McNair cut his first all-jazz
album,
Up in the Air with Harold McNair on a visit to Miami, before settling back in London permanently. His first UK album as a leader,
Affectionate Fink, was made for the fledgling
Island Records in 1965. The session saw him team up with
Ornette Coleman's then current rhythm section of
David Izenzon (bass) and
Charles Moffett (drums), for a set of standards played with hard swinging intensity. McNair equally featured his tenor sax and flute on this session, delivering virtuoso performances on both. His next (self-titled) album, cut for
RCA in 1968, recorded at
Trident Studios featured probably his best known composition, "The Hipster", which was included on
Gilles Peterson's 2004
Impressed Vol. 2 compilation of 1960s
British jazz. His next album was
Flute and Nut (RCA, 1970), which featured
big band and string arrangements by
John Cameron. This was quickly followed up in the same year by
The Fence, which moved in the direction of
jazz fusion. Another self-titled album was issued posthumously in 1972 by the B&C label, which mixed tracks from the 1968 RCA album with later, unreleased recordings. Recordings as a jazz sideman included sessions with the jazz-rock/big band ensemble
Ginger Baker's Air Force and John Cameron's
Off Centre. He recorded with visiting Americans
Jon Hendricks, pianist/vocalist
Blossom Dearie and drummer
Philly Joe Jones and performed with saxophonist
Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis at the
Manchester Sports Guild in 1967.
Other recordings McNair's unique
phrasing on the flute in particular led to great demand for his services among non-jazz musicians, especially during the late 1960s. His flute was featured on the soundtrack for
Ken Loach's film
Kes (1969), with music written by regular McNair collaborator John Cameron. Another notable soundtrack contribution was his tenor saxophone on the original 1962 soundtrack theme from
Dr. No and his solo flute on
Johnny Harris,
Movements (Warner Bros. 1970) that was originally recorded for the original soundtrack of the film
Fragment of Fear. His best-known sideman role came via his regular participation (with Cameron) on
Donovan's mid-to-late 1960s recording sessions, and as a member of Donovan's touring band. McNair arranged the hit single "
There Is a Mountain" (1967) and played the flute
riff. Donovan's live album
Donovan in Concert features McNair's flute and tenor extensively and demonstrates some of his finest recorded work. Throughout the late 1960s he also played on many other jazz-inflected
folk music and
progressive rock albums, including
John Martyn's
The Tumbler and
Davy Graham's
Large as Life and Twice as Natural.
Death McNair died of lung cancer in
Maida Vale,
North London, on Sunday, 7 March 1971, at the age of 39. == Discography ==