Jessie MacLachlan


Jessie Niven MacLachlan was a Scottish Gaelic soprano.

Early life

Jessie Niven MacLachlan was born at Oban, the eldest of eight children born to Alexander MacLachlan and Margaret Campbell Niven. Her father was an auctioneer.

Career

MacLachlan achieved fame as a stage singer of Gaelic song. She performed for Queen Victoria, at Balmoral Castle in 1892. She toured extensively. She shared a bill with singer Harry Lauder and violinist Mackenzie Murdoch on a Scottish tour. She toured in North America in 1901; while in Canada, she sang with a teenaged Henry Burr, at the Opera House in Saint John. In 1902 she sang at the Scottish Concert of the London Inverness-shire Association, to raise funds for Scottish scholarships and a "Home Club for Highland Lads" in London. In 1905 she sang at a Burns Monument Fund benefit concert in Boston. She performed in New Zealand in 1905 and again in 1907.
During her North American tour MacLachlan was celebrated in newspapers and helped to increase the popularity of Gaelic song there. "Whether it is crooning a Highland cradle song, or a call to the clans to take up arms, she is equally successful," observed one New Zealand reviewer in 1907, about her repertoire.
In September 1899 MacLachlan made the first commercial gramophone recording of Gaelic song, performing "Oro Mo Nighean Donn Bhòidheach" to piano accompaniment. She made further recordings in England in 1903.

Personal life

Jessie MacLachlan married her accompanist, fellow musician Robert Buchanan, in 1887. They had a son. She died in Glasgow in 1916, aged 49 years, shortly after making a "hazardous journey" from France during World War I. Her grave is in Cathcart Cemetery.