Celtic Clanjamphry
Jack’s Bio
Jack was born in Dunfermline
in Fife and lived there until 1998 when he moved to the St Andrews area (still
in
From 1964 till 1967 he partnered the
well-known singer Barbara Dickson and throughout the 1960s he was part of the
circle which included Archie Fisher, John Watt, Rab Noakes, Jimmy Hutchison,
The MacCalmans, The Corries, The Incredible String Band etc.
In 1976 he co-founded the acclaimed folk-band
‘Heritage’, which went on to make a number of recordings, broadcast on radio
and TV, played most of the Scottish festivals and clubs and toured Europe
regularly.
In 1989 he visited the
During the 1990s he performed more frequently
as a solo singer or in tandem with his ‘Heritage’ colleague George Haig. He
also revived a long-standing partnership with the singer/songwriter John Watt
and more recently with ace guitarist Sandy Stanage.
His most recent venture is a
presentation/workshop/concert called ‘A Stranger in this Country’ involving
Sara Grey, Anne Neilson and Jack, which examines Scots and American versions of
the same songs and ballads. This has been performed both in
In 1990 Jack was made an honorary life member
of the Traditional Music and Song Association of Scotland and from 1999 through
2002 he was external examiner in Scots Song for the Degree programme in Scots
Music Performance at the prestigious RSAMD in
Jack’s ‘day job’ till 2002
was head of department in a community college in
They say:
'His delivery of the classic
Scottish ballads is outstanding' - Ian Green
(Greentrax Records)
'I can certainly vouch for
the quality of his presentations - very definitely
worth hearing' - Sandy Ives
(Dept of Folklore -
'A fine singer, with a
uniquely compelling quality of delivery' - Hamish
Henderson (School of
Scottish Studies)
'The song is the thing with
Jack - - - -one of the last of the singers that
form the bridge between the
old rural tradition and the urban revival' -
Archie Fisher (singer and
broadcaster)