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Dougie MacLean is one of Scotland's premier singer/songwriters. A past member of
the Tannahill Weavers and
Silly Wizard,
MacLean has used his songs, including "Caledonia," "The Singing Land," and "Solid Ground," to capture the natural beauty of his hometown on the border between the Highlands and the Valley of Strathmore.
MacLean first attracted attention as a teenager when he formed a band with future
Silly Wizard members
Andy Stewart and
Martin Hadden. While performing as a street musician in Kinross in 1974,
MacLean was invited to join
the Tannahill Weavers. He remained with the group for three years before he moved to Germany and launched his solo career. For a while,
MacLean also performed in a trio with
Alex Campbell and
Alan Roberts.
MacLean's breakthrough came with the release of the album Caledonia in 1979. Returning to Scotland in 1980, he spent six months as the replacement for fiddler
Johnny Cunningham in
Silly Wizard. Although he temporarily returned to
the Tannahill Weavers, he resumed his solo career in 1981.
In addition to his busy schedule as a touring singer/songwriter,
MacLean has been an influential record executive, having founded Dunkeld recording studios and record label with his wife, Jennifer, in 1983. Among the many tradition-rooted Scottish musicians who have recorded for the label, whose slogan is "Scotland's new heritage music," are
Sheena Wellington,
David Allison,
Gordon Duncan,
Hamish Moore, and Frieda Morrison.
A tour of the United States in 1989 was conducted in conjunction with Fiona Ritchie's National Public Radio show, Thistle & Shamrock. The following year,
MacLean returned to the U.S. for a 17-concert tour with other Dunkeld artists. In 1995,
MacLean played guitar and sang harmony on country artist
Kathy Mattea's Good News album and toured as the opening act for
Mattea's North American tour. Several of
MacLean's songs were heard on the soundtrack of the film The Last of the Mohicans. In 1993,
MacLean served as music director of the TAG Theater Company's production of A Scots Quair. A 40-minute documentary on
MacLean's life and music, The Land: The Songs of Dougie MacLean was aired by the BBC.
Tracks from
MacLean's three albums on the Plant Life label were assembled on the 1997 album
The Plant Life Years. A sampling of tunes from
MacLean's albums on Dunkeld were included on the 1995 album The Dougie MacLean Collection.
MacLean's subsequent noteworthy releases have included
Riof (1997), Perthshire Amber and Live from the Ends of the Earth (both 2000), Who Am I (2002),
Inside the Thunder (2006), and the limited-edition EP Muir of Gormack (2007). ~ Craig Harris