All three of us would mess around on our instruments at the house. It came about that she needed a band for an Association function and couldn't get one, so she suggested we get together and do the night, which was scheduled for an upstairs room in the Kelvin Hall. Blair and Rory said fine, but we don't have a drummer, and I said I would do it.
I'd never played drums in my life, but I went out and bought a second-hand set the next day in Biggar’s in Glasgow. I didn't even know how to put the thing together, but I eventually figured it out! Goodness knows what it sounded like, but we got through it, and that was it – Runrig was launched, although at that point we were the Runrig Dance Band.
Although the gig is hazy, I do remember the feeling of exhilaration afterwards, and how excited we were that we had done our first gig and it was deemed to be successful. We were bursting to do more, so we got on the phone to the secretaries of the village halls and booked a summer of dances. That was April, 1973, so we are actually already into our fourth decade. Donnie Munro joined the band the following year back in Skye, and we eventually decided to go full time at the end of the 1970s. It’s all been a great adventure.
It would be fair to say that Donnie’s departure from the band in 1997 was a real crisis in the group’s history. In some ways it would have been a natural point to bring Runrig to an end. That band belonged very much to a particular place and time in Scotland, and we thought long and hard about it. Having given it that thought, we felt we wanted to continue as Runrig, because we thought we had more to give, and taking on a new singer would provide a new challenge and a new perspective.
Deciding to carry on and look for a replacement for Donnie was one thing, but finding one was a different matter! In fact, it was almost impossible. We listened to about 400 tapes, and whittled it down to two audition sessions with about 30 guys. They were all good, but none of them were quite right. |
Bookmark with:
What are these?