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Barbie MacLaurin Sixty Today
18 Sunday Feb 2024
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in18 Sunday Feb 2024
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in11 Tuesday Oct 2022
Posted Songs
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Listen to my song here. Thanks to Lukas Merrild for the bass.
They didn’t need a preacher,
no, they didn’t need a kirk.
They didn’t need a teacher
to tell them what would work.
They threw this great big party
aback of Ballimore.
Our Jeremy and Barbie
were married on the shore.
Imagine a wedding on the shore,
the sweetest thing you ever saw.
Jeremy and Barbie were married on the shore.
The bride arrived stage centre
and met the leading man.
Belinda was their mentor,
and the nuptials began.
As clouds collected darkly,
we witnessed deep rapport.
Our Jeremy and Barbie
were married on the shore.
Imagine a wedding on the shore,
the sweetest thing you ever saw.
Jeremy and Barbie were married on the shore.
We luckily found refuge
ahead of heavy rain.
It turned into a deluge.
We toasted with champagne.
The speeches simply charmed me,
and the Ceilidh filled the floor.
Our Jeremy and Barbie
were married on the shore.
Imagine a wedding on the shore,
the sweetest thing you ever saw.
Jeremy and Barbie were married on the shore.
The kitchen crew were gracious.
Phoebe keenly shone her light.
We somehow stayed vivacious
till late into the night.
Next day it was so balmy
we knocked on heaven’s door.
Our Jeremy and Barbie
were married on the shore.
Imagine a wedding on the shore,
the sweetest thing you ever saw.
Jeremy and Barbie were married on the shore.
Listen to the poem version without the chorus and with two additional verses:
With coffee served by Harry
from his Maclaurin’s bar,
the aunt he’d just seen marry
had her surname on his car.
And, as she hinted smartly,
it’s what it was before
our Jeremy and Barbie
were married on the shore.
So now I’m all excited
about them coming here.
They’re openly invited
at any time of year.
We’ll gaze on fields of barley,
then we’ll go out and explore.
Our Jeremy and Barbie
were married on the shore.
18 Monday Feb 2013
Posted Ditties
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Many moons ago my sister Barbie asked me to write a piece for her. Last month, after I’d sent her a sonnet about a sad incident in my childhood, she wrote to me: “I challenge you to write a happy sonnet about your childhood!” Well, it’s not a sonnet, but it’s a sunny piece, and it’s one for her. It’s also a greeting on her birthday, which is today – so that’s three out of four boxes ticked. The happy sonnet about my childhood will have to come later.
The Belle of Perth
Best wishes on your Birthday,
Barbie (never Barbara Anne!),
who, once the belle of Perth, may
win the Golden Palm at Cannes
so there can be another
lass besides Jane Campion.
According to your brother,
you’ve been more than champion.
12 Wednesday Sep 2012
Posted Essays
inTags
1780, A Time for New Dreams, Alistair Baines, Amanda Baxter, Ardvreck, Astrid Gorrie, Azzizzi, Barbie MacLaurin, Ben, Ben Okri, Brass Monkey Leith, Café Rouge, Captain's Bar, Carol Ann Duffy, Colin Campbell, Colm Tóibín, Cousin Steve, Cry Freedom!, Danish Cultural Institute, David Richards, David WW Johnstone, denzel washington, Don Paterson, Donald Gorrie, Douglas Turner, Dunkeld, Edinburgh 2012, Euan Gorrie, Glenalmond, Harry Turner, Helen, Jack Turner, Jane Nicoll, Jayne Osborn, Jeremy Hall, Julia Turner, Karen's Way, Kevin Gore, Leonard Cohen, Mairi Campbell, Mark Noonan, Mike Breen, New College Oxford, Nigel Mace, Papsie, Rantum Scantum, Rich Batsford, Rod Mitchell, Sacred Space, Shona Moonie, St. John's Church, Steve Biko, Suzanne, Tamzin Walker, The Comic Destiny, The Festival of Spirituality and Peace, The Fiddler's Elbow, The Royal Oak, Vanessa Rosenthal, Wild
Along with his wife, Helen, and their son, Ben, cousin Steve came to my first ticketed concert – quite unannounced and at the last minute. It was a lovely surprise. He recorded the concert and took photos too.
He caught me lighting up outside afterwards.
Two fellow-poets I’d never met before also came along – Jayne Osborn, who’d travelled up specially from England the day before, and Nigel Mace, who was in Edinburgh for Karen’s Way, a play his partner, Vanessa Rosenthal, had written and was performing in. We made our way to the first pub in Rose Street: 1780.
Steve, Helen, Ben and I then ambled around town. It rained quite a bit. We had some supper here:
Half an hour later one of the Red Arrows almost touched the roof. As Ben said: “I thought I was going to die!”
The reflection of the lights on the glistening cobbles of Cockburn Street inspired Steve to pull out his camera again:
I’m sure I took a couple of Steve and Helen, but I must have made a hash of it.
I went up to the church the next day to do some promotion and heard Rich Batsford at FoSP. Then in the evening I met up with Steve & co. again. We weren’t allowed in any restaurants because of Ben being only 12 years old,
so we had a carry-out on Princes Street. My newly-acquired road manager, Tamzin Walker, a friend from schooldays, was with us. The fireworks started just after we’d finished our meal. I intended to have an early night but instead was hauled in to an Open Mic at Brass Monkey on Leith Walk just forty yards from the flat I was staying in. It was a wild but mellow experience.
Steve burst in at the start of my second concert on the 8th, took a couple of photos, and I haven’t seen him since.
After the second ticketed concert I took the train to Dunkeld and spent two nights with my dad. My sister, Amanda, came the next day, and in the evening my sister, Julia, her husband, Douglas, and their two boys, Harry and Jack, turned up. Then it was back to Edinburgh on the Friday for the third ticketed concert. My younger sister, Barbie, had travelled up from London for this one, so at one point I played Leonard Cohen’s “Suzanne”, the only cover number I do. At the age of 19 I was enchanted by a version of it when Barbie and I found ourselves on the beach of a Greek island. Five years were to pass before I actually put my hand in my pocket, but that is what inspired me to take up the guitar. We had a good evening together along with her partner, Jeremy Hall, and two old friends from uni days, Colin Campbell and Jane Nicoll.
I was staying with my schoolmate, Mark Noonan, and Saturdays with him are all about a wee visit into town for something to eat, with the evening tending to revolve around a visit from another schoolmate, Alistair Baines, where chilling out and fun are the order of the day. Mark and Al both came to my final ticketed concert on the Sunday, as did another schoolmate, Rod Mitchell. Attendance averaged at ten, which is about par for the course.
My last performance the next day was a replication of my first one – an unticketed lunchtime “Sacred Space” in the church itself. The PA had broken down, but it didn’t matter that much. It’s a wonderful venue, a church, for acoustic guitar, song and mouth organ. This time I started with Leonard Cohen’s “Suzanne”. Astrid Gorrie, the mother of my schoolmate, Euan, had made the trip into town to hear me, which was a pleasant surprise.
In preparation for an upcoming trip to Ireland with a third-year class I’d bought a ticket for Colm Tóibín at the Book Festival. It was lucky I did as it was sold out. It wasn’t what I was expecting as he was promoting his newly published collection of essays, New Ways to Kill Your Mother, but it was interesting all the same, and at least I can pronounce his name right now.
* * *
1780 became my regular watering-hole, not only for that week but also when, hatless and clean-shaven, I was back in Edinburgh later in the month for a course at the Danish Cultural Institute in conjunction with the Book Festival. Charlotte Square is but a stone-throw away, and the Danish Cultural Institute is but a five-minute walk from there.
This photo was taken by my old school pal, Rod Mitchell.
The highlight of my course was a three-part presentation of (and by) Ben Okri. First we saw an adaptation of his piece, “The Comic Destiny”, written by David WW Johnstone, who was also one of the three actors. All three were also part of Ben Okri’s gig the next day at the Book Festival, where he also read from both his very recent poetry collection, Wild, and his recent collection of essays, A Time for New Dreams. I was very taken by both his presence and his performance. He put me in mind of Denzel Washington playing Steve Biko in Cry Freedom! Softly-spoken and generous, but with a vision of steel. In short, he has a very winning personality. Before that we’d been given a lecture on post-colonial Nigerian literature by David Richards, where Ben Okri was one of the three main writers discussed. Upon my return to Denmark, I determined to teach him to my second-year students. In this connection I found some good material on the Internet:
Video highlights of A Time for New Dreams at the RSA, 2011
Full audio podcast of A Time for New Dreams at the RSA, 2011
Ben Okri – International Authors Stage – The Black Diamond – The Royal Libary – Copenhagen
Ben Okri discusses his approach to writing
Ben Okri in Conversation with Vanity Fair’s Anderson Tepper
I had also added Karen’s Way to my programme as well as performances by Don Paterson and Carol Ann Duffy at the Book Festival. And there were other delights in the evenings, as I met some very accomplished folk musicians playing at two folk pubs close to my hotel – Captain’s Bar and The Royal Oak. Mike Breen and Shona Moonie, Eddie and Bobby from Rantum Scantum, Kevin Gore, Azzizzi, to name but a few. I had a rare time.
I also gave a seventh performance at St. John’s on the 23rd. I came to hear Mairi Campbell give a “Sacred Space” performance, but she hadn’t been able to make it. The sound technician, Alec, asked me if I’d be willing to do it. The only guitar I’d played in ten days was five minutes in Captain’s Bar, but I consented, and a guitar was promptly found. The PA was working this time, so a strong “Suzanne” rang round that sacred space.
My last evening, the 24th, was spent in the company of Euan Gorrie, who’d come up from London just to see me. We were at school together from the age of eight onwards (Ardvreck and Glenalmond) and matched each other both as athletes and scholars. We were the two centres in the rugby team by the end (me on the inside, being somewhat bulkier, him on the outside, being somewhat faster), and we both won awards to New College, Oxford. I’d chosen to eat with him at Café Rouge, a serendipitous choice it transpired as he revealed to me that he’d been involved in setting up their business. He’s a financial lawyer in London. We went to hear Kevin Gore et al. at The Fiddler’s Elbow and had a splendid evening. I bought the last round, which came to £11 exactly. I had only coins left in my purse, and as I counted them out I assured the barmaid that I had a back-up. We were both amazed to discover that the contents of my purse amounted to £11 exactly. Arriving at Mark’s at 1am, I failed to rouse him and subsequently spent five hours on the landing before heading off to the airport. Four hours of sleep sitting on a suitcase is better than none of course.
My dad rang me three days later to say he’d seen an obituary for Euan’s dad in the paper. I sent my condolences to Euan and asked him if he’d managed to see his dad before he died. He told me that the care home where his dad had been since suffering a stroke had rung half an hour after he’d got to his mother’s flat.
RIP, Donald Gorrie.