The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Sights, lights and music at East Neuk

- ROB ADAMS

Picture this: a massive brass ensemble filling a large farm building just outside St Monans with sound and film accompanim­ents.

Or how about: a Citreon van with a band playing spontaneou­s concerts wherever the driver stops?

These are just two of the attraction­s at East Neuk Festival this year.

World-renowned classical music performers include pianists Elisabeth Leonskaja, who will be playing Beethoven’s final three sonatas and Schubert piano trios, and Pavel Kolesnikov and Samson Tsoy, whose programme includes the piano-duet version of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring. String quartets, wind quintets and the festival’s orchestra in residence, the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, offer everything from Hadyn to hoolies as the Elias String Quartet’s violinist – and fiddler – Donald Grant presents his arrangemen­ts of Scottish traditiona­l tunes.

There’s folk music also from eastern Africa, the Middle East and the NorthEast of England as Kenyan singer and multiinstr­umentalist Rapasa Otieno joins forces with Newcastle-based fiddler and composer Frankie Archer.

Rihab Azar, a Syrianborn virtuoso of the oud (a lute-type instrument), returns in duo with singersong­writer Luke Daniels to blend traditiona­l and contempora­ry music with experiment­al electronic­s.

Anstruther Town Hall hosts flamenco guitarist Daniel Martinez’ ensemble, and jazz, in a fusion with North African and Turkish traditions, from cellist Shirley Smart’s trio and a celebratio­n of Hollywood’s swinging heyday with clarinetti­st Julian Bliss’s septet.

Light the Lights, in the Bowhouse near St Monans on July 1, is led by Gandini Juggling, a company at the vanguard of contempora­ry circus. Known for collaborat­ing with musicians, composers, choreograp­hers, dancers, orchestras and opera companies, their latest production will feature acclaimed guitarist Sean Shibe and violinist Benjamin Baker in a oneoff performanc­e of music, lights and juggling.

As well as giving a talk on the stars of vintage comedy films, such as Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin and Laurel & Hardy, leading early Hollywood expert and silent film accompanis­t, pianist Neil Brand plays for a double bill of classic Buster Keaton adventures in Crail Church Hall on June 30.

Neil Brand is also involved in the festival’s centrepiec­e, the big project, Thunderplu­mp at the Bowhouse on June 29.

Inspired by Scotland’s weather, Thunderplu­mp is the creation of Brand in partnershi­p with filmmaker David Behrens.

Comprising a sequence of new and archival film and original music, it features up to 100 young brass players led by stars of brass John Wallace and Tony George (founders of the renowned Wallace Collection) and includes Fife Youth Jazz, directed by Richard Michael, and Tullis Russell Works Band.

Other attraction­s include a huge labyrinth in the shape of a map of the East Neuk, designed by festival director Svend McEwanBrow­n, in the grounds of Kellie Castle.

There’s also a music, lighting and juggling spectacula­r in Cambo Garden on July 2.

There’s enough to grab any audiences’ attention on these five days and nights.

East Neuk Festival, June 29 to July 3. eastneukfe­stival.com

 ?? ?? ON THE BALL: Juggling will be part of the many attraction­s at the East Neuk Festival this year.
ON THE BALL: Juggling will be part of the many attraction­s at the East Neuk Festival this year.

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