| Sir
Jimmy Shand MBE
Few musicians’ names become interchangeable
with the style of music they play in the way that Jimmy Shand came
to define Scottish Country Dance music to the broader audience.
For countless numbers of people across the world,
the sound of an accordion playing Scottish music instantly registered
the Shand legend and for decades no Scottish New Year was complete
without Jimmy’s signature tune, The Bluebell Polka.
Born on January 28, 1908, in the Fife coal-mining
village of East Wemyss, Jimmy inherited his love of music from his
box-playing father, Erskine. The button-keyed accordion was popular
around the village and Jimmy regularly heard its sounds coming out
of local pubs and houses as well as watching his dad and older brother,
Dod, play.
Determined to equal Dod’s ability, Jimmy
took every opportunity to play their dad’s accordion, often
taking it into the stairwell outside the family’s tenement
flat where he found the best sound quality. He also listened avidly
to Erskine’s cylinder collection – the forerunner of
78rpm records – learning tunes and picking up subtleties of
phrasing.
By the age of twelve Jimmy was entertaining audiences
at picnics and parties and when he left school at fourteen to work
in the mines, he began cycling and later motorcycling all over Fife,
to Stirling and Perthshire to engagements.
In 1934, Jimmy took up a long-standing job offer
from a music shop owner in Dundee as a salesman. This proved significant
as his new boss, Charles Forbes, had music business connections
in London. Soon afterwards, Jimmy made his first recording for Beltona
Records.
Even the Second World War didn’t hamper
Jimmy’s progress. He served the war years with the Fire Service
and formed his first band, developing a distinctive ensemble sound
of two accordions, fiddle, piano, and drums, later adding double
bass.
The Jimmy Shand Band made its first New Year
broadcast on January 1, 1945 and with the war over it found itself
in huge demand, turning professional and keeping up a hectic schedule
of gigs, radio broadcasts and recording sessions.
The records that singer-songwriter Richard Thompson
memorably celebrated in his song, Don’t Sit on My Jimmy Shands,
sold in vast quantities and in time Jimmy didn’t just share
a record company with The Beatles – their record sales vied
for top place on the charts too.
Success genuinely never changed Jimmy, though.
A naturally shy man, he never smiled onstage. But he always made
time after gigs to sign autographs and would stay for hours chatting
to fans backstage.
He received many honours over the years. To his
MBE in 1962 was added, among others, an honorary Master of Arts
degree from Dundee University in 1985, a British Academy of Songwriters,
Composers and Authors gold badge of merit in 1996, and a knighthood
in 1999. Yet as far as Sir Jimmy Shand was concerned, he was just
a box player. His legions of admirers know that he was much more
than that.
|