes began
with the Glasgow Battalion of the Boys Brigade Championship. After
serving in the RAF during World War ll, he entered the Oban meeting
for the first time in 1948 and became only the second piper to win
the double of Gold Medal and Open Pibroch.
Six years later he became the first piper to
win the double at the Inverness meeting. His prize haul –
including a record fifteen firsts in the Senior Piobaireachd at
Oban; a record nine firsts in the Gold Clasp event at Inverness;
and six firsts in the Former Winners March, Strathspey & Reel
event at Inverness – is all the more remarkable considering
that Donald was a self-confessed practice dodger. He also dropped
out from competing for several periods and so might have won even
more medals.
It was with some relief for the opposition, then,
that Donald retired from competing after one final success at Oban
in 1990.
His involvement with piping has continued, though,
as a judge and teacher. Judging has taken him to Canada, Nova Scotia,
the USA and New Zealand and earned him a reputation for basing his
assessments on fairness, knowledge and understanding through his
own experience as a competitor.
Well into his eighties Donald continues to pass
on his skills, emphasising the importance of good sound quality
and warning pupils in his warm, good humoured way about the danger
to lampshades and light bulbs that is the weapon of mass destruction,
the bass drone.
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