The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Businessma­n and drummer dies of Covid

- CHRIS FERGUSON

Bob Carson, a businessma­n in Dundee, 1960s rock drummer and computer expert, has died from Covid aged 72.

For the last 30 years he operated as the Computer Doctor in Dundee, having learnt his skills at NCR.

Mr Carson played drums in various Dundee bands in the 1960s and 1970s and was a member of Jynx when they played an openair gig at Camperdown Park in 1971.

He was born in Lochee in 1949 and educated at Ancrum Road Primary and Rockwell High School.

He went on to serve his apprentice­ship at NCR at the time it was gearing up for the computer era, and worked on the Century Line making the first integrated circuit computers.

Outside work he had a love of rock music and was taught to play the drums by his great uncle Johnny Pearson, drummer at the Hubara (Craigtay Hotel).

Dance band drumming was not what he aspired to and he became drummer with rock band, Jynx.

They turned profession­al and played all over the UK in the 1960s with their versions of Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, Rolling Stones and Hendrix classics.

One of Jynx’s last gigs was at Camperdown Park on July 18 1971, when members travelled from Birmingham to play one of the first open-air concerts in their home town.

As the band was breaking up, Mr Carson was recruited by a small East London company who came to Dundee to find an NCR-trained person for the job of maintainin­g and servicing NCR accounting machines.

He spent the next 20 years in London working for various computer companies, including Rediffusio­n (in the House of Lords), Telex and Memorex, as specialist support for the huge mainframe computers of the era.

He then went into business on his own account, building and servicing personal computers.

In the early 1980s he was particular­ly excited by the launch of the first popular personal computer, Acorn’s BBC B that was introduced into many schools across the country.

Mr Carson designed and engineered one of the first external disk operating systems for this computer and within months of setting up his first business enterprise to market it, was competing with the likes of Alan Sugar who was marketing his Amstrad, and Clive Sinclair with his ZX Spectrum.

By the early 1990s, and once back home in Dundee, he turned his expertise and knowledge to building bespoke machines for businesses and individual­s and offering PC repair, refurbishm­ent and maintenanc­e, making many friends in the process.

Mr Carson is survived by his wife Pat, his son Iain and daughter Sam, grandchild­ren Mathew, Kathryn, Natasha, Bethany and Tiffany, his mother Margaret, sisters Maria and Margot and brother Paul.

 ??  ?? TRAGIC: Bob Carson, a profession­al rock drummer in the 1960s, has died aged 72.
TRAGIC: Bob Carson, a profession­al rock drummer in the 1960s, has died aged 72.

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