Jackie
McAuley Biography .....John Taylor
Born and raised
in a musical family of the purest Irish Tradition, a very young Jackie
McAuley already had begun to absorb the wealth of Reels and Jigs that
were being played at home.
At seventeen Jack
and his brother Pat joined the band 'Them' and embarked on the road
to rock and went to London. It was at this time Jack became friends
with rock and roll legend 'Gene Vincent' This was to become the most
significant change in McAuleys career. "Gene really was the one
who gave me the confidence to write'. After Them fell apart Jack moved
to Dublin and frequented the back room folk sessions at O'Donahues pub
where a bunch of lads who called themselves the 'Dublinners' often played.
Later Jack set up a blues band with a young piano player called Paul
Brady called "The Cult'
Two years later
he went to Copenhagen where he set up a band and recorded an album called
'The Belfast Gypsies' on Sonnet Records. He then returned to London
and joined a little Jazz/rock outfit and went of to the Lebanon for
three months. This was in the wake of the Arab /Israeli war, and the
impression of the Palestinian refugee camps scattered along the roads,
and the suffering, injustice, capitalism, hunger and despair was later
to become a driving force in McAuleys lyrics.
Back in London Jack
teamed up with Judy Dyble of Fairport Convention to play the folk circuit.
They soon signed a contract with Pye Records and recorded an album under
the name 'Trader Horn'. Judy Dyble later married and retired from music
and Jack went on to record his first solo album for Pye records, aptly
entitled 'Jackie McAuley'
During the seventies
Jack became a session musician and worked on numerous albums which included
the top Jamaican reggae band 'The Heptones' , albums with 'Jim Capaldi'
and 'Rebop' of the band Traffic, and two albums with keyboard wizard
'Rick Wakeman' another with jazz singer Viola Wills - the list goes
on. Jack played and recorded with many different acts throughout this
period from the weird and wonderful Viv Stanshal to Cherokee Indian
- Marvin Rainwater. He then joined one of his old heroes 'Lonnie Donegan'
as Musical Director and spent a few years as his sideman. His song writing
was realized in 1982 when he got together with his friend Johnny Gustafson
{Merseybeats & Roxy Music} and penned the Top ten hit 'Dear John'
for 'Status Quo'