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    Who is Mr MacKenzie?
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  1. Goodbye Mr Mackenzie is a Scottish rock band formed in Bathgate near Edinburgh. At the band's commercial peak, the line-up consisted of Martin Metcalfe on vocals, John Duncan on guitar, Fin Wilson on bass guitar, Shirley Manson and Rona Scobie on keyboards and backing vocals, and Derek Kelly on drums.

  2. He is Martin Metcalfe, once the lead singer with cult band Goodbye Mr Mackenzie, later of Angelfish, and currently frontman in both his own group, The Fornicators, and The Filthy Tongues, a collaboration with former Goodbye Mr Mackenzie bandmates Fin Wilson and Derek Kelly.

  3. About the Author. “One of the most consistently accomplished writers on the current scene” — Financial Times. M.R. Mackenzie is the author of several gritty, character-driven crime fiction novels set mainly in his native Glasgow, including an ongoing series of mysteries featuring criminology lecturer Anna Scavolini.

  4. Oct 29, 2021 · Goodbye Mr Mackenzie. Good Deeds And Dirty Rags. Released – 1989. Scotland's greatest albums. Entertainment. Music. By Billy Sloan. Share. . THERE is a 33-year gap between two of the most...

    • Billy Sloan
  5. Apr 4, 2019 · Martin Metcalfe of Goodbye Mr Mackenzie. MARTIN METCALFE will come full circle next month when he takes to the stage of the Liquid Room fronting the band he and some friends from Bathgate...

    • Liam Rudden
  6. Goodbye Mr. MacKenzie released their first album, Good Deeds and Dirty Rags, in 1989. It entered the UK charts at No.16 and the band quickly attracted a large, loyal support north of the border. Incredible live shows and singles like the top 40 hit ‘The Rattler’, in particular, further cemented a fond place in many a Scottish heart.

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  8. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › The_RattlerThe Rattler - Wikipedia

    The Rattler. " The Rattler " is a 1986 song by Scottish alternative rock group Goodbye Mr Mackenzie and has become their most enduring track, often referred to as a "lost classic" of the Scottish music scene. The song was often described as "Springsteen-esque", even though the song had not been inspired or written in that way. [1]

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