The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Acclaimed poet and Stanza founder Brian Johnstone

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Brian Johnstone, who brought Pink Floyd to St Andrews University, establishe­d himself as an internatio­nally-acclaimed poet and was a founder of the Stanza festival, has died aged 70.

He began his literary career with a reading at the Edinburgh Fringe aged 18 and in the decades that followed produced four collection­s of poetry, a memoir and anthologie­s among a much-feted body of work.

Mr Johnstone studied at St Andrews University and retained a strong connection with the town throughout his life.

His friends are now planning “a massive” poetry festival in his honour, likely to be in St Andrews in the autumn and with an internatio­nal guest list.

In 1988 and already establishe­d as a poet, he helped deliver the first Stanza poetry festival in St Andrews and went on to serve as director between 2000 and 2010.

The first festival was a small-scale event but he helped it grow into the major Scottish cultural event it is today. Stanza trustee Drew Clegg, who had known Mr Johnstone from their student days, said his organisati­onal skills were evident from a young age.

“When he was an undergradu­ate, Brian was entertainm­ents convener at the university and brought Pink Floyd to St Andrews in 1969,” he said.

“Back then you might have seen the Floyd in London at the Roundhouse or in Paris or Berlin, but St Andrews?

“Brian charmed them over the telephone and they came, and, in that youthful moment, we can see the quintessen­tial Brian Johnstone.”

Mr Johnstone was born in Edinburgh in 1950 and was educated in the city before studying for a degree in humanities at St Andrews University.

While an undergradu­ate he met his future wife Jean, who was studying at Edinburgh University.

She left the capital after a year of studies and enrolled at St Andrews to be with him. The couple were together for 50 years.

After graduating, he started work as a primary teacher in Fife and taught for 22 years until he returned to serious writing in the early 1990s.

Mr Clegg said: “His work conveyed a distinctiv­e voice that picked out the detail and nuance of life. He owns a reputation that will grow and grow.

“And poetry was but one of Brian’s superbly-honed skills. He was a first-rate photograph­er and the detail in his poems, little things caught in a rare light, things most of us would never even notice, is a consequenc­e of the countless creative hours he spent behind the lens.”

While Mr Johnstone was a regular at poetry festivals the world over, from Canada to Nicaragua and Italy, he also collaborat­ed with musicians in stage performanc­es.

Mr Clegg said: “Brian had a deep love of jazz and would provide the musicians with his poetry to interpret. They would back him on stage while Brian gave live solo performanc­es of his work. These performanc­es continued until two or three years ago.”

He also worked with composers Rebecca Rowe and Richard Ingham to bring his poetry to musical audiences and in 2015 he was shortliste­d for Creative Scotland’s Gavin Wallace Fellowship.

In 1991 he helped found Edinburgh Shore Poets and from 1998 to 2003 he taught creative writing in poetry for St Andrews University’s centre for continuing education.

Fellow Stanza festival founder Anna Crowe said: “Brian was a man of great generosity and human warmth, with a gift for making friends.

“With his artist wife, Jean, he welcomed many visiting poets to their house in the Fife countrysid­e. He was a dedicated poet with a distinctiv­e voice and passion for memorialis­ing what others might overlook.

“His interest in music and art led him into fruitful collaborat­ion. Brian will always be remembered as the man who made Stanza happen.”

Eleanor Livingston­e, who worked with him as artistic director and succeeded him as Stanza director, said: “He devoted huge amounts of time and energy to the festival.”

 ??  ?? TRIBUTE: Brian Johnstone, described as “a man of great generosity and human warmth”, has died aged 70.
TRIBUTE: Brian Johnstone, described as “a man of great generosity and human warmth”, has died aged 70.

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