The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Barbara Dickson

Carnegie Hall, Dunfermlin­e, September 21

- MICHAEL ALEXANDER Barbara Dickson outside Carnegie Hall, Dunfermlin­e. www.onfife.com

She is the multi-million selling recording artist and Scottish music legend whose career to date has spanned the worlds of folk, musical theatre, pop and acting.

But when Barbara Dickson returns to the Carnegie Hall in her home town of Dunfermlin­e tomorrow as part of the Andrew Carnegie centenary celebratio­ns, her thoughts will inevitably drift back to the influence the late Dunfermlin­e-born American steel magnate and philanthro­pist had on her early life.

“Andrew Carnegie was a very important person when I was growing up,” Barbara told The Courier.

“My generation knew a great deal about him.

“I can’t speak for the youngsters nowadays in Dunfermlin­e but he was a very important person.

“I was part of the post-war generation of people and I just remember his contributi­on to life being enormous for us. We didn’t take libraries and days out for granted. We got a day out every year at his expense at the Dunfermlin­e Gallery.

“He was really important to us in providing the library, the Carnegie Hall and various other buildings. Dunfermlin­e has handsome buildings that were built due to his generosity to us. And he also gave us Pittencrie­ff Park, so we were very grateful to him.”

Born in 1947, and attracting praise over the years from the likes of John Lennon, Ray Charles and Bjorn from Abba, Barbara describes herself as a “Scottish folk musician turned pop star actress and back again”.

But despite having moved away to Edinburgh as a teenager and then later to London, the now Edinburgh-based singer often returns to Dunfermlin­e where her cousins still live and she enjoys visiting the Fire Station Creative.

Barbara has a particular fondness for Pittencrie­ff Park – particular­ly the “wild bit” known locally as The Glen.

However, she also has a close affinity with the Carnegie Hall where she first performed as a five-year-old with her dancing school and, most importantl­y, where she staged her first headlining concert in the late 1970s.

Barbara will appear on stage with fellow musician Nick Holland.

“It’ll be a stripped down version of what we normally do,” she said. “To open the show we have Anthony Toner who is a pal of ours from Northern Ireland who is a wonderful songwriter. He’s really special.”

Last week Barbara headlined BBC Proms in the Park at Glasgow Green and she’s doing up to 20 further shows at various venues before the end of the year.

The Carnegie Hall concert, organised by Dynamic Dunfermlin­e, is sponsored by Stephens Bakery.

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