Hamish Imlach

Hamish Imlach (10 February 1940 – 1 January 1996) was a Scottish folk singer.[1] Imlach was born in Calcutta to Scottish parents,[1] although he claimed to have been conceived in Glasgow, Scotland. Although his commercial success was limited, he influenced many other artists, including most notably John Martyn, Billy Connolly, and Christy Moore. In Central and Northern Europe Imlach enjoyed a strong reputation as a vivid live artist.

Hamish Imlach
Born(1940-02-10)10 February 1940
Calcutta, British India
Died1 January 1996(1996-01-01) (aged 55)
Motherwell, Scotland
GenresFolk
Occupation(s)Musician, songwriter
InstrumentsGuitar

Career

He had his biggest hit in the late 1960s with "Cod Liver Oil and the Orange Juice", a scurrilous and hilarious take on the American gospel standard "Virgin Mary Had a Little Baby" written by Ron Clark and Carl MacDougall. The song was for a time banned by the BBC as it was assumed to be full of double meanings, but at one point became the most requested song on British Forces Radio.

He was described by Ewan McVicar, the Scottish storyteller and singer, as "a raconteur who taught Billy Connolly, a singer who taught Christy Moore, a blues guitarist who taught John Martyn".

Imlach was invited to join the Irish trad and folk group The Dubliners. He was also an early anti-nuclear protester,[1] and wrote and performed protest songs as well as comic ones. After recovering from a serious illness in the 1970s he regularly toured with Iain MacKintosh as well as doing solo tours. For the last 18 months of his professional life his stage partner was Kate Kramer, a Canadian fiddle player and singer living in Scotland, with whom he recorded his last CD, More and Merrier (1996).

Personal life

Hamish Imlach was married to Wilma, who died on 10 March 2019 and had four children named Mairead, Fiona, Jim and Vhari.

Imlach's health deteriorated again towards the latter part of his life with bronchial troubles and obesity and he died on 1 January 1996, six weeks short of his 56th birthday. In his 1992 autobiography, co-written with Ewan McVicar, Cod Liver Oil and the Orange Juice Imlach jested "When I die I want everything to be knackered!"[2][3]

Discography

  • Hamish Imlach (XTRA, 1966)
  • Before and After (XTRA, 1967)
  • Live (XTRA, 1967)
  • The Two Sides of Hamish Imlach (XTRA, 1968)
  • Ballads of Booze (XTRA, 1968)
  • Old Rarity (XTRA, 1971)
  • Fine Old English Tory Times (XTRA, 1972)
  • Murdered Ballads (XTRA, 1973)
  • Scottish Sabbath (Autogram, 1976)
  • A Man's a Man (Autogram, 1978) with Iain MacKintosh
  • The Sporting Life (Musikiste, 1981)
  • Sonny's Dream (Lismor, 1985)
  • Portrait (Musikiste, 1989)
  • I Was Born in Glasgow (Gallus Music, 1991)
  • Two's Company (Vindaloo Music, 1993) with Muriel Graves
  • More and Merrier (Lochshore, 1995) with Muriel Graves and Kate Kramer
gollark: Wait, what if we treat passing/failing proposals as a 1D cellular automaton?
gollark: Oh, and also, pass proposal but translated to Latin, pass proposal 3 days ago, pass proposal *in* 6 days, and randomly reassign all rule numbers.
gollark: It may take a little while to do the necessary votes, but it would be ENTIRELY worth it.
gollark: I think we should use instant runoff voting, with the options to choose between being pass proposal, fail proposal, revote proposal but the second most popular option is unavailable, wait 16 hours and then revote, fail proposal but pass its dependents instantly regardless of other rules, crab, pass proposal and next/previous proposals, reclassify proposal as an SCP, pass the proposal but with every second letter removed, pass the proposal but backward, and frog.
gollark: Because I deployed the bees.

References

  1. Colin Larkin, ed. (1997). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.). Virgin Books. p. 641. ISBN 1-85227-745-9.
  2. "OBITUARY: Hamish Imlach". Independent.co.uk. 4 January 1996. Retrieved 25 November 2017.
  3. "BBC - Folk: Remembering Hamish Imlach". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 25 November 2017.
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