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Shelagh McDonald

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Name
  
Shelagh McDonald


Role
  
Singer

Genres
  
Folk music, Electric folk

Shelagh McDonald httpsshelaghmcdonaldfileswordpresscom20130

Occupation(s)
  
Musician, singer-songwriter

Years active
  
1968-1971, 2012-present

Website
  
shelaghmcdonald.wordpress.com

Albums
  
Let No Man Steal Your Thyme, Album, Stargazer

Record labels
  
B&C Records, Sanctuary Records Group

Associated acts
  
Similar People
  
Keith Christmas, Anne Briggs, Sandy Denny, Pentangle, Pat Donaldson

Instruments
  
Guitar, vocals, piano

Shelagh mcdonald mirage


Shelagh McDonald (born 1948) is a Scottish folk singer, songwriter and guitarist who released two albums before her abrupt and mysterious disappearance in 1971.

Contents

Shelagh McDonald fRoots Feature Shelagh McDonald Return Journey 34

Shelagh mcdonald rigs o rye


Career

Shelagh McDonald Shelagh McDonald

On her first two albums she was backed up by many notables within the English folk-rock scene, including Richard Thompson, Dave Mattacks, Danny Thompson, Keith Tippett, Keith Christmas, the Fotheringay rhythm section, as well as Ian Whiteman, Roger Powell and Michael Evans, then members of Mighty Baby.

Shelagh McDonald Shelagh McDonald

On 23 June 2005, by which time McDonald's albums had been reissued on CD, an article by Charles Donovan appeared in The Independent, the first high-profile piece about McDonald's disappearance. This prompted copycat features in local papers, the Glasgow Herald and the Scottish Daily Mail. It was the latter of these that caught the eye of McDonald herself. In November 2005, McDonald turned up in the offices of the Scottish Daily Mail and told them her story. She retreated from public life after a bad LSD trip left her paranoid and hallucinating, with a ruined voice. Living with her parents and working privately in Edinburgh, she met and married bookseller Gordon Farquhar; together, they lived a nomadic lifestyle in north Britain, living on welfare benefits and moving from house to house, and later tent to tent.

Shelagh McDonald Messageboard For Love Fans Shelagh McDonaldforgotten

In the 2005 interview McDonald said that her voice had improved and she was again interested in music, and the renewed interest in her work by the public surprised and gratified her. After that nothing more was heard of her until 2012, when she spoke to fRoots magazine. In the new interview she reveals that, since her partner's death earlier in the year, she has resumed contact with other folk musicians and is cautiously planning low-key live appearances and hoping to record new material. In an October 2013 interview with The Guardian, she revealed that she had, in fact, recorded a new album, though she provided no further details about it. The new album, called Parnassus Revisited, with several new songs, was made available at gigs but has not been widely distributed. A collaboration with Galloway indie folk band The Razorbills, "Fame Fatale", was broadcast on Stuart Maconie's Freak Zone in 2014: Shelagh also performed with this band on a number of occasions, and with Nigel H. Seymour, with whom she is rumoured to have written some new material.

Shelagh McDonald NickDrakecom View topic New Shelagh McDonald interview

On 16 January 2013, McDonald had made her first official public appearance, after more than 40 years away, as a guest of The False Beards at the Green Note, Camden, London. Among her half hour set of previously unrecorded material, she also played her version of the traditional song "Let No Man Steal Your Thyme" from her first album. A series of low-key appearances took place in 2014, mainly at Scottish venues, and a similar but longer tour in 2017, in collaboration with Nigel H Seymour followed, which took in some appearances in England. It was also announced that a recording called Timescapes was forthcoming.

Discography

Shelagh McDonald fRoots Feature Shelagh McDonald Return Journey 24

  • The Shelagh McDonald Album - B&C Records, 1970
  • Stargazer - B&C Records, 1971
  • Club Folk 2 - Peg Records PS3, 1972 (one track: " Rainy Night Blues")
  • Let No Man Steal Your Thyme - Sanctuary Records, 2005
  • Parnassus Revisited - Shelagh McDonald, 2013

  • Shelagh McDonald Shelagh Mcdonald New Album YouTube

    References

    Shelagh McDonald Wikipedia