Robbie MacNeill

Biography

Robbie MacNeill (age 78–79) is a guitarist and singer-songwriter who was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. He attended Queen Elizabeth High School and studied engineering at Dalhousie University for two years, before moving to Toronto to work as a surveyor in 1964. In the late sixties and early 70's he arranged, conducted and performed with The Privateers, billed as 'Eastern Canada's Only Professional Folk Chorus'. He went on to work with a number of other artists, and released his own album 'Pieces' in 1984. In 1967, Robbie met Anne Murray while both were performing on CBC's Singalong Jubilee. She invited him to play backing guitar for her (as a duo) on her early tours of The Maritimes. Their first show together was at a high school in Nova Scotia. They played weekend shows at small venues such as The Monterey (Halifax, NS), The Prince Edward Lounge (Charlottetown, PEI), Wong's (Antigonish, NS), and the Colonial Inn (Amherst, NS). Anne Murray released singles he wrote, including "Robbie's Song for Jesus" and "A Million More." She also covered 'Let Sunshine Have Its Day', 'Lullaby' and 'Sleep Child' on her albums. In Anne's autobiography All of Me, she said of MacNeill: "... in addition to being a fine guitar player was a wonderful songwriter. To this day his 'A Million More' is one of my favourite songs." Robbie also played on Anne's brother Bruce Murray's 1975 debut, which included a cover of Robbie's 'Sunshine Song'. Robbie also met John Allan Cameron on Singalong Jubilee around 1967, and from then on was his main backing guitarist for about 25 years. John Allan sometimes gave Robbie the spotlight to showcase his talent. In 1975 The Ottawa Citizen wrote, "Robbie MacNeill opened the second half. He is the essence of the good contemporary folk singer. His voice is clear and distinctive, and his solo guitar is all the accompaniment he needs. He wrote the songs he sang, including Sunshine Love and Evangeline - the beautifully haunting love song he nostalgically

Bio from Wikipedia

Discography

Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Credited work

113 releases · 18 albums · active 1972–2025

  • Performance · 116
  • Production · 3
  • Other credits · 2

Studios: Eastern Sound · National Arts Centre / Centre National Des Arts · Sounds Interchange · Toronto Sound Studios

Frequent collaborators

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