Hugh Alexander “Sandy” MacIntyre (born April 17, 1935) is one of the most revered artists in the tradition of Cape Breton fiddle music.

Personal Life

Sandy was born into a family of musicians in the town of Inverness on April 17, 1935. His father Ronald and mother Cassie were both Scottish fiddlers. Cassie had long been considered one of the liveliest square dance fiddlers in the county. Sandy was one of fourteen children, most of whom played musical instruments. He started playing the pump organ at age 8 or 9 chording for family members and visiting fiddlers. At about age 16 he took up the fiddle, learning by ear. He also learned the guitar and in high school he was a drummer in the Inverness Pipe Band. Sandy married the former Lucy LeBlanc of Margaree Forks, Inverness County. They have two children, Brian, a guitarist, and Stephen, a bodhran player. Sandy moved to Toronto and took the music with him. He is personally responsible for creating a Cape Breton scene there. He linked up with other exiled Cape Bretoners to bring musicians to Toronto for Cape Breton style dances and to keep the music alive. Some of his guest appearances included the Mariposa Folk Festival at Toronto in 1971 and 1972 where he represented Cape Breton fiddlers. He performed at, and managed, the Scottish Talent Club in Toronto for approximately eight years. He has traveled extensively in Canada and the United States, and has made trips to Scotland as well as the Shetland and Orkney Islands doing fiddle workshops and concerts. He appeared for five years on the CBC National TV show “Ceilidh” from Halifax with other players such as Winnie Chafe, Buddy MacMaster, John Campbell, Cameron Chisholm, and Doug MacPhee. Sandy was a member of the Cape Breton Symphony Fiddlers for many years, and performed on the John Allan Cameron CTV show with symphony director Bobby Brown, Buddy MacMaster, John Donald Cameron and Wilfred Gillis. Sandy made two trips to the Northwest Territories, where he taught fiddle and step dancing to many native and Inuit children under the auspices of the “Strings Across The Sky” program arranged by Toronto Symphony violinist Andrea Hansen. Sandy was asked by the Hon. Alan J. MacEachern to perform at a fund-raising dinner in Ottawa to assist in the restoration of Balnain House in Inverness, Scotland, the Home of Highland Music. Sandy was proud to be part of this project which raised thousands of dollars and was a major part of the restoration fund. One of the rooms in that house was named the Canada Room, and Sandy held workshops in that room during a tour of Scotland in 1995. Sandy has been an instructor at the Cape Breton Fiddling School at the Gaelic College in St. Ann’s Bay for many years and successfully expanded the interest in that program to students from around the world. Sandy’s efforts in raising funds for the College through benefit concerts and his assistance to so many students was recognized by the Board of Governors of the College in 1995. Sandy was a feature artist on “Bridging Canada”, a simultaneous series of concerts held in October, 1996 on famous bridges from Vancouver to Montreal to foster and celebrate Canadian unity. Sandy performed on the famous Bloor Viaduct in Toronto. Sandy was one of the feature artists in the Mirvish production of “Needfire”, a celtic musical, from 1998 – 2000 at the Royal Alexandria Theatre and the Princess of Wales Theatre in Toronto. He displayed the unique and traditional style of Cape Breton fiddling during numerous stage appearances throughout the show. Sandy has been a feature performer for many years at the Celtic Colours International Festival in Cape Breton.


Career

Sandy worked as a manager at Air Canada until he retired after twenty-five years in 1983. He sold real estate in Scarborough until 1995. He continues to run fiddle classes in Toronto and teaches Cape Breton step dancing. He is a prolific composer with over a hundred tunes to his credit, many in active circulation among Cape Breton players.

Recordings

Let’s Have a Ceilidh with Sandy MacIntyre; Island Treasure Vol. 1; Cape Breton Fiddle Music: Steeped In Tradition.

Honours

A number of fiddlers have composed tunes in Sandy’s honour: Sandy MacIntyre's Trip to Boston (composed by John Campbell); Sandy MacIntyre’s (composed by Brenda Stubbert); Sandy MacIntyre’s March (composed by Donald Angus Beaton).


References

Gaelic College of Celtic Arts and Crafts http://gaeliccollege.edu/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=13&Itemid=28

Sandy MacIntyre http://www.sandymacintyre.com/

Sandy MacIntyre - Biography http://www.sandymacintyre.com/sandy_macintyre___biography.htm

Back To The Sugarcamp http://www.backtothesugarcamp.com/Mac.htm

"The Cape Breton Fiddler" by Allister MacGillivary

“Fiddler plays by numbers to teach kids” by Frank Jones, Globe and Mail