
'Scotland's great lost rock star' looks back at his band's debut album
Goodbye Mr Mackenzie's excellent introduction, Good Deeds and Dirty Rags, is a case in point.
Released in April 1989, within weeks of such landmark albums as Pixies' Doolittle and The Cure's Disintegration, it sounds as fresh and captivating today as it did back then. It sprinted into the UK charts at number 26, contained some of the Edinburgh band's strongest material, and led to eventful tours of the UK and Europe.
Live, too, they were a formidable proposition, one guaranteed to get the audience up on its feet. One review of a London Marquee gig, in 1989, begins: 'What an extraordinary bunch these Mackenzies are! If they ever become famous enough to have a cartoon series or soap opera written about them, the scriptwriters will have a field day'.
Many fans of the group have fond memories of the debut and of such songs as The Rattler, Open Your Arms, Goodwill City, and Face to Face, all of which charted. When, a few months ago, the question was asked on Facebook, what's your favourite Goodbye Mr Mackenzie song?, many opted for them.
'Face to Face', said one. 'First time I heard it, have to admit brought a tear to my eye and ever since'. Wrote another: 'Now We Are Married [from the follow-up album, Hammer and Tongs] was the first song at our wedding, but I need to go with Goodwill City. Don't tell the missus'.
Does Martin Metcalfe, the band's charismatic singer, feel that the album has aged really well?
'I don't think I'm the person to ask', he demurred earlier this week. 'There are fans who still love it, so it hasn't dated for them, and that's great, but it's not something I can stand back from and say, that was a timeless piece of work or whatever. Certainly, it has stood the test of time, because it keeps getting played on national radio, so I suppose it must have some kind of timeless element to it'.
It was, however, something of a turning-point for the group. In a 2019 interview with Narc magazine, Martin did acknowledge that the album had been a 'defining life moment' for him: 'In those days any musician who managed to have a proper album released felt they'd arrived in one way or another. The fact that it went top 30 was yet another life landmark and I suppose would have cemented the 'arrived' metaphor if we'd managed to keep performing at that level'.
Goodbye Mr Mackenzie - Martin, 'Big John' Duncan (formerly of the punk group, The Exploited, on guitar, Fin Wilson on bass, Derek Kelly on drums, and Shirley Manson and Rona Scobie on keyboards and backing vocals - were formed in Bathgate, and emerged into a thriving music scene in the capital.
'For lads coming from Bathgate and immersing ourselves in that [Edinburgh] environment, it was actually great', Martin says. 'It was an era when things were really opening up in Scotland, and Edinburgh anyway.
'I know that Glasgow had the advantage over Edinburgh regarding venues, possibly because of the size of the city. But the great thing about those days was that student unions had funding: in Edinburgh you had gigs at Telford College, Napier College, Teviot Row, and Queen Margaret College in Corstorphine.
'You had gigs in Chambers Street in Edinburgh - a huge building that had three floors, maybe four, and on three of those you could stage gigs. Also, you had Potterrow, which was a real centre of young bands. Ents committees wanted to bring local bands in and had a desire to attach themselves to local musicians.
'That college circuit in the UK, which lasted into the Mackenzie's big period, was a genuine support. They had budgets to pay bands a reasonable amount of money. That is something that hasn't happened for a few decades now.
'On top of all of that you had The Venue, on Carlton Road, where bands like Suede kicked off … then along came La Sorbonne [in the Cowgate], which was a fantastic place for bands'.
Read more:
The band toured widely. In Glasgow, there were gigs at the famed Barrowland venue, in 1987 (supporting the Blow Monkeys), in 1988 (supporting Aztec Camera) and headlining in 1989).
Asked how Goodbye Mr Mackenzie's distinctive sound evolved, Martin responds: 'It really came out of post-punk. When punk came along it was like an adrenaline rush, an explosion, but as Steven Severin [bass guitarist with Siouxsie and the Banshees] said, it wasn't that different in a lot of ways from pub rock and rock'n'roll'.
He marvels now that, looking back, the Banshees managed to influenced much of the post-punk movement without having released a record, having won invaluable exposure from John Peel sessions in 1977 and 1978. They and other unsigned, groundbreaking acts broadcast by Peel were picked up by numerous other groups across Britain, who absorbed the sound and altered their own musical style.
'Initially, Goodbye Mr Mackenzie wanted to play this punk music but by the time we were starting to play, and were a little bit older, post-punk had taken over. The bands we were listening to, and loving, were Magazine, the Banshees, the Skids, the Scars and other bands like that. And then Joy Division came along …'
Good Deeds and Dirty Rags was released on the Capitol label. Listening to it afresh after 36 years is to release the truth of something that Vic Galloway wrote in 2018 - that they 'blended the feral nature of punk, arty intelligence and effortless pop melodies'.
It's a well-crafted album, intelligently written. The Rattler remains, perhaps, their best-known song, a perennial audience favourite. In 1986 they performed it on the TV music show, The Tube. That same night, when they played the Hoochie Coochie in Edinburgh, the venue was rammed because everybody had seen them on The Tube.
Speaking to Billy Sloan for the Herald in 2021, Martin discussed the song and some of the influences hat went into it: 'We were completely taken aback when [The Rattler] took on a life of its own. I look at Bowie and wonder why his work was such genius. I think he just sucked in information from so many different sources. In the art world you'd call it research.
'I love Iggy Pop, New Order, The Cocteau Twins and Talking Heads. All had direct input into what we were doing. I'd also seen a documentary about Woody Guthrie where he travelled from town-to-town on trains spreading a socialist message, and got up to no good while he was doing it.
'So that had an effect on the song too. It could have been about a rattlesnake but it could also have been a Freudian symbol for sex … a train going into a tunnel. [Scots poet William] McGonagall wrote a poem called The Rattling Boy From Dublin – which is absolutely hysterical – so it's in there too.'
Another song on the album, Face to Face, is a provocative piece about a female hitchhiker who was repeatedly raped in a pub, only to see her attackers being acquitted in court on the grounds that she had been 'asking for it' because of the way she was dressed.
Yet another track, Goodwill City, is about the Aids crisis that afflicted Edinburgh in the Eighties. 'I had a couple of friends round about that time who affected by Aids', Martin says. 'That was quite a powerful moment in time, quite a landmark affecting a small part of the Eighties. I've got a friend who is an Aids survivor from that period. He's still alive, which is amazing'.
Read more On the Record:
About the album as a whole, he is philosophical. 'The thing about artists is, not many of them can ever look back at their own work and think, that was great, that was perfect. The word 'perfect' never comes into it.
'Most bands hate the song that they're weighed down by - their albatross, the song that everyone shouts for, the one that everyone films on their phone and ends up on YouTube a million times. But I like listening to The Rattler. And I think it's a really good record'.
Unfortunately, Goodbye Mr Mackenzie would go on to be plagued by record company indecision and internal politics. Though there were three further, very fine, albums - Hammer and Tongs (1991), Five (1994), and The Glory Hole (1996) - the band came to an end, with a final live gig at Glasgow's The Garage in late 1995, after Manson and Duncan had departed. Along the way, band members had created a side-project, Angelfish, whose well-received 1994 album was produced by Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth of Talking Heads.
As for Martin, his later projects have included the acclaimed Filthy Tongues, alongside his old Goodbye Mr Mackenzie bandmates, Derek Kelly and Fin Wilson.
Profiling the Filthy Tongues in 2005, the Herald's David Belcher had this to say: 'Martin Metcalfe may be Scotland's great lost rock star. Blessed with the stature to look lanky Nick Cave straight in the eye, a dark rich baritone and the songs to match, in the 1980s and 1990s it seemed he could only pout it all away. Fate conspired to take matters out of his and Goodbye Mr Mackenzie's hands, thanks to eccentric management, and the emergence of Shirley Manson as one of the pop music icons of recent time'.
During that Herald interview Martin looked back on his days as such a distinctive frontman with Goodbye Mr Mackenzie. "All that rock star stuff is just acting', he said, 'as Bowie explained with Ziggy Stardust. I used to think people like John Lydon were more real than that, but I remember reading something one of his friends said about him just pursuing the theatre of rage, just basing his character on Richard III and things like that. But I think I did an okay job of playing a rock star'.
And of his old band itself he declared: "We were like a family because there were girls and boys in the band, it wasn't your average lads' band, going off and getting trashed and hanging out with women. On tour we were our own unit, we didn't need anybody else, but included our crew in that because we had a special relationship with them as well. Even though we were all quite dysfunctional people, as a band we were quite a functional unit.'
Goodbye Mr Mackenzie has had a legacy. In 2007, when Vic Galloway challenged his radio listeners to name the top 50 Scottish bands of all time, they came in at number 31, ahead of Blue Nile, the Cocteau Twins and the Skids. And The List magazine once observed that they 'left behind the most complex and fascinating footprint of any Scottish band'.
In 2019 Goodbye Mr Mackenzie hit the road again, to mark the 30th anniversary of the debut album. As he told the Herald's Barry Didcock at the time: 'It happened by accident. Me, trying to make a crust, had decided to try to do the album in its entirety as a solo gig. But the response I got was so incredible that I thought I can't do this without at least asking if Fin and Kelly want to do it.'
In that interview with Narc magazine mentioned above, he declared: 'To be perfectly honest, I wasn't excited about revisiting the whole album as we've moved on from 80's subversive pop/rock and as a creative person it's hard not to be critical of your own work but in the end, we realised that (most of) the songs were really well crafted.
'There aren't many moments live where I think this part of the song doesn't work or that part goes on too long. I think we had a solid grasp of song arrangement back then, so in many ways, I'm proud of how we pulled it together'.
He has every right to be proud. And the band are still active, still touring, still looking and sounding great on stage. Their forthcoming gig at Glasgow's Oran Mor on July 11 should be something else.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
4 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Strictly winner and Gladiator star to headline Southport Flower Show
Celebrity guests also include Emmerdale actor turned farmer Kelvin Fletcher and wife Liz from TV series Fletchers' Family Farm Southport Flower Show returns this week for four days of horticultural highlights, celebrity guests, television chefs and even a real-life Gladiator. The finishing touches are being made to show gardens, exhibits, and trade areas at the town's 34-acre Victoria Park. Competition judging takes place later this week. Celebrity guests include Emmerdale actor turned farmer Kelvin Fletcher and wife Liz from TV series Fletchers' Family Farm; punk icon Toyah Willcox; wildlife cameraman and Strictly winner Hamza Yassin; Zack George – Steel from Gladiators; Christian Lewis from The Wilderness Family; and children's TV favourite Justin Fletcher. Last year the event reached its milestone 100 th anniversary, attracting 50,000 visitors across the four-day event. Gates open to the public at 10am on Thursday. (14 August). Show times are 10am to 6pm Thursday to Saturday, and 10am to 5pm on Sunday. A packed programme spanning the four days features celebrity guest Q&A sessions in the Garden Theatre and live demonstrations in the Cookery Theatre; live music performances on the Piazza Stage; and an outdoor show arena hosting dog display teams, birds of prey, and horse shows. This year sees more family attractions than ever before. Alpacas are visiting for the first time, and a new children's trail highlights include conservation, scarecrow festival, children's yoga, doodle wall, and tennis skills. Alan Adams is General Manager of Southport Flower Show. He commented: 'Victoria Park is a real hive of activity with show gardens reaching the end stages of build, garden and cookery theatres being kitted out, marquees and exhibits dressed, and traders arriving to set up their stalls. Every single individual involved plays a vital role in the ongoing success and appeal of Southport Flower Show. It never ceases to surprise me each year just how committed and focused everyone is to get things exactly right. It's incredibly inspiring. 'Our special guest line-up spans all four days with plenty of opportunities to hear from the celebrities and watch the chefs live in action at the two dedicated theatres. Join us for a day bursting with colour, live entertainment, food, shopping – and not forgetting the beautiful blooms which await you.' The celebrity guest programme includes: Thursday 14 August: David Domoney, Kelvin and Liz Fletcher, Christian Lewis, Rosemary Shrager, Martin and Jill Fish. Friday 15 August: Toyah Willcox, David Domoney, Carole Baxter and George Anderson, Gladiator Steel Zack George, Phil Vickery, and Martin and Jill Fish. Saturday 16 August: Carole Baxter and George Anderson, Hamza Yassin, Nick Bailey, Cherish Finden, Nancy Birtwhistle, and Martin and Jill Fish.


Spectator
14 hours ago
- Spectator
Why is sport so obsessed with Goats?
It was late at night in rural France and Martin wanted to discuss Goats. And he didn't mean livestock. 'You write about sport,' he said. 'Who is the Greatest of All Time?' I asked if he was talking about my stunning victory in the village boules competition the previous night, but it turned out he was thinking of a certain Serbian tennis player. 'Novak Djokovic is the Goat,' he said, with the certainty that comes from a third bottle of Bourgueil. I conceded that Djokovic's record was a smidgen better than Rafael Nadal's, though some might prefer the artistry of Roger Federer – but didn't Bjorn Borg have an even better winning percentage in the grand slams? This pleased Martin's Swedish wife. And the career records of Serena Williams and Martina Navratilova are right up there. Martin was unconvinced, so we turned to Goats in other sports. Cristiano Ronaldo or Lionel Messi in football, he said, though the shades of Maradona and Pele might say something about that. I offered Jack Nicklaus's record 18 majors in golf and that Don Bradman's Test batting average remains so far above any other cricketer. What about the undefeated thoroughbred Frankel? Can a horse be a Goat? People have been sorting sheep from goats ever since St Matthew, though in the Gospel the latter receive eternal punishment, probably for being smug. The modern concept began with Muhammad – Ali, that is – who called himself The Greatest when he beat Sonny Liston. In 1992, Ali's wife created Goat Inc to handle his commercial rights. Until quite recently, however, most people still used 'goat' to mean a duffer. It was possibly short for scapegoat, though may have a connection to the horns sign shown to a cuckold. The acronym-form took off in 2017 when teammates of the American footballer Tom Brady brought five goats to practice, one for each of his Super Bowl wins. The Merriam-Webster dictionary soon added a new definition as the use of Goat to denote excellence proliferated on Twitter. There were 333,665 goat emoji tweets the day after Brady won his sixth Super Bowl. This led the Wall Street Journal to report that the 20 days with the most Goat tweets (or bleats?) all related to sport: six times about Brady, seven about basketball's LeBron James, once about Williams, Messi, Federer, the snowboarder Shaun White and the baseball player Clayton Kershaw, and twice about Tiger Woods, though he got more goat emojis on the day he was arrested for drink-driving in 2017 than he did for winning the Masters two years later. (No one tweets Goat at bishops or transport secretaries.) The usage has become ever more prevalent. For the Olympics, the hashtag for the gymnast Simone Biles created an emoji of a goat in a red leotard. In the past month, articles have compared Ronaldo with Messi as football's Goats and James with Michael Jordan as the Goats of basketball. Toto Wolff, head of the Mercedes F1 team, said Lewis Hamilton, who's having a poor season, 'will always be the Goat', while footballer Esme Morgan stated that a note she passed to Lucy Bronze as the Lionesses struggled to beat Sweden at the Euros read 'Save us, Goat'. A rhinestone Goat on Simone Biles's leotard (Getty Images) Some, like James, play up to it; others, such as Scottie Scheffler, sensibly call it 'a bit silly'. Scheffler is in red-hot form but, as he pointed out when it was suggested he is golf's Goat, he's still 14 major wins behind Nicklaus and 11 shy of Woods. Recency bias led to claims that the Slovenian cyclist Tadej Pogacar is the Goat after winning a fourth Tour de France with ease – but his 30 stage wins in the three Grand Tours over the past six years don't match Eddy Merckx's 64 from 1967-75. Goat claimants seldom appreciate history; they just go with the herd. They also ignore dominance in less familiar sports. What about Ed Moses, undefeated in 400m hurdles for nine years, nine months and nine days, or Jahangir Khan, who won 555 consecutive squash matches? Valentina Vezzali took golds in fencing at five Olympics. Steve Redgrave did the same in rowing. As a lover of real tennis, I'd add Rob Fahey, world champion for all but two years from 1994 to 2022, who has won the sport's four grand slam titles 51 times, though he may yet be out-Goated by his wife, Claire, who has 45 slams and last lost to a woman in 2009. When she was 12, she thrashed me in a club match 6-0: Kidd beaten by a Goat kid. But in the end, I'd suggest, ahistorical, narrow-focused hyperbole gets us nowhere. Far better to appreciate the talent we see right now for what it is than make ludicrous claims on eternity. Never mind greatest of all time, best at the moment is enough.


Daily Mirror
2 days ago
- Daily Mirror
Keir Starmer sent urgent letter from celebs - 'he must listen'
The musicians argued that further development of the oil field north west of Shetland would undermine the UK's climate commitments and the sustainability of the cultural sector Stars including Paloma Faith, Lola Young and The Cure's Robert Smith have warned Keir Starmer to reject future drilling at Rosebank in the North Sea. In a letter addressed to the PM and Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, the musicians argued that further development of the oil field north west of Shetland would undermine the UK's climate commitments and the sustainability of the cultural sector. The letter urges the Government to follow the science and states "any new application to exploit Rosebank's reserves must be refused". Ministers published new guidance last month on how the environmental impacts of oil and gas are included in assessments. As a result, offshore developers can now submit applications for consent to extract fossil fuels in oil and gas fields that are already licensed, which includes Rosebank and the Jackdaw gas field off Aberdeen. It comes after Chancellor Rachel Reeves dismissed Donald Trump's 'con job' wind turbine claim. This came after the Supreme Court ruled that emissions created by burning fossil fuels should be considered when granting planning permission for new drilling sites, in a case that focused on an oil well in Surrey but reverberated through the energy sector. The open letter, co-ordinated by Earth Percent and backed by the Stop Rosebank campaign, is also signed by artists including Ed O'Brien and Philip Selway of Radiohead, rock band Enter Shikari, Imogen Heap, and Olly Alexander of Years & Years. They warn that the expansion of operations at Rosebank will accelerate the climate crisis, deliver no meaningful benefit to the UK public, and burden future generations. Producer Brian Eno, who co-founded Earth Percent, said: 'As musicians and artists our creativity is deeply connected to the state of the world around us. "Fossil fuels are not only unsustainable – they are actively destructive. The evidence is clear: burning them accelerates the climate crisis, endangers our futures, and undermines the UK's credibility as a climate leader. We have the tools and the knowledge to make the transition. The Prime Minister must listen – reject Rosebank, and stop approving new oil and gas developments.' A Department for Energy Security & Net Zero spokesperson said: 'Our priority is to deliver a fair, orderly and prosperous transition in the North Sea in line with our climate and legal obligations, which drives our clean energy future of energy security, lower bills, and good, long-term jobs.'