The Scotsman

Good advert for music as the gift that keeps on giving

- Jimmie Macgregor at 90 Years Young Oran Mor, Glasgow

THERE was nothing flippant about the title of this show. Singer, songwriter and broadcaste­r Jimmie Macgregor, who turns 90 on 10 March, remains a persuasive advert for the nourishing power of music with his ability to spin a yarn, deliver a punchline and hold an audience undiminish­ed.

There was an unabashed nostalgia to this celebratio­n concert, with fond memories and cultural references readily evoked for the capacity crowd, who felt as much a part of proceeding­s as Macgregor’s invited musical guests.

Sadly, Archie Fisher – fresh from celebratin­g his 80th birthday at Celtic Connection­s last weekend – was unwell and unable to join the party, but Rab Noakes kept a supportive but gentle hand on the tiller while the redoubtabl­e Macgregor, a law unto himself, roamed freely around a wide and long career.

Singers Sheena Wellington and Alastair Macdonald, onstage throughout, occasional­ly got a word or a harmony in, with the latter leading on a spry version of Macgregor’s Pack Your Tools and Go, originally written for the Upper Clyde Shipbuilde­rs’ Work-in. Joining the campfire powwow, fiddler Innes Watson and cellist Christine Hanson added subtle, satisfying texture to the simple arrangemen­ts, including a sprightly coda to Burns’ Duncan Gray, one of numerous songs to inspire a spontaneou­s singalong.

Macgregor remains a natural charmer, with sundry quips at his own and others’ expense and pithy humour at the heart of many of his songs, including a laugh-out-loud “effusive” Glasgow love song (“I really like you” went one of its wilder declaratio­ns), a comic meditation on the authentici­ty of the Stone of Destiny, My

Way done his way and some gentle ribbing of the Scottish hospitalit­y trade gleaned during his touring years.

Macgregor has been highlighti­ng the work of other songwriter­s and keeping traditiona­l tunes and vernacular in the firmament since his days of mass TV exposure with musical partner Robin Hall on the Tonight programme.

From this bottomless well, he plucked folk club favourites such as Roddy Mcmillan’s Yuri Gagarin, Tramps and Hawkers and Michael Marra’s superlativ­e satire, Hermless.

Noakes led on skiffle standard Freight Train and added sublime bluegrass harmonies to Turtle Dove, a haunting highlight in an otherwise gently jocular set which culminated with a rousing communal rendition of The Wild Rover and a sweet singalong to the evergreen Scottish lullaby Ally Bally Bee.

 ??  ?? 0 Singer, songwriter, broadcaste­r and storytelle­r Macgregor has lost none of his connection to his audience
0 Singer, songwriter, broadcaste­r and storytelle­r Macgregor has lost none of his connection to his audience

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