Biography

Ian Walker is now based in Bo´ness in East Central Scotland but he was raised three stairs up in a Glasgow tenement with his deeper family roots stretching back to the bothies of Banffshire and the Ayrshire of Robert Burns´ time.
As a youngster, Ian had a fascinating introduction to the wider world of music, the theatre and entertainment through contact with the acclaimed Scottish actor and entertainer Jimmy Logan.
In the early 1960´s, Ian regularly visited The Glasgow Folk Centre where he first sang and where he was introduced to the unsurpassable delights of the five-string banjo.
In the 1970s, Ian found success singing in one of well-known Scottish impresario, Archie McCulloch´s, "Stars of Tomorrow" talent shows in Kilmarnock.

At this time he also attended the Kilmarnock Traditional Folk Club where he took part in their travelling road shows and where he received his first solo booking.
The late 1970s saw Ian getting awards for singing at, for example, the Kinross Festival and at the Thurso Festival.
Song writing started in the late 1970s and by the mid 1980s, Ian Walker's writing had become more prolific and songs like "Some Hae Meat", "Roses in December" and "Hawks and Eagles" were being picked up by other singers.
In 1985, Ian Walker's first album, "Roses in December", was recorded by Gavin Livingstone (of the band "Tonight at Noon"). This was followed in 1987 by "Flying High" on Fellside Recordings. The Music Retailers Association (MRA) in London voted "Flying High" the outright winner in their Folk and Country music award category in 1988. Ian collected the award, on behalf of Fellside, from TV astronomer Sir Patrick Moore at their awards ceremony in the Café Royale, London.
From 1987 to 1991, Ian had the privilege of singing and song writing with Glasgow singer/songwriter Ian Bruce. During this period they wrote about a dozen songs together many of which have since been recorded.