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Duncan Mackay (born 26 July 1950) [2] is a British composer, singer, arranger, and keyboard player who has recorded eight solo albums as well as collaborations. He was born in Leeds , Yorkshire , England.
By May the next year, O'Malley had been replaced by Duncan Mackay. [5] By the summer of 1981, following the release of Bloody Tourists and Look Hear?, Mackay had left 10cc. [6] He was replaced for the recording of Ten Out of 10 by Vic Emerson. [7] Tosh left around the same time. [8]
Duncan MacKay or McKay may refer to: Duncan MacKay (footballer) (1937–2019), Scottish former footballer; Duncan Mackay (musician) (born 1950), British composer, singer and musician; Mickey MacKay (Duncan McMillan MacKay, 1894–1940), Canadian ice hockey centre; Duncan McKay, a character from Monarch of the Glen
English: Something else from the archive - Elkie Brooks at Coventry Apollo in 1983 on the "Pearls 2" tour, 1983, with Zal Cleminson on lead guitar (SAHB, Nazareth) Gerry Conway on drums (Jethro Tull, Cat Stevens, Fairport Convention), John Giblin on bass (Chris de Burgh, Peter Gabriel, Simple Minds, John Martyn) and Duncan Mackay on Keyboards (Coliseum II).
[7] The US music industry trade magazine Record World commented, "Mackay can now take his rightful place alongside Rick Wakeman, Keith Emerson, Patrick Moraz and Vangelis with this adventurous LP." The reviewer noted Wetton and Harley's vocal contributions on the album, but added "it is Mackay who is in the spotlight with just the right amount ...
The album is half instrumental and was mostly co-written by Eric Stewart and then 10cc keyboardist Duncan Mackay.It was recorded during the time of recording of the 10cc's seventh studio album Look Hear? and features contributions from all of the other then 10cc members.
Sheet Music is the second album by the English rock band 10cc.It was released in 1974 on UK records (No: UKAL 1007), and yielded the hit singles "The Wall Street Shuffle" and "Silly Love".
After the success of the No More the Fool album, Brooks' new record company was keen to release a follow-up and tracks were chosen during 1987. Prior to recording, Brooks and her sound engineer and husband Trevor Jordan realised that, despite the previous success, money to record the new album was not forthcoming.