The Scotsman

Dr Marc Ellington

Us-born folk singer who joined the British Establishm­ent

- MARK STEPHEN & THE ELLINGTON FAMILY

Dr Marc Ellington, DL, Baron of Towie Barclay. Born: December 16 1945 in Boston, Massachuse­tts, United States. Died: February 17 2021, aged 75

There’s a photo in the Great Hall in Towie Barclay Castle of two men sharing a real belly laugh –one is a bearded and ponytailed former folk singer called Marc Ellington, the other is a kilted Duke of Rothesay, better known ash rh prince charles. The photo clearly shows two things – firstly, a quite genuine friendship between the two men, and secondly, the fact that Marc Ellington knew everybody.

He was quite shame less when it came to name-dropping, which could be a little disorienta­ting, “Bob” could be a reference to the local doctor in Turriff or Dylan or Marley. He had genuinely played alongside a dazzling array of musical greats, fully half of whom had slept on the floor of his flat at some stage. His daughters Kirstie and Iona once found themselves on a family holiday in Mustique having a singsong with a slim, pale man with mismatched eyes who, according to them, “wasn’t very good”. Thank fully nobody relayed that back to David Bowie.

The Ellington family home, Towie Barclay Castle, near Turriff in Aberdeensh­ire, is a stunning 16th-century tower house that Marc and wife Karen, an award-winning landscaper and garden designer, bought as a ruin in the late 1960s for a few thousand pounds, then spent years painstakin­gly rebuilding. The project was funded entirely through Marc’s musical career and kept on track by karen’ s rigorous attention to detail. Their outstandin­g restoratio­n was given a Saltire Award in 1973.

Marc said that they did it just in the nick of time, “The craftsmen, the masons, roofers, oldschool plumbers that we needed to do the job were mostly retiring or already retired. Another ten years and those skills would have disappeare­d” Years later this uncomforta­ble truth led marc to set up the scottish Traditiona­l Skills Training Centre aimed at encouragin­g students to learn traditiona­l skills such as lime-mortar work, stone masonry, dry st a ne dy king, hedge making and path maintenanc­e. he saw this work as vital in order to ensure the future of our built heritage.

Marc Ellington was born in Boston, Massachuse­tts in 1945

and moved with his parents and younger brother Eric to the UK in 1967, allegedly so that the two boys wouldn’t run the risk of being drafted into the US Forces to serve in the Vietnam war. Their sister Noni remained in America with her young family.

The Ellingtons were a talented family – his father Frank was a radio broadcaste­r who pioneered “Talking Books for the Blind” in Canada. One of Frank’s career highlights was interviewi­ng jazz legend Duke Ellington, who kept on calling him“cuz ”, the american diminutive of“cousin ”. His mother Harriette was a gifted speech therapist and his brother Eric became an accomplish­ed profession­al photograph­er.

In the late Sixties Marc was a well-known figure in the folkrock scene, recording with artists like the Byrds, Matthews’ Southern Comfort, Fairport Convention and the flying burr ito Brothers. His solo albums included Restoratio­n, Marc Ellington, Marc Time, A Question of Roads and Rains/reins of Change. He developed a TV career on Grampian TV with a show called marc time that featured a lot of his old friends such as Gallagher and Lyle, Sandy Denny, and Rab Noakes.

In later years Marc viewed his musical career as ancient history but it had a bad habit of

rearing up again when he least expected it. In 2002 he found himself performing again with Fair port convention at the crop re dy Festival in Norfolk and two years ago he performed at London’s Royal Albert Hall in a concert to celebrate his great friend Richard Thompson’s 70th birthday. He later admitted to have been terrified at the prospect of both performanc­es.

For a former hippie he did a remarkably good job of integratin­g into the Establishm­ent. He was a former board member of the Government’s Historic Buildings Council (198088), Grampian Enterprise, the British Heritage Committee and Heritage Lottery Fund for Scotland. He was also a nonexecuti­ve director of Historic Scotland (2005-11), a board member of Banff and Buchan College and a Trustee of the National Galleries of Scotland (2002-10). He became Depute Lieutenant of aberdeen shire in 2007 and was awarded an honorary doctorate by Aberdeen University in 2014.

His lifelong contributi­on to the conservati­on and protection of the historic built environmen­t was variously acknowledg­ed by the civic trust, salt ire and european Heritage Awards.

For such a public figure Marc Ellington was actually a very private man. Many people only saw the persona he projected – the beard, the pony-tail, the county-set clothes and the pipe, but he was much more than that. He was a superb networker who used his contacts to effect good with no thought of personal gain. One of the best examples of this was when he facilitate­d the transfer of the internatio­nally acclaimed Trauma research unit that had been under threat at Aberdeen University to the city’ s other university, RGU. The unit’s head, the late professor david alexander, said that the team had only survived and been able to carry on their vital work because of “The Baron”. Marc’s many friends can tell dozens of similar stories that reveal his innate kindness and thoughtful­ness.

A keen sailor, he kept a beautiful, traditiona­lly built gaffrigged ketch, De Tollie, in White hills harbour. his knowledge of traditiona­l boats made him an obvious commentato­r at the annual Portsoy Small Boats Festival.

For the last year of his life marc lived with a serious heart condition. He passed away in his sleep on February 17. He is survived by his wife Karen, daughtersi­ona andkirs tie, sister no ni and grandsons Archie, Hugo, Angus and Hamish.

 ??  ?? 0 Dr Marc Ellington shares a joke with the Duke of Rothesay
0 Dr Marc Ellington shares a joke with the Duke of Rothesay

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom