The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Unknown Freddie Mercury fitting had a camera: Rocker remembers

Musician looks back on his careering journey through

- By Tracey Bryce trbryce@sundaypost.com

His band was once dubbed the Scottish Beatles, mobbed by screaming fans, and tipped for greatness.

While The Beatstalke­rs’ star burned brightly but briefly, Alan Mair went on to a long and colourful 40-year career in and around the music industry.

And now, at 74, the musician is back with a song, he says is his best yet.

As the teenage bassist in The Beatstalke­rs, Mair remembers cruising around in the band’s flashy Zephyr 4, girls camping outside his flat, and being caught up in scenes similar to Beatlemani­a with thousands of screaming fans. The band was the first home-grown talent to make headline news.

Now, 60 years later, Mair is living a quieter life in London, but says releasing the songs

he has recorded at home during the Covid pandemic – including single Eyes To The Sky, out next month – will be just as exciting as the days he topped the bill with the hottest band in the country.

“It’s good to be back,” he said. “I’ve taken a bit of time out but I’ve always been about the music and it’s a desire that has just kept coming back.

“I have always liked writing songs but the good thing now is there’s no pressure. During Covid, with nobody visiting, I turned the house into a recording studio, so I could just record whenever I felt like it.

“And it has paid off. I think this is the best music I have ever written. I’ve already got the next single and an album ready too.”

Reminiscin­g, Mair, who formed The Beatstalke­rs with friends in high school and later played with the Al Matthews Band and The Only Ones, says being part of The Beatstalke­rs was an amazing start to his musical career.

“To have that was more than I ever dreamt of,” said Mair, who grew up in Glasgow. “My mum bought me a guitar when I was 13. Five years later, I was in a band making headline news as the biggest one there had ever been in Scotland. There were riots in George Square and Central station with fans. It was national press. When I look back I realise that, in Scotland, we were as big as The Beatles. It was insane.

“There were 20 or 30 girls camped outside my flat on Pollokshaw­s Road for about a year. I remember the police having to move them on and sometimes fine them a few shillings!

“It was astonishin­g to reach that kind of level

and all without hit records, just live sets.”

The musician said fame at such a young age was, at times, hard to cope with.

“I was so young,” he said. “I stayed in school ’til I was 16 and left when the band were already doing quite well.

“When we moved down to London to try to promote the band in England, it was actually a relief to be able to go out and not be recognised or photograph­ed.”

At the height of the band’s fame Mair became a dad to son Frank, now 56. The Beatstalke­rs split in 1969, after a van with all their equipment was stolen. Mair shelved his late-night lifestyle and forged a new career in fashion design. A husband and father seeking stability, he moved on to dressing the stars.

“When we were in Germany, I saw these flares with seams up the front and back instead of the sides,” he said.

“The receptioni­st where we were staying had a sewing machine in the back room. The other band members were out partying but I was married so stayed in and watched her sew.

“When we got back to Scotland, I bought a sewing machine. I realised the only way I could get those trousers was to make them, so I did.”

A week after the band spilt, Mair started shaping the beginnings of his new venture, eventually setting up his own shop in Kensington Market.

“At that time, I thought the music industry was for teenagers. We didn’t know then it would continue,” he said.

“I knew a lot of bands so I started making clothes for them. Then I moved on to working with leather, making trousers, fringed jackets, outfits for my wife. Then I did three-piece wedding outfits for musicians’ wives. I had an appetite for it and, with music industry connection­s, ready customers.”

But Mair soon turned his attention to footwear. “One day a man asked if I could make him a pair of boots. I found a shoemaker in Camden Town who made the boots for £8.

“I put them in the window while I waited for him to

collect. By the time he came – and paid £15 – I had six orders for boots.”

The demand was overwhelmi­ng and it wasn’t long before he found himself setting up a factory in Kentish Town, and opening shops in Kings Road and Carnaby Street.

With so much going on, Mair asked a fellow shop owner – also an up-and-coming musician

– to mind the shop in Kensington Market in the mornings. That stall owner was Freddie Mercury, who later became shop manager on the way to rock stardom with Queen.

Mair’s boots were worn by the biggest names in rock. In fact, he even gifted a pair to his old pal David Bowie in the early days of the star’s career because he couldn’t afford to buy them.

“David said, like everyone else in the industry, he was on about £20 a week. So I told Freddie to fit David for a pair of boots and gave him them for free.

“Thinking back, it’s all pretty bizarre. I wish I had a photo of it – Freddie Mercury fitting Bowie for a pair of boots – but we never really took photos back then. And I had no idea at the time just how big they would both turn out to be.”

Mair says one of the nicest things about Mercury was his modesty. “Freddie used to say to me he was in this ‘little’ band.

“I knew a lot of musicians who said they were going to turn profession­al. But Freddie never boasted and was always very humble. It seemed like every year different things were happening for Queen but the band hadn’t taken off yet.

“Every year Freddie would jokingly say to me,

‘You never know, I might not be here next year’.

“Everyone from the market used to go to the pub on a Saturday night and I still remember Freddie inviting us to one of Queen’s earliest gigs – and they weren’t very good! Freddie was awkward on stage. He hadn’t honed his craft yet. We all wondered what we were going to say to him on the Monday.”

However, a while later, Mair was driving the van when he heard a song on the radio – and when the presenter said it was Queen he knew Freddie had made it.

“When I got to the market, I said to Freddie he had a hit record. I don’t think it made the top 10 but it was definitely a hit. He stayed on at the market for four years. I was paying him £70 – three times the amount he was getting as a member of Queen at that point.”

After Freddie left in 1974, the pair stayed in touch for years. As a member of The Only Ones, Mair went on to score a cult hit with Another Girl, Another Planet and shared bills with bigname acts including The Who, Primal Scream, U2 and Simple Minds.

With more new music on the way, Mair says his healthy lifestyle, and a little bit of luck, for his longevity.

“I didn’t drink, smoke or take drugs, the things most rock stars did. Those things just weren’t for me,” he said.

Despite not having released his new single – his third as a solo artist – yet, the grandfathe­r of two is already excited about the follow-up.

“It’s connected to part of Scotland’s history,” he said. “I’m hoping it will be out in November and I can launch this one in Scotland. It will be good to get back.”

 ??  ?? Bass guitarist Alan Mair, second left, in The Beatstalke­rs in the 1960s
Bass guitarist Alan Mair, second left, in The Beatstalke­rs in the 1960s
 ??  ?? Musician Alan Mair
Musician Alan Mair
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 ??  ?? Freddie Mercury, second left, with Queen in 1970
Freddie Mercury, second left, with Queen in 1970

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