David Scott MacRae (born 2
April 1940, Auckland
, New Zealand
) is a keyboard
from New
Zealand
, noted for his contributions in jazz and the Canterbury
scene.
MacRae
studied at the New South Wales Conservatorium of
Music
and then worked in Australia in the 1960s as an arranger for Festival Records. He moved to the United
States in 1969, playing with experimental groups in Los Angeles
before joining Buddy
Rich's ensemble in 1970. He relocated to London
in 1971,
working that year with jazz musicians Clark
Terry, Chet Baker, John Hendricks, and Gil
Evans.
In 1971 he was briefly with a group called
Caparius before he joined
Ian
Carr's group
Nucleus, where he
remained until 1973. Concurrently he played in
Matching Mole and
Elton
Dean's band Just Us. He played in
WMWM and
Giles Farnaby's Dream Band in
1973 and did session work for
Back
Door in 1974, but left Nucleus around this time to concentrate
on his own project called Pacific Eardrum, which he led with his
wife
Joy Yates until 1979. He continued
working with Canterbury musicians such as
Robert Wyatt,
Mike
Gibbs, and
Richard Sinclair
through the 1970s.
In the 1980s MacRae worked briefly with
False Alarm and then played in a reconstituted
version of
Soft Machine in 1984.
He
returned to Australia later that year, and played in the Sydney
area with
Bernie McGann and Ronnie Scott.
References