Paul mcgill biography

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SADNESS AS DERRY-BORN JOURNALIST PAUL MCGILL DIES AFTER BATTLE WITH CANCER

The late Paul McGill who died this more after a battle with cancer

THERE is sadness at the news that journalist Paul McGill died this morning, Friday, 27 January 2017.

He had been ill with cancer for some time.

Paul, who was originally from Derry, was a good journalist, good trade unionists and a past President of the NUJ.

He was one of a family of six – his youngest sister was killed when an Army Land Rover was in collision with her car in the 1970s and his oldest brother passed away in more recent times – he went to Queen’s University in Belfast where he graduated in law, although that was a career path he was not really interested in following.

Two stints working with the Union of Students of Ireland prefaced Paul joining the Education Times in Dublin, a stand-alone publication of the Irish Times, but it closed and then he joined the main newspaper working with Henry Kelly – “a serious journalist who later went into showbiz” – on a special reports team

Paul McGill (luthier)

Paul McGill is an American luthier, specializing in classical, steel string as well as the originator of a unique type of resonator guitar based upon the Brazilian Del Vecchio designs of the 1930s.

In 1985, McGill moved to Nashville to work as a repairman for Gruhn Guitars. A seminal moment in his career occurred in late 1992, when Earl Klugh asked McGill to build a more refined version of a Del Vecchio resonator guitar that Klugh had received from Chet Atkins. Though Klugh enjoyed the Brazilian guitar's sound, he found it delicate, with poor intonation.[1] Though McGill was apprehensive, fearing that building such an unusual instrument would ruin his reputation as a builder of classical guitars, he built the instrument as requested. Klugh loved the guitar, and immediately requested that McGill build others.[2]

McGill guitars have been used as recording instruments by Chet Atkins, Earl Klugh, Muriel Anderson, Peter White, Marc Antoine, Jim Stafford, Wayne Wesley Johnson, Nokie Edwards, Don Potter, Steve Earl, Larry Koonse, John Sta

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