Dha Gordon a mhain Gordon
Duncan Full Documentary - Just for Gordon Thunderstruck was his most
famous thing on the bagpipes. He for sure was one of the greatest pipers
ever on this planet. Enjoy this Gordon Duncan Film!
Born: 14 May, 1964, in
Turriff, Aberdeenshire.
Died: 14 December, 2005, in Pitlochry, aged 41.
GORDON Duncan was, arguably, the most innovative and influential piper
of his generation. A virtuoso on the Highland bagpipe who pushed out the
envelope in terms of technique and inventive musicality, his exuberant
pyrotechnics and unorthodox and gleefully irreverent approach enraged a
few among piping's old guard, but inspired many young pipers to follow
in his turbulent wake and take the instrument to the limit.
Best known as a soloist, Duncan, who was found dead at his home at
Edradour, Pitlochry, last Wednesday, was also for many years a catalytic
element within the ranks of the innovative Vale of Atholl Pipe Band, of
which his older brother, Ian, was pipe major. A compulsive composer,
during his tragically short life he left a wealth of often idiosyncratic
pipe tunes, many of which are now well established in the international
pipe-band and solo repertoire. Perhaps the most popular, the reel Andy
Renwick's Ferret, is thought to have been recorded by more than 100
pipers, pipe bands, folk groups and others, while others now well
established in the piping repertoire and beyond include The Belly
Dancer, The Famous Baravan, Zito the Bubbleman and Pressed for Time.
Listening to him play, with a fluid ease and an insouciance which could
make many a lesser piper feel like consigning his own instrument to the
nearest bonfire, you were aware of both his utter musicality and how
grounded he was in tradition and technique. His last CD featured both
"straight" 2/4 marches and pibroch as well as a rip-roaring adaptation
of its title tune, Thunderstruck - a number by rockers AC/DC, whose
music comprised just some of the eclectic elements which informed his
music, from Irish, Breton and Galician piping to heavy rock.
Duncan was born in Turriff, the son of tenant farmer Jock Duncan (well
known in the folk scene as a bothy ballad singer) and his wife Frances.
Soon after Gordon's birth, Jock joined the North of Scotland
Hydro-Electric Board and moved, via a brief spell in Thurso, to
Pitlochry, where Gordon would live for virtually all of his life.
He was initially taught the pipes by his father, then was sent to Walter
Drysdale of Methil, who polished his playing, enabling the young player
to make an impact on the junior piping competition circuit. Playing
note-correct for judges didn't sit well with his maverick creativity,
however, and he gave up competing in his late teens.
Sometimes living as close to the edge as he played, Duncan plied a day
job as a refuse collector with the local council, and was known to
scribble a new tune on the back of a cigarette packet. He spent time
with notable folk bands such as Ceolbeg and Wolfstone, while his years
in the Vale of Atholl Pipe Band, along with Ian as pipe major, saw the
band evolve within a decade from a local band pottering about Grade Four
in the competition stakes into a formidable Grade One outfit, which won
the European Championship in the late Eighties.
"Gordon was really my mentor," said his brother. "I was good at running
a pipe band, but anything I did really revolved around Gordon and his
musical ideas. If we'd played safe, and perhaps a bit more boringly, we
might have got [the world championships]. But we were more extrovert in
the stuff we did, thanks to Gordon.
"He was quite special, unique."
In the sleeve notes to Duncan's first solo album, Just for Seamus, the
piper and pipemaker Hamish Moore wrote: "This man is precious and should
be one of Scotland's living national treasures." Following his death,
Roddy MacLeod, the principal of the National Piping Centre in Glasgow,
described him as "a great traditional player but, as everybody knows, he
pushed back the barriers. It's just a tremendous loss."
Ian Green, the managing director of the Greentrax label for whom Duncan
recorded, described himself as "devastated" at the news of his death:
"He was a very rare talent indeed, and a sad loss to the Scottish
traditional music scene."
Among the younger generation of pipers on whom Duncan had such an impact
is 26-year-old Stuart Cassells, the BBC Radio Scotland Young Traditional
Musician 2005, who played in Vale of Atholl and was one of the players
on the Young Pipers of Scotland album which Duncan produced for
Greentrax. Cassells described Duncan as "without doubt the biggest
influence on my piping career.
"Looking through the programme of last year's World Championships, there
must have been more tunes in it composed or first arranged for the pipes
by Gordon Duncan than by any other composer."
Not a few of these tunes are likely to be aired at his funeral, at the
Church of Scotland in Pitlochry tomorrow (12.45pm), which is expected to
attract some of the world's best-known pipers.
Duncan is survived by his mother and father, brother and two sisters,
and by his son, Gordon, and his wife, Mary.
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