Tomorrow (March 6) marks the second anniversary of the passing of Frank MacKay. I’m sharing the video below once more, this time as a Celebration of Life for Frank. Hope you are able to take a moment (well, 4 mins 47 secs) to think back on what a remarkable person and performer he was.
Remembering Frank MacKay
February 2021
We are coming up on the second anniversary of the passing of Frank MacKay. It was March 6, 2019, and I recall vividly that I was in a Charlottetown hotel when I heard the news. It came to me as a phone call from Eleanor Norrie, wife of original Lincoln drummer Rod Norrie.
Anyone who ever knew Frank, even if only at a distance as a legendary singer or stage performer, was shocked. The man was larger than life in everything he did. When he sang, he gave it everything—heart and soul—and thousands responded to him at every show or dance.
There are innumerable ways to remember Frank, and watching him sing on the YouTube video (Kings of Friday Night: The Lincolns) found elsewhere on this site is certainly one I recommend.
Less well known is Frank’s charitable side. In his will, he left a large sum for the homeless shelter in Dartmouth that renamed its facility Frank MacKay House after its benefactor.
We miss you and remember you, Frank.
Frank singing with The Lincolns at Dartmouth High, 1968.The Lincolns performing at Dartmouth High, 1968
A Better Home
February 2021
Like a lot of people during the pandemic, I’ve been getting rid of some stuff. Most is not worth talking about, but this 19th-century pewter mug (with a glass bottom) is different.
I was sent it many years ago by someone in Ontario whose name I no longer recall. At the time, I was living in Cape Breton and working at the Fortress of Louisbourg. The gentleman in question somehow came across my name and obtained my phone number. Maybe he had visited the Fortress and heard me give a talk? Or someone recommended me to him?
In any case, he told me on the phone that he wanted the mug to return to Nova Scotia (from whence it had come). Had he inherited it? Purchased it? If he told me 25 years ago, I no longer remember those details. What I do know for sure is that he said the mug belonged to one George J. Drillio who was a contemporary and friend of the renowned 19th-century politician Joseph Howe. Wanting to see it back in NS, the gentleman asked if I would accept it. I said I would, and not long after the mug arrived in the mail.
For the next 25 years it was on shelves, first in Sydney and then in Halifax.
Yesterday, following an exchange of emails, I handed the mug over to Lisa Bowers of the Nova Scotia Museum. Lisa said that the NSM collection did not have anything of that kind in their collection and that Drillio had been a Halifax alderman back in the 1800s.So, I handed the glass-bottomed, inscribed pewter mug over to Lisa and signed the necessary form.
So, now the NSM has the mug, which is a much better place for it than any shelf of mine.
Isabel Wilkerson’s Caste
February 2021
If you have read Caste already, you know how powerful and persuasive it is.
If you have not read it, I urge you to consider it. Maybe think of it as a Black History Month project? Though it’s definitely worth reading any month at all.
I finished the book a week ago and I continue to think about what Isabel Wilkerson presents in the book about both history and the world we are in right now, especially in the USA. Yes, the focus is on the USA, but I grew up in and live in Canada and the “caste” analysis fits here as well, to a lesser degree.
Not a day goes by without something happening in the world that demonstrates the relevance of Wilkerson’s in-depth analysis. She is also a terrific writer.
Book Launch / Media Event
February 2021
It’s been a long wait, but I can finally see a specific time and place where I will be able to offer a live presentation (with people in the room!) on Kings of Friday Night: The Lincolns.
There are still a few details to firm up, but the presentation is now set for mid-July 2021 on the South Shore, and the event will involve two other authors as well.
Stay tuned, for more details in the days ahead.
African Heritage Month, 2
January 2021
To mark this year’s African Heritage Month, I’d like to say a few more words about the influence Murray Dorrington had on Nova Scotia’s premier 1960s band, The Lincolns.
That influence was especially strong on singer, Frank MacKay. It was an important mentorship. Frank liked to say that he went to UMD: the University of Murray Dorrington.
I offer a few pages on the topic of Murray Dorrington’s influence and how The Lincolns broke down racial barriers in Kings of Friday Night: The Lincolns.
With this post, however, I’d like to share a photo that I saw for the first time only recently. It was taken during the opening night performance of SOMA at Delmer’s Barn (outside Truro, NS) in 1969, after The Lincolns had broken up. In this photo you can see some of the 13 musicians who played with the band in the beginning, with Frank MacKay singing at the mic. And there in the background (on the left) is none other than Murray Dorrington!