The Scotsman

Tributes paid to Scottish folk music ‘champion’

- Brian Ferguson

Tributes are being paid to a former police inspector who went on to become one of the most influentia­l figures in Scottish music in modern times.

Ian Green, who has passed away at the age of 90, released nearly 500 albums with the label he set up more than 35 years ago after retiring from Lothian and Borders Police.

He would go on to work with singers like Barbara Dickson, Dick Gaughan, Eric Bogle, Jean Redpath and Donnie Munro, and the bands shoo glen if ty, salsa Celtic a and Peatbog Faeries.

Green’s first foray into the music business was when he launched a folk night at the edinburgh Police Club in the1960s. He helped launch both Edinburgh Folk Club and the Edinburgh Folk Festival in the 1970s, as well an annual Fringe venue, which still runs under the banner of the Acoustic Music Centre.

Bogle recalled first meeting Green when he played at his “Fuzzfolk” night at the police club. He said: “It was at this club that Ian deepened and extended his love and knowledge of folk music, especially Scottish traditiona­l music. This led to him deciding, upon receiving a generous severance payment after 30 years in the police, to invest this money in starting a record label to promote and sell folk music. I and many others told him he was ‘aff his heid’, but luckily he totally ignored us and so Greentrax was born. It then became the pre-eminent and most treasured record label in Scotland, and perhaps the world, as far as Scottish folk music was concerned.”

Singer and musician David Francis, director of the Scottish Traditiona­l Music Forum network,said :“ian’ s contributi­on to folk music in Scotland is almost incalculab­le. For many musicians, a contract with Greentrax was the first rung on the ladder to making a career in music. But Ian was always mindful of the fact that our community is not just made up of profession­als, with space being made for semi-pro musicians, Scottish dance bands, pipe bands, and the whole gamut of activity and musical perspectiv­es.

“Greentrax issued almost 500 titles, a testament to his faith in the talent and creativity of Scottish folk music. The label is an outlet that enabled that talent and creativity to flourish in a way that it might never have done otherwise. Ian was to be found behind his desk in his office at cock enzie almost to the end, still planning releases, still grappling with the complexiti­es of downloads and streaming at an age when you would have for givenhim for shutting up shop .”

Long-time friend john bar row, a music promoter who first met Green in the 1960s, is the chair of edinburgh folk club. he said: “The folk scene has lost a most highly valued friend who took integrity to a new level.”

Composer, musician and producer Jim Sutherland said: “Ian was a towering figure on the Scottish folk scene. His legacy goes way beyond the output of his label.”

Singer and musician Steve Byrne, who made albums on Green's label with his band M al inky for more than 20 years, said: “Ian Green was a doughty champion for our traditions and almost single-handedly created a document and archive of a huge swathe of the Scottish folk music scene from the 1980s to the present day.”

The folk scene has lost a most highly valued friend

 ?? PICTURE: ALLAN MACDONALD ?? Ian Green founded the record label Greentrax in Edinburgh in 1986 after retiring from Lothian and Borders Police
PICTURE: ALLAN MACDONALD Ian Green founded the record label Greentrax in Edinburgh in 1986 after retiring from Lothian and Borders Police

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