| Kenneth
McKellar :
Early
Years
Kenneth McKellar was born and brought up in Paisley where his
father owned a grocery shop. Although there were no musicians
at home, the McKellar family nevertheless loved music and often
listened to opera on the gramophone. "There wasn't much Scottish
music at home," he recalls. It simply wasn't being recorded.
My father was very keen on Gilbert and Sullivan, Caruso and Gigli
and I lapped all that up. " |
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As
a child of three or four he sat for hours absorbed in the power of the
great singers like Peter Dawson, Paul Robeson, Norman Allin and Richard
Tauber. I thought Peter Dawson, the Australian baritone, was wonderful,"
he said. "He had the kind of voice that could be identified within
the first four bars."
He
recalls his parents taking him to a concert in St.Andrew's Hall in Glasgow
where he was enthralled by the Italian tenor, Beniamino Gigli. "I
still have not heard better more beautiful singing from anyone,"
he said. Kenneth attended Aberdeen University and it was here, while he
was studying for a Science degree which was meant to lead on to a career
in Scottish Forestry, that he joined the student choir and showed for
the first time that he had a special talent for singing. "The Director
of Music told me I should think seriously about singing," he said.
"So he gave me lessons. We did Mozart's Requiem; the B Minor Mass;
Messiah, of course; The Creation; the St Matthew Passion; and he coached
me for a Caird Scholarship which I won." Later, the Caird Scholarship
would take him to the Royal College of Music in London for four years.
Outdoor Life
But his great joy in those early years lay in a life outdoors in the forests
and rushing rivers of the Highlands. During the war years, much of Scotland's
forest reserves had been depleted to the point of exhaustion and he was
keen to help restore them. After graduation he joined the Scottish Forestry
Commission and took part in a research and survey programme of the woodlands
of the British Isles. "I travelled on horseback up and down all over
the country," he said, "Aberfoyle, Dundee, Deeside and Birkhall,
from Forfar over to Skipness, drawing up plans for regeneration with Sitka
Spruce, Larch, Scots Pines. We put in hundreds of thousands of trees.
Over the years I've seen those trees grow to maturity; I've seen them
felled and another crop grown and harvested as well. In Carradale I used
to lodge with a wonderful old maid, Miss Tina Patterson at Portree. She
had the most marvellous store of folk tales and a great grasp of Scottish
history. It was all so real, so vivid to her that sometimes it seemed
as if she actually had been there. 'Aah,' she'd say wistfully, William.
Wallace! I was awful vexed to hear what they did to him in London.' That's
where I picked up my love of Scottish folk lore. I attended Gaelic classes
at night and learned the songs of the Hebrides, from Mrs Carson who ran
the Campbeltown Gaelic Choir. She had studied with Marjory Kennedy Fraser,
the concert singer who had been an enthusiastic advocate of Gaelic culture
and a great collector of songs at the beginning of the century. There
are people who say Marjory debased the Gaelic oral tradition by writing
those Hebridean songs down. But I say thank God she did. It's largely
thanks to her that we have those songs today."
Singing
Career Takes Off
Kenneth McKellar's great talent as a singer first came to public notice
in 1947 through a broadcast with the BBC in Glasgow. "It was the
ballad opera The Gentle Shepherd, by the early 18th century Scottish poet
Allan Rarnsay," he recalls. "The music for it was arranged by
Cedric Thorpe Davie, who was Professor of Music at St.Andrew's University.
I sang the main tenor part in that. It was very beautiful. That was my
introduction to broadcasting."
In
the early 1950s he found himself recording for the Parlophone label by,
at first, pure accident. "At College I was about to have my tonsils
out and a friend of mine said in case the surgeon's scapel slips I ought
to cut a recording, so I went along to HMV in London and-did just that.
It had on it a song by Roger Quilter, 0 Mistress Mine, and a couple of
Scots songs. The engineer sent it to Parlophone. It was a surprise to
me that he had. Parlophone asked me to come up and talk about making a
record for them. On the strength of that they thought I should be working
commercially for them. That's been the story of my life, really. A random
progression in which one thing leads to another"
Opera
Singing
As soon as he graduated from the Royal College of Music, Kenneth joined
the Carl Rosa Opera Company. He started out in the chorus but "by
pure chance" was given an opportunity to sing the opening aria from
The Barber of Seville. "They seemed impressed,' he says, "because
they offered me a principal tenor's contract".
He
toured with the company for two seasons but didn't really like the environment
of opera. "It was like living in a goldfish bowl" he says, "and
I thought: 'I don't need this. All I want to do is sing' Alec (the late
Sir Alexander) Gibson, wanted me to join the Scottish Opera. 'No,' I said,
'I've had enough'." However, in 1965, Benjamin Britten did persuade
him to join the English Opera Group at the Aldeburgh Festival and at the
Champs Elysee Theatre in Paris in the part of McHeath in "The Beggar's
Opera".
Recording and Performing
A year after he left opera for good he signed with the Decca Record Company
where he remained for over 25 years during which time he recorded some
35 or more LPs which have sold many millions of copies throughout the
world. His Songs of Robert Burns album is regarded in Scotland as the
definitive Burns collection. His recordings in Paisley Abbey, Sacred Songs
and Hosana are among the best-loved ever to come out of Scotland. Thanks
to the wonders of digital recording some of Kenneth McKellar's most memorable
songs have now been re-released by Decca.
All
text taken from www.rampantscotland.com
  
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