The “Golden Hits Of The 70s” 

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IAN MATTHEWS

“SHAKE IT”

(Terence Boylan)

Mushroom 7039

No. 13   February 17, 1979

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He has told Rolling Stone that he’s known primarily as a rebel.   Outside of his faithful cult following,

however, singer-songwriter Ian Matthews is known mostly for his smoothwork with the Brit-folk Fairport

Convention and his namesake band, MATTHEWS SOUTHERN COMFORT.   Both of his former groups

were seemingly at the peak of their creative and pop powers when Ian left them.

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He was born Ian McDonald in Lincolnshire, England, in June, 1946.   He began attracting notice playing

guitar and singing with a teenage R & B band called the Rebels.   “The Drifters, the Coasters, that’s what I

latched onto,” Matthews told Rolling Stone’s Byron Laursen.   “I must have sounded so dumb.”   Next,

Matthews tried playing surf music in a Deram recording act called the Pyramid (no relation to the

baldheaded surf group the Pyramids).   One single was issued, “Summer of Last Year.”   In 1967, Ian was

asked to join the original Fairport Convention (for three albums).   “I’ve never really been a folkie,” he

explained to Guitar Player.   “When I joined Fairport Convention, they weren’t a folk band…  They were

doing their own interpretations of mainly Ameri­can material; they’d do songs by the Byrds and Tim

Hardin.   That’s the nearest we came to folk music.”   All was to change, however, when Sandy Denny was

admitted into the fold, and the group’s direction veered toward Celtic allusions and medieval English

balladry.   “That was when I really became disillusioned with the band.”

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Ian left in 1969 to form his own group, Matthews Southern Comfort, with Carl Barnwell (guitar), Ray

Duffy (drums), Mark Griffins (guitar), Gordon Hunt­ley (pedal-steel guitar), and Andy Leigh (bass).

Three country-folk-rockin’ LPs followed; with the success of a take on Joni Mitchell’s “Woodstock” (#23,

1971), Ian was gone, though two other singles from Matthews Southern Comfort’s Later That Same Year

album made the Hot 100: “Mare, Take Me Home” (#96, 1971) and a cover of Neil Young’s “Tell Me Why”

(#98, 1971).   Hunt­ley and the rest carried on as Southern Comfort for three more LPs before disbanding

in 1972.

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Since his departure from the Southern Comfort band, Ian has carried on as a soloist for most of the time

with a loyal following.   There have been occasion­al one-off projects with groups like Plainsong (In

Search of Amelia Earhart), the Hi-Fi’s, and the Mallards.   Critics have praised Matthews for his tasteful

and folk­ tinged interpretations of songs by Jackson Browne, Carole King, RANDY NEWMAN, Tom Waits,

and Neil Young.   A few of these solo efforts sold well: Tigers Will Survive (1972), Valley Hi (1973)

(produced by ex-Mon­kee Mike Nesmith), and Stealin Home (1978).   Only one of the many singles taken

from these albums has been a Top 40 hit: producer/singer/songwriter Terence Boylan’s “Shake It.”   In

reference to his big moment, Ian said to Rolling Stone that “I don’t think I did anything different.   I guess

it’s my reward.   After all, I’ve been doing exactly what I want for…years.”

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Ian Matthews–for a period of time an A & R director at the Windham Hill label–continues to record

albums, though sporadically.