Dave Thomson

The information in this biography was published in 2015, based on interviews prior to that date. Later events and accomplishments may not be included.

Image
Name
Thomson, Dave
Dates
1942-
Where Raised
Residence
Occupation
owns septic tank business, semi-professional musician

In the early 1990s, Dave Thomson ran a weekly square dance at Club 56 in Hillsborough Park; he was one of four old-time fiddlers who ran weekly square dances at the time within a ten mile radius of Charlottetown (the others were Reuben Smith, Stephen Toole, and Elliott Wight). Thomson elected to discontinue the Hillsborough dance c. 2004, having found that it had simply become too tiring to take on what amounted to a second job. With all these dances now gone and no new ones to take their place, this was probably the first time since the quadrille first came to Charlottetown in the 1840s that the area had no regular access to square dancing.

Dave grew up in a fiddling family near Charlottetown; both his grandfather Fulton Thomson and his father Dave Thomson, Sr. played. Sometimes Fulton would work all day for the railroad, play all night at a house party, then get home at four in the morning and change his clothes to go back to work.

A natural southpaw, Thomson was sent for violin lessons as a child to a teacher who tried to get him to bow right-handed. This approach did not take, and he later re-taught himself to bow left-handed. Because he strings his violin in the conventional – or right-handed – manner, however, this puts the first string farthest away from his bowing hand (and situated on the descending side of the bridge). Therefore, he must often manipulate the bow at difficult angles in order to play even the simplest passages.

Thomson grew up a big Don Messer fan, and he learned quite a bit of his repertoire from that source. His style is very much in the Western Queens County vein, however, featuring both Scottish and West-Prince style flourishes. In part, however, these West-Prince style syncopations might be a family legacy, since both father and grandfather grew up in O'Leary.

After he gave up dance playing, Thomson began to play regularly with a group of music enthusiasts that included MacRae and Vessey, his accompanists at the 2006 interview. The group appeared frequently at local benefit concerts, and for a while played regularly on Island public cable TV. During the summers, they would periodically congregate at public campgrounds -- with families in tow -- for a few days of undistracted music making.

Images

Dave Thomson, 1992
Dave Thomson, fiddle - 2006 at Margaret Ross Mackinnon's home in Cornwall. Also playing are MacKinnon, pno & Rupert Vessey, gtr

Tune Selections

Black Velvet Waltz Accompanied by: Ken Perlman, bjo Western Queens info
Ste. Anne's Reel Accompanied by: Ken Perlman, bjo Western Queens info
Lord MacDonald's Reel Accompanied by: Ken Perlman, bjo Western Queens info
Carlton County Breakdown Accompanied by: Margaret Ross MacKinnon, pno; Rupert Vessey, gtr; Alan MacRae, bass Western Queens info
Southern Melody / Polo March Unaccompanied Western Queens info
Southern Melody / Polo March Unaccompanied Western Queens info
Growling Old Man Accompanied by: Ken Perlman, bjo Western Queens info
Ragtime Annie Accompanied by: Margaret Ross MacKinnon, pno; Rupert Vessey, gtr; Alan MacRae, bass Western Queens info
Golden Slippers / Silver & Gold Accompanied by: Margaret Ross MacKinnon, pno; Rupert Vessey, gtr Western Queens info
Golden Slippers / Silver & Gold Accompanied by: Margaret Ross MacKinnon, pno; Rupert Vessey, gtr Western Queens info
German Waltz Accompanied by: Margaret Ross MacKinnon, pno; Rupert Vessey, gtr; Alan MacRae, bass Western Queens info

Videos