Mick MacNeil
Musical artist / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Michael Joseph MacNeil (born 20 July 1958) is a Scottish songwriter and keyboardist. He is best known as a former member of the group Simple Minds.[1]
Mick MacNeil | |
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Born | (1958-07-20) 20 July 1958 (age 66) Isle of Barra, Scotland |
Genres | Rock, post-punk, new wave, pop rock, alternative rock |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter |
Instrument(s) | Keyboards, accordion |
Years active | 1978–present |
One of seven siblings, MacNeil grew up in a musical family listening to traditional scottish folk music, and was trained as a folk music accordionist between the ages of seven and sixteen.[2] At 16 he formed a band called The Barnets with his drum-playing brother, playing cover songs at local cabaret clubs, weddings and social clubs and once appearing on the television programme Junior Showtime.[3][4]
MacNeil joined Simple Minds as their keyboard player in spring 1978. At this point he had only recently discovered pop music and was unaware of contemporary new wave bands Magazine and Ultravox, to which his keyboard playing would be compared.[3]
During his time with Simple Minds, MacNeil was recognised as one of their main composers that contributed to the band's success throughout the 1980's,[3] releasing the UK number three album New Gold Dream (81–82–83–84) in 1982, and then scoring four consecutive UK number one albums with Sparkle in the Rain (1984), Once Upon a Time (1985), Live in the City of Light (1987) and Street Fighting Years (1989), and one UK number one single "Belfast Child" (1989).[5] Exhausted by the relentless touring schedules MacNeil left the band at the end of the decade.[3] After leaving Simple Minds, he occasionally joined Simple Minds-related projects such as Fourgoodmen (along with fellow ex-Simple Minds member Derek Forbes plus Ian Henderson and Bruce Watson)[6] and XSM (with Forbes and original Simple Minds drummer Brian McGee).[6] In 2003 and 2018 respectively, MacNeil contributed with accordion backing tracks to Simple Minds songs "Dirty Old Town" and their cover version of "Brothers in Arms" on the album Reimagines the Eighties.[3] He also contributed keyboards and programming to a reformed Visage on their final studio album Demons to Diamonds (2015).[7] In 2016 he accepted an Ivor Novello Award for Simple Minds "Outstanding Song Collection".[8]
He released a solo album called People, Places, Things on his own record label, Mix Records, in 1997.[citation needed]