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If Burns were alive today...A poser's a poser for a' that

By DAVID BELCHER

Through the revolving door of history Rabbie turns up in Glasgow, looking not a day over 37. In an exclusive interview with David Belcher he explains how he is coping with the twentieth century.

I CANNOT help but watch the flailing figure in the cheap, too-tight leather jacket as he struggles with the waiter who is trying to huckle him out through the revolving doors of Glasgow's Cafe Gandolfi. ''Effin' an blindin', it's ma gemme . . . ya wee sleekit, timrous, cowerin' basssterrt!''

His pinched grey shoes and matching facial pallor seem oddly familiar and strangely disturbing. My assignation, which had seemed unlikely enough at the outset, is evidently getting off to a start so bizarre as to be wholly unimaginable.

I mentally re-run the late-night phone call which had brought me here: your Ayrshire Bard is alive yet . . . Robert Burns wants a meeting set. How? Rabbie Burns? Undead for 199 years? Further loud scufflings ended my reverie.

''Y'effin' sonsie-faced puddin' shite . . . a'm a famous writer, me -- a can pey yur hirelin' traitors' wages!'' Chilling words. Burns alive in '95 . . . but in such a debased form? ''A've a cheque in the post! An if a get ma boot to ye, ye'll have a red, red erse!''

Such is my horrified absorption in this spectacle that I entirely fail to clock the materialisation at my table of an urbane figure in a stylish four-button tweed suit. When he speaks, his voice is three-parts Denis Law, two-parts Scottie in Star Trek, one-part Willie McIlvanney. ''Have nib, will travel,'' he drones with quavery gravitas.

I study my new companion's trendy Roman emperor-style haircut and neatly-trimmed mutton-chop sidewhiskers, his air of no-nonsense dandification. He doesn't look a day over 37. Yet he had been born 236 years previously -- the heaven-taught ploughman-poet; the drawing-room dilettante and farmer; the satirical sentimentalist, Robert Burns.

''Immortality's easy when you've tholed half an hour at Rugby Park,'' is Burns' gnomic reply to my obvious first question.

About his life post-death, as it were, Burns is similarly vague. ''I was away for a long time. Then I went away-away. To the States. I relocated there, to LA, in 1960-odd. I joined a friend in hopping aboard a US military transport plane when it called into Prestwick. I'm over there six months of the year; over here the other six, living somewhere between Heaven and Kilwinning, let's say.

''I didn't write for literally ages. It was the sixties that got me going again at the word-face.''

Ah, the era of free love, dissent, and self-expression. ''No, the era of knocking out small amounts of words for big buckets of wonga, writing TV ad jingles. Let not women e'er complain; Surf banishes wash-day pain. Lines Written on an Amex Credit Card -- far safer than a Bank Note, pard'ner! Then I got back into songs again.

Mostly for my own groups. Folk. Folk-rock. Acid-rock. Right the way through to industrial grindcore and ambient trance. There was the Houghmagandie Band; Extemporaneous Effusions; Auld Mahoun and the Muckle Black Deils; Thripplin Thrissle.

''Then it was film music, and ultimately film-writing. Stuff like The Cotter's Saturday Night Fever; Twa Reservoir Dogs; Halloween. Halloween is still my favourite: the spell-binding tension, the blood and guts, the senseless violence, the flash of the stalker's blade . . . the horror. Aye, and all of it based on a Ayrshire Cup tie between Kilbirnie Ladeside and Cumnock.''

Ah yes, football. Shake my hand in a scrimpet fashion under this table and tell me you're not a Rangers man.

''I can honestly say Robert Burns has had no interest in football since the retirement of his great-great-great grandson, Kenny. Kenny once told me that he psyched himself up for the on-field fray by nutting the dressing-room wall . . . he said he could only give of his best in a game if he had the taste of blood in his mouth. Aye, in his own gritty, workaday kind of way, Kenny was as much a poet as me.

''As for freemasonry, let me say that when I joined 170 years ago, it wasn't for bond-holding bourgeois bummles in the Copland Road stand.''

So do you seek weekend entertainment on the dancefloor?

''I visit the Love Boutique at the Arches every month. It's refreshing to dress up in thigh boots, chamois breeches and lacey ruffles. Otherwise, I'm not a man for clubs that would have me as a member. As I've already said, look what happened to the masons.''

How do you get about these days?

''A Mitsubishi Shogun V6 3.5 litre four-by-four with a personalised number plate, K17 AFF. It's meant to look like 'Kit Aff,' as in 'Haw, darlin, get yer . . .' An all-terrain vehicle covers much more galloping-ground in the Ayrshire Tirlie-Whirlie Stakes.''

Ah-ha! Love action! With whom? ''No comment, but it's not John Cairney.''

There are many Burnsian contradictions, leading to contradictory interpretations of your role and worth. How do you cope with being all things to all men?

''Easy. The friend with whom I went Stateside has been through it all, too, exactly the same. We share the burden. And much else besides, actually . . . not least eternal life.''

What? ''Robert Burns . . . and Elvis Presley. Rabbie still burns and Elvis lives. Ponder the karmic connections. We both checked in in the same month, January. We both checked out -- apparently -- after a visit to the dentist. He signed off -- ostensibly -- by singing Auld Lang Syne at the end of 1976. And where was the one place he touched down in Britain?

''I've been writing songs for him. Country and western. Aye, when you're talking about country and western, simple couplets, sentimentality, deathless love, and cheatin' hearts . . . well, songwriters don't come any more country and western than me.'' Our conversation winds to an end. We bid each other adieu, exiting Cafe Gandolfi together, carefully avoiding the ejected trouble-maker whose rage continues in the street.

''For auld lang's effin syne, it's Francie an' effin' Josie,'' the leather-jacketed cries upon seeing us.

Burns stops. Considers. ''Return to sender, pal. I did bawdy demotic 150 years ago. Get a new act. Get contemporary. Like me.''

Wed 25-Jan-1995

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