The Scotsman

Robin Morton

Musician, producer, promoter and band manager on Scottish folk scene

- JIM GILCHRIST

Robin Morton, musician, producer, promoter and band manager. Born: 24 December 1939 in Portadown, Co. Armagh. Died: 1 October 2021 in Edinburgh, aged 81

For someone born and bred in Northern Ireland, Robin Morton’s impact on Scotland’s traditiona­l music scene has been far-reaching. As a founder member of the Boys of the Lough and manager, for more than 40 years, of another pioneering outfit, the Battlefiel­d Band, as well as proprietor of Temple Records, he was a tireless enabler within the developing vibrancy of the Scottish folk music revival and the wider “Celtic music” world.

With the Boys of the Lough, then with Battlefiel­d, he helped establish the worldwide touring patterns followed by many other scottish folk artists, while his label issued numerous significan­t albums. In roles such as his three-year directorsh­ip of the former Edinburgh Folk Festival and as chairman of the Scottish record industry associatio­n, as well as wider lobbying, his pugnacious­ly argumentat­ive energy made him at horn in the flesh of arts funding agencies and a champion of the artist she promoted.

Yet the folk music activist might have been lost to a career in psychiatri­c social work. Growing up in Portadown, Co Armagh, on leaving school Morton worked with mentally handicappe­d children, later studying social work at queen’ s University belfast, then taking a further qualificat­ion in psychiatri­c social work at the London School of Economics.

Meanwhile, an early interest in jazz was overtaken by an increasing­ly passionate enthusiasm for traditiona­l music. He became an initially tentative singer, then an avid collector of folksongsa­ndco-founderoft­he Ulster folk music society, combining his studies with a developing career in broadcasti­ng. He also published his collection Folk songs sung in ulster, as well as come day, go day, god send Sunday, on Fermanagh singer John Maguire.

It was while collecting in the late Sixties that Morton, who played concertina and bodhran, met two important Fermanagh tradition-bearers, fiddle r Tommy Gunn and flautist and singer Cat hal Mcconnell. Eventually calling themselves­the boys of the lo ugh, the trio toured the UK. The older

Gunn left and morton, who had moved to Edinburgh to pursue aphd which fell by the way side, toured with Mcconnell before they recruited the formidable young shetland fiddle ralyba in and guitarist and singer Mike W hell ans. the group won internatio­nalac claim, establishi­ng a gruelling touring schedule.

Morton left the Boys in 1979, having establishe­d his Temple Music label in the beautiful old church, in the Midlothian village of Temple. He and his wife, harpist and glass artist Alison Kinnaird, acquired it in 1976 and converted it into their home and studios. He and Kinnaird had met through music in shetland in 1972 and wed two years later, going on to have two children, Ellen and John.

Having produced albums for the Topic label – including Dick Gaughan’s still revered Handful of Earth – he set up Temple Records in 1978. He also took on management of another influentia­l group, the Battlefiel­d Band, whose first generally available album he produced for topic before issuing on temple some 30 Battlefiel­d albums over four decades, the band’s line-up changing over time but consistent­ly featuring a powerfulfi­ddle and bag pipe front line with the initially groundbrea­king use of keyboards.

Like the Boys before them,

Battlefiel­d establishe­d the kind of global “Celtic music” touring circuit followed by later artists, performing in places as far flung as Anchorage, Beijingand uzbekistan. the band’ s longest-serving member, keyboard player and singer-songwriter Alan Reid, recalls: “Robin was a constant driver of the band, urging us ever forward. Whether pitching us into longer tours, or pestering us to start on a new album, he was constantly thinking of ways to raise the band's profile.

“We also had Brian Mcneill, followed by myself, crafting original songs, mostly in traditiona­l style. Robin was always at the helm, harnessing all this creative energy. In my later band years I wrote songs that I couldn't have envisaged, had he not encouraged or suggested the ideas to me. For that alone I am very grateful.”

Temple didn’t just release Battlefiel­d material, however. Notable recordings included its very first – Alison Kinnaird’s The Harp Key, a 1979 landmark in the early days of Scotland’s vigorous clarsach revival. Other significan­t early albums included one by Gaelic singer Christine Primrose, paving the way for several important Gaelic recordings by the label, as well as 1983’s A Controvers­y of Pipers, featuring a new generation

of players. The converted church became a hotbed of creativity, its sound studio regularlyo­ccupied by battlefiel­d or other artists.

Morton, who was inducted into the Scots Trad Hall of Fame for services to traditiona­l music, told one interviewe­r: “I always say that temple records doesn’ t release albums, they just sort of escape.”

One artist who made his first recording there, at 18, is Gaelic singer and former Mòd goldmedall­ist Arthur Cormack, a co-founder of Skye’s Macmeanmna label and chief executive of Fèisean nan Gàidheal. “I will always be hugely grateful for the opportunit­ies Robin gave me,” he says, “and for what I learned from him about the music business. he did great work in the background, cajoling and lobbying politician­s and he was certainly a forthright thorn in the side of a few Scottish Arts Council music officers. What he did, though, was what he believed was in the best interests of artists and traditiona­l music.i will remember him with as mile; he was a funny man and great company.”

Morton died in Edinburgh Royal Infirmary following a heart attack. He is survived by Alison, Ellen, John and three grandchild­ren.

 ?? ?? Robin Morton at a mixing desk in his recording studio in Temple, Midlothian in 1990
Robin Morton at a mixing desk in his recording studio in Temple, Midlothian in 1990

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