Ian Bairnson | |
Birth Name: | John Bairnson |
Birth Date: | 1953 8, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Lerwick, Shetland Isles, Scotland |
Genre: | Soft rock, progressive rock |
Occupation: | Musician |
Instrument: | Guitar, saxophone, keyboards |
Years Active: | 1968–2019 |
Associated Acts: | The Alan Parsons Project, Kate Bush, Bucks Fizz, Junk, Pilot, Keats |
Website: | IanBairnson.com |
John "Ian" Bairnson (3 August 1953 – 7 April 2023) was a Scottish musician and member of Pilot and the Alan Parsons Project.[1] He was a multi-instrumentalist, who played saxophone and keyboards, but mainly performed as a guitarist, which he played with a sixpence. In addition to his work with Parsons, Bairnson played guitar on four Kate Bush albums, including the guitar solo on her 1978 debut single, "Wuthering Heights".
Bairnson was born in Lerwick, Shetland, on 3 August 1953.[2] [3] He grew up in Levenwick, also in Shetland, before his family moved to Edinburgh, Midlothian, when he was nine years old, following the death of his father. Bairnson learned how to play the guitar when he was six.[4]
See main article: articles, Pilot (Scottish band) and The Alan Parsons Project. He was a session guitarist before joining up in 1973 with former Bay City Rollers musicians David Paton and Billy Lyall in the band Pilot, contributing the harmony guitar parts to their hit single "Magic". During this time with Pilot, he first collaborated with Alan Parsons, the record producer on their debut self-titled album. It was this relationship that helped incorporate most of the band's members (bassist/lead singer Paton and drummer Stuart Tosh) into the Alan Parsons Project. He played the distinctive guitar solo on the track "I Wouldn't Want to Be Like You" from Parsons' I Robot (1977) album.
As a guitarist, he was featured on every Alan Parsons Project album, including the 1984 side project Keats.[5]
In 2019, Bairnson added guitar solos to two songs from Alan Parsons' new album, The Secret, specifically the tracks "Years of Glory" and "I Can't Get There from Here".
Bairnson played on Kate Bush's first four albums The Kick Inside (1978) (notably playing the guitar solo on "Wuthering Heights") Lionheart (1978), Never for Ever (1980) and The Dreaming (1982).
Bairnson also played with the band Bucks Fizz for whom he co-wrote two of their Top 20 hits, "If You Can't Stand the Heat" (1982) and "Run for Your Life" (1983).
In 2009 he appeared on the album of the German bass player Chris Postl, Parzivals Eye. Chris Postl played in RPWL, a German band. He toured with a number of different bands, the latest being Junk (Bairnson, Pau Chaffer, Sarah Rope and Ángel Celada). During his session career he played on more than a hundred albums in different styles, for artists such as Yvonne Keeley, Joe Cocker, Jon Anderson, Chris DeBurgh, Mick Fleetwood, and Neil Diamond. He played live with Sting, Eric Clapton, Beverley Craven and many more.
After moving back to the UK in 2013, Bairnson got together with David Paton and produced an album called A Pilot Project where they paid homage to Eric Woolfson’s legacy. In November 2016 Paton and Bairnson got together again, touring Japan with a Pilot revival and some Alan Parsons Project songs as well.
Bairnson lived in Spain from 2003 to 2013, where he had a recording studio and continued working as a session guitarist.
His wife, Leila, announced on her Facebook page in 2018 that Bairnson had been diagnosed with a progressive neurological condition that affected his communication skills, so he would no longer play in public.[6] On her Facebook page, she subsequently announced that Bairnson had died on 7 April 2023, following a long time with dementia. He was 69. [7]
Year | Album | |
---|---|---|
1974 | From the Album of the Same Name | |
1975 | Second Flight | |
1976 | Morin Heights | |
1977 | Two's a Crowd | |
2002 | Blue Yonder | |
2014 | A Pilot Project | |
2019 | The Traveller - Another Pilot Project | |
2021 | The Magic EP |
Year | Title |
---|---|
1974 | "Just a Smile" |
"Magic" | |
"Ra-Ta-Ta" | |
1975 | "January" |
"Call Me Round" | |
"Just a Smile" (new version) | |
"Lady Luck" | |
1976 | "Running Water" |
"Canada" | |
"Penny in My Pocket" | |
1977 | "Get Up and Go" |
"Monday Tuesday" |
Title | Album details | |
---|---|---|
Tales of Mystery and Imagination | ||
I Robot |
| |
Pyramid |
| |
Eve |
| |
The Turn of a Friendly Card |
| |
Eye in the Sky |
| |
Ammonia Avenue |
| |
Vulture Culture |
| |
Stereotomy |
| |
Gaudi |
| |
Freudiana |
| |
The Sicilian Defence |
|
Year | Title | |
---|---|---|
1975 | "The Raven" | |
1976 | "(The System of) Dr. Tarr and Professor Fether" | |
"To One in Paradise" | ||
1977 | "I Wouldn't Want to Be Like You" | |
"Don't Let It Show" | ||
"Day After Day (The Show Must Go On)" | ||
1978 | "I Robot" | |
"Hyper-Gamma-Spaces" | ||
"Pyramania" | ||
"What Goes Up" | ||
1979 | "Damned If I Do" | |
"Lucifer" | ||
1980 | "You Won't Be There" | |
"The Turn of a Friendly Card" | ||
"Games People Play" | ||
1981 | "Time" | |
"Snake Eyes" | ||
"Gold Bug" | ||
1982 | "You're Gonna Get Your Fingers Burned" | |
"Eye in the Sky" | ||
"Psychobabble" | ||
"Old and Wise" | ||
1983 | "You Don't Believe" | |
1984 | "Don't Answer Me" | |
"Prime Time" | ||
1985 | "Let's Talk About Me" | |
"Days Are Numbers (The Traveller)" | ||
"Vulture Culture" | ||
1986 | "Limelight" | |
"Stereotomy" | ||
1987 | "Standing on Higher Ground" | |
1990 | "Freudiana" |