The Herald on Sunday

Rab Noakes His friends and fans will always have his cherished music

Rab Noakes, musician, born May 13, 1947; died November 11, 2022

- By Rob Adams

RAB Noakes, who has died suddenly aged 75, was an immensely influentia­l figure on the Scottish music scene.

A distinctiv­e, utterly sincere singer, a superbly accomplish­ed guitarist and a master song craftsman, Noakes enjoyed a profession­al career of more than half a century. He was also a radio producer of great skill and, committed to fairness and equality, he was a staunch trade unionist who served on the Musicians’ Union Executive Committee and represente­d musicians’ interests at the Scottish Trades Union Congress.

Noakes was born in St Andrews and grew up in nearby Cupar, where his father encouraged one of his passions – classic cars – and his mother, a singer, inspired another: music. His cousin Derek deepened Noakes’s musical interests by giving him a collection of 78rpm discs including some by Buddy Holly and The Crickets, who remained favourites and whose songs frequently appeared in Noakes’s early folk club sets.

Even before he moved to Glasgow in 1963 to start his first job as a clerical assistant in the Ministry of Pensions, Noakes had investigat­ed the essential record shops. In his first week in the city, he attended a concert featuring another influence, The Everly Brothers, along with Little Richard, Bo Diddley and The Rolling Stones.

Noakes inhaled all the live music he could find in Glasgow and had fond memories of Clive’s Incredible Folk Club, where he heard the Incredible String Band and guitar virtuoso Davey Graham, and the Glasgow Folk Centre, where he and longtime friend, Dundonian Robin McKidd played their first profession­al gig in 1967.

It was the first of many as Noakes worked assiduousl­y on interpreta­tions (he hated the term “covers”) of songs by Bob Dylan, Elizabeth Cotten and others, and increasing­ly developed his own songwritin­g.

A year or so later, when Noakes met Gerry Rafferty who was then in the Humblebums with Billy Connolly, another long-time friendship began. Noakes briefly featured with Rafferty in Stealers Wheel but before that, with other long-time friends including Barbara Dickson, John Watt and Davie Craig, he toured with the Great Fife Road Show and forged another lasting friendship with Archie Fisher.

In 1970, Noakes released his first album, Do You See The Lights, on the Decca label. By now, he was beginning to feature on the rock festival, concert and college circuit, going on to appear on bills with Budgie, Greenslade and John Martyn while still featuring in folk clubs. Another friend, Alan Hull, took Noakes’s songs into the album charts with Lindisfarn­e, who recorded Turn A Deaf Ear on their first album, Nicely Out Of Tune, and Together Forever on their second, Fog On The Tyne. Barbara Dickson also recorded Turn A Deaf Ear on her Do Right Woman album.

Noakes followed Do You See The Lights with Rab Noakes (for another major label, A&M) and then Red Pump Special and Never Too Late, both produced by Elliot Mazer, who worked with Neil Young, Bob Dylan and Linda Ronstadt, for the mighty Warner Bros. More big-time associatio­ns came with albums for MCA and Ringo Starr’s Ring O’ Records.

Despite their undoubted high quality, Noakes’s records didn’t match his labels’ sales expectatio­ns. He became alcohol dependent but stopped drinking in 1982. Always a keen radio listener, he followed this fascinatio­n by getting production work for BBC Radio

Scotland, notably on the afternoon show fronted by Art Sutter, where Noakes memorably introduced another friend, singer-songwriter Michael Marra, to radio presenting. This led to “proper jobs” in the network radio department in Manchester, then Noakes’s appointmen­t as senior producer in the entertainm­ent department at BBC Scotland.

His vast knowledge of pop, rock, folk and country music made Noakes a natural for radio and he encouraged similarly equipped people, including the late, much-valued producer Stewart Cruickshan­k to join him. With a busy BBC schedule, Noakes didn’t perform and tour so much. But when he did play concerts they could easily have doubled as radio documentar­ies, with brilliantl­y informed background informatio­n, diverse song selections – interpreta­tions of Little Feat, Talking Heads and Beck Hansen songs as well as beautifull­y crafted originals – and top-notch singing and guitar playing.

In 1995, Noakes and his wife Stephy formed the production company Neon, making documentar­ies and releasing Noakes’s back catalogue and a steady stream of new recordings.

His gig schedule picked up, including shows with harmonica player Fraser Speirs, Gaelic singer Kathleen MacInnes, singer-songwriter Jill Jackson, and old friend Barbara Dickson.

Even being diagnosed with tonsillar cancer in 2015 didn’t stop Noakes singing, at least not for long, or from being generous with advice for emerging musicians. The loss of his wife and muse, Stephy, in May 2021 was another blow that music helped him through.

Noakes was due to appear in January at Celtic Connection­s, where he celebrated his 70th birthday in 2017 and was a major contributo­r in tributes to Bob Dylan, Martyn Bennett, and his great friends Gerry Rafferty and Michael Marra. His innumerabl­e friends and fans, however, will always have his cherished music.

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 ?? ?? Rab Noakes, who has died aged 75; below, with his late wife, Stephy
Rab Noakes, who has died aged 75; below, with his late wife, Stephy

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