The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Barbara hails ‘nice guy’ Paul as Beatle turns 80

- NEIL DRYSDALE

Barbara Dickson can still recall the frisson of excitement when she learned The Beatles were performing in Kirkcaldy in 1963.

At that stage, the Fife teenager, who later achieved fame in her own right, had heard enough about the four Liverpool lads that she was determined to catch the gig.

As Barbara recalled: “I cycled from Dunfermlin­e to try to get tickets but learned when I got there you had to apply by post!”

It was the start of what developed into a lifelong passion for the melodies of the Fab Four, whose legacy is undiminish­ed more than half a century after they went their separate ways, while Barbara became one of the pivotal performers in Willie Russell’s musical John, Paul, Ringo, George... and Bert.

The combinatio­n of fine writing, a cast of young and largely unknown actors, including Antony Sher,

Bernard Hill and Trevor Eve, allied to Barbara’s idiosyncra­tic interpreta­tion of some classic Beatles songs, made the show hugely successful and paved the way for her to record a string of chart hits.

And she is among those who have saluted the gifts of Paul McCartney as he celebrates his 80th birthday.

She said: “I think Paul McCartney, apart from Bob Dylan, is the most important musical figure in the world. This excepts classical music, of course.

“He is legendary, and rightly so, for his contributi­on to music and popular culture.

“He was part of the greatest rock and roll band ever. He’s also a very nice guy.”

Barbara speaks from experience because she came face to face with her “teenage heart-throb” in 2005 when Paul presented her with the prestigiou­s Companions­hip of the

Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts.

She recalled: “We had a brief chat, but didn’t discuss John, Paul, Ringo, George... and Bert.

“What I did tell him, in front of the audience at the Graduation, was that I still had a big picture of him from 1963 that used to hang above my bed in Dunfermlin­e.

“I think he was

impressed. Although he did look a little alarmed when I asked him whether he thought it might be time I took it down.”

As one of the leading cast members in the play, Barbara fell in love with many of The Beatles hits from the 1960s and marvelled at how the often beautiful simplicity of McCartney’s unforgetta­ble ballads was complement­ed by John Lennon’s wistful and mesmerisin­g lyrics.

So she found it difficult to pick one song that defined why the duo are hailed as the greatest in the history of pop.

Barbara said: “The songs in JPGR and Bert were chosen by Willy Russell and I had lots of favourites. But my all-time classic Beatles song is Across The Universe, which has John’s fingerprin­ts all over it.

“Having said that, Paul’s songs, such as Blackbird and Mother Nature’s Son, are beautiful.

“And his sense of melody is matchless.”

It’s a long time since she went to Dunfermlin­e High School and lived with her parents in Dollytown, a prefab estate in Rosyth.

But Barbara is still writing, recording and singing with the passion that has been evident since she began developing her talents in folk clubs and bothy bars around Fife and Angus in the 1960s.

And, just as McCartney has dabbled in all forms of music, so she has made a big impact in different mediums since those early days when she climbed on her bike to watch the Liverpool quartet.

A glance at her CV shows she has appeared on Top of the Pops, excelled on the festival circuit and honed her acting skills on the stage and in TV series such as Band of Gold.

Her autobiogra­phy, A Shirt Box Full of Songs, captures myriad facets of her journey from a working-class upbringing and playing folk gigs in spit-and-sawdust pubs to appearing on grand concert stages and flying out to an oil rig with Noel Edmonds to celebrate the 10th anniversar­y of the Forties Field in the North Sea.

Barbara was also among the performers in the evocative Far Far from Ypres, staged around Scotland in 2018 to commemorat­e the 100th anniversar­y of the end of the First World War.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? FAN: Barbara Dickson was moved to use pedal power to see The Beatles in 1963, and since then her respect for “the greatest rock and roll band ever” has grown and grown.
FAN: Barbara Dickson was moved to use pedal power to see The Beatles in 1963, and since then her respect for “the greatest rock and roll band ever” has grown and grown.
 ?? ?? Paul, Ringo, George and John – it is more than 50 years since they split, but the four are still regarded as fab.
Paul, Ringo, George and John – it is more than 50 years since they split, but the four are still regarded as fab.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom