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VIDEO: Working with Paul McCartney 91Ƶan out of this world musical experience91Ƶ

B.C. pipe band member shares memories of recording 1977 U.K. hit 91ƵMull of Kintyre91Ƶ
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John MacCallum, who has called Langley home for the last 20 years, was a member of the Scottish pipe band used in Wings91Ƶ 1977 hit song 91ƵMull of Kintyre.91Ƶ MacCallum is pictured third from the right, with Paul McCartney in the centre. MacCallum is now a member of the South Fraser Pipes & Drums, a Langley-based band that is looking for new members. Photo courtesy of John MacCallum

John MacCallum remembers well the first time he spotted Paul McCartney, dressed in casual wear, walking through the streets of his hometown of Campbeltown, Scotland.

McCartney 91Ƶ a former Beatles member who at that time was in his own band 91Ƶ owned a country home with his wife, Linda, on the Kintyre peninsula.

91ƵI91Ƶd see him in the town when I lived there. He would come in with his Wellington boots on, with his family in tow and an English sheep dog and all that stuff,91Ƶ recalled MacCallum, who now calls Langley home.

It was 1977, and MacCallum, then 19 years old, played the tenor drum in the Campbeltown Pipe Band, and was given the opportunity of a lifetime to work with McCartney.

91ƵHe decided to write a song about the area,91Ƶ McCallum said. 91ƵHe really enjoyed coming up. It91Ƶs in the country on the Southwest part of Scotland. It91Ƶs kind of near the beaches, it91Ƶs quite beautiful actually. And I guess Linda really enjoyed coming up to the farm a lot, so he decided to write a song.91Ƶ

McCartney made contact with the pipe major, Tony Wilson, and together they came up with the music for Mull of Kintyre, with McCartney playing the melody on keyboard, and Wilson converting it to pipe music.

The group had just two weeks to learn the part, before recording it in a converted barn on McCartney91Ƶs farm.

91ƵIt was an out of this world musical experience,91Ƶ MacCallum said.

91ƵHere I am, I am a shipwright, I91Ƶm working in the town I grew up in 91Ƶ and this is what I do as a hobby part time, I91Ƶm in the pipe band 91Ƶ so to meet him, and Linda91Ƶ. They both made us feel so welcomed, and so homely. They didn91Ƶt have any airs and graces about them. They were pretty down to earth. They were really, really nice.91Ƶ

From there, the pipe band was featured in a music video for McCartney, in which MacCallum has a two-second close-up, and travelled to London to play in the BBC studios and to perform on Mike Yarwood91Ƶs 1977 Christmas Show.

Mull of Kintyre shot off the charts, becoming a single in the U.K., and the only Number 1 single for Wings.

Pictured below: John MacCallum with Paul McCartney.

SOUTH FRASER PIPES & DRUMS

MacCallum moved to Canada in 1984, and largely stopped playing music until joining the South Fraser Pipes & Drums one year ago.

The pipe band, formerly called the Langley Legion Band, has been operating since the 1980s. But when the Langley Legion shut down and had to sell their building, the band dwindled to a small group, only picking back up recently.

Now, working under the guidance of well-known piper Peter MacNeil (one of the founders of the Simon Fraser University Pipe Band), they meet weekly on Tuesday nights at the Coghlan Hall, and are looking for new pipers and drummers to join.

The band is great for those who have a musical background or who played in their youth, but stopped playing as they grew older, said secretary-treasurer Nancy Gleeson.

91ƵMany play in their youth when they have time, and then with family, they91Ƶve stopped playing. And it can be 20, 30 years, and then they91Ƶve got a little bit more time, the children are gone, and they want to get back into something. That91Ƶs what our group is good for,91Ƶ she said. 91ƵWe91Ƶve also got some young people as well, which makes it special.91Ƶ

91ƵWe91Ƶre trying to encourage the youth in the community to get involved,91Ƶ MacCallum added. 91ƵWe91Ƶve got good mentorship here as well, it would be great to pass that knowledge and experience along to the younger groups.91Ƶ

A UNIQUE INSTRUMENT

The bagpipe itself is also very unique from other wind instruments, Gleeson said, with more physicality involved, fewer notes to play and no sharps or flats.

Bagpipes are made from natural materials, meaning that something as simple as the weather, or walking from the cool outdoors into a warm room can change their tone.

91ƵThey are a very ancient, primitive instrument. Mine, the bag is elk hide, the inner big drones are now synthetic, but our chanter reeds are cane, they91Ƶre wrapped in hemp,91Ƶ she said. 91ƵAnother whole thing, beside just playing, is keeping them tuned and maintained. And Peter is very skilled at that.91Ƶ

91ƵIt takes a bit of work and practise to get a finely tuned instrument,91Ƶ MacCallum added. 91ƵIf it91Ƶs not tuned properly, it doesn91Ƶt sound so good. It sounds like a bag of cats.91Ƶ

All of the music has to be memorized as well, making it a good exercise for the mind, MacCallum said.

EMOTIONAL CONNECTION

MacCallum has been exposed to piping music his whole life, with many of his family members playing. One of his cousins even owns a manufacturing company for bagpipes in Scotland.

Gleeson, however, did not grow up with the music. She first became familiar with the sound when taking up Scottish country dancing as a teenager, and learned to play the pipes after.

91ƵWell played pipes send shivers up your back,91Ƶ she said.

91ƵPlaying at Remembrance Day, when you91Ƶre marching down the street and you see the faces of the crowd. There will be people crying, there will be people looking delighted. Kids shocked. And seeing the veterans, it means so, so much to them. Every parade you do, just seeing the delight on peoples faces.

91ƵI play the cello in an older ladies music group, and we play for seniors and things, and they like it and enjoy it 91Ƶ but not the emotional connection that pipes and drums have. With our two world wars, there91Ƶs just a strong emotional connection. And you can91Ƶt beat that, really. The pipes meant so much to the people who were fighting.91Ƶ

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John MacCallum of the South Fraser Pipes & Drums. Miranda Gathercole Langley Times.
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John MacCallum of the South Fraser Pipes & Drums. Miranda Gathercole Langley Times.
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Nancy Gleeson of the South Fraser Pipes & Drums. Miranda Gathercole Langley Times.
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A member of the South Fraser Pipes & Drums. Miranda Gathercole Langley Times
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A member of the South Fraser Pipes & Drums. Miranda Gathercole Langley Times




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