Band / History
George Burt and
Raymond MacDonald are the leaders of the Burt MacDonald Quartet. The
band is a jazz-based outlet for their compostions, their songwriting,
their arrangements, and their guests.
George and Raymond first came across each other in the Bill Wells component
of a Brian Wilson tribute gig. The tune was “Wind Chimes”,
and in the mind of Bill this meant a dozen musicians distributed all
over the club playing tiny fragments of the tune while Raymond did one
of his mad solos over the top.Raymond used to come along to George’s
free improvisation workshops, and they got the idea to form a duo to
play standards with some of the freedom of the free stuff. They never
got there, and years later Derek Bailey showed them how to do it with
his “Ballads” album, but it was fun doing it, and we also
gigged as a trio with the fantastic Sophie Bancroft.
The late Lindsay Cooper had a wonderful band at that time with Allan
Pendreigh on drums, Robert Henderson on trumpet and John Burgess on
tenor. They used to do their gigs with “guests”. It was
a tabla player one time and George as narrator of Lindsay’s long
poem “A Madman’s Guide to Music” another. Tempers
could get a bit frayed in that band at times…
We were getting a bit tired of the duo/trio format, and we got Lindsay
and Allan as our rhythm section and started playing pub gigs. A lot
of these were in the west on Sunday lunchtimes, and Lindsay was an Edinburgh
musician. This was when George Lyle joined us, and it stayed like that
for nearly six years until Allan retired in 2004. Sophie’s own
career was revitalised by two excellent records, and Nicola MacDonald
eventually joined us. She’s a songwriter and record producer,
and has some of Sophie’s lightness of touch as well as a pop musician’s
concern with melody. We made a record called Oh Hello at about this
time made up of songs and tunes we’d written for the pub gigs
as well as the occasional hang-over from our previous bands. A similar
batch of stuff made up Big Brothers. We financed these by saving up
money from the pub gigs. We strongly recommend this process to young
musicians … and old musicians too.
In between times
we got the opportunity to travel and take our music further a field.
(Eg Texas, Shetland and Oxford). These trips, along with the first two
CDs, were real milestones in the band's early development and were came
out of each of these projects with new ideas and plans.
George met Lol Coxhill at a duo gig with Pat Thomas as part of the Glasgow
Jazz Festival gig, later released on CD as One Night in Glasgow. He
took the cds and tapes we offered, and said “If I like them I’ll
give you a call, and if I don’t you’ll never hear from me
again.”
He returned to Glasgow the following year for a couple of gigs, and
we recorded Tsunami in an afternoon. We repeated the process with Coxhill
Street the next year, and Popcorn the year after that. These are basically
records of free improvisation, although Aileen Campbell’s popcorn
machine imposes a structure on some pieces. The goal of combining the
two approaches is still there, though and we had another go using studio
technology on Hotel Dilettante, which was recorded a couple of years
ago and released by the Textile label in 2005. This gave us a chance
to play at the famous Les Instants Chavires club near Paris where Lol
recorded his immortal version of “Falling in Love Again”
for Winter & Winter. Working with Lol has had a huge positive impact
on the band in so many ways.
While all this was
going on we got involved with whole lot of other people in setting up
and running of the Glasgow Improvisers’ Orchestra. But that’s
another story.In 2005 we not only got to work with Harry Becket but
we spent a week on the Isle of Mull at the wonderful An Tobar (say “unTOE-pur”)
Arts Centre recording a new set of songs with Keith Tippett. We had
played with Keith at the CCA in Glasgow late in 2004 which was very
well received so we were really keen to work with him again. This CD
was released on An Tobar’s own label, TOB Records, and is called
A Day for a Reason. And that’s you up to date. There will be more….