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This project was made possible by funding through the Canadian Culture Online Strategy and the Heritage Policy Branch of the Department of Canadian Heritage.

Canadian Heritage

Fraser MacPherson

Fraser MacPherson discusses his career status.

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Fraser MacPherson discusses the draw to play larger cities.

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Fraser MacPherson discusses his travels through touring.

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Transcription

Q: “There are times when you can think ‘that mainstream thing is tapped out’ and then we hear a Buck Hill or a Fraser MacPherson and all of a sudden there’s a new voice in that style music! It’s unfortunate that we haven’t heard you more…”

A: “Well, it's curious, very nice of you … should say that, but it's also curious because the tenor is something I never thought much about or worked on. I took it up. Well, I took up clarinet as a teenager and then the alto saxophone and when I started working in Vancouver, it began. Ray Norris needed a tenor, so I borrowed one and I played it and had a bit of fun and then I eventually bought one, but my main work all the time was I used to play lead alto on all the … pretty well all the commercial work, radio and television and that sort of thing. And clarinet in the studios and later on, flute. And I worked pretty hard on those instruments. And the tenor was just something for fun. You know, I'd never ... I don’t ever remember practicing it, but I would get it out and find a reed and Dave Robbins used to hire me to play tenor on the old jazz workshop series in CBC and that's about the only tenor playing I did. I enjoyed it and I had a lot of fun, but then I used it in quintet groups I had in night clubs, but you know, commercial work. So there we go in the last several years, I've reached a point where I wanted to have some fun and the tenor was the one to do it with, I guess.”