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Celtic Connection­s picks

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BANISH those January blues: here comes Celtic Connection­s, with 18 days and nights of sparkling entertainm­ent. The festival opens on Thursday with a spectacula­r, Expofunded new symphonic work performed by the Grit Orchestra. Here are 12 further highlights to look forward to …

1. A CURRENT AFFAIR: COASTAL CONNECTION­S (January 18, Glasgow city centre, then Glasgow Royal Concert Hall)

Catch a glimpse of giant sea goddess, Storm, as she makes her inaugural journey through Glasgow ahead of the Coastal Connection­s mini-festival.

Marking the start of Scotland’s Year Of Coasts And Waters, Coastal Connection­s offers a full afternoon of entertainm­ent with musicians representi­ng 20 Scottish islands and coastal communitie­s (including North Uist’s Julie Fowlis), plus Launch!, which blends footage from the Royal National Lifeboat Institutio­n’s film archive with beatboxing … and lots more.

Coastal Connection­s tickets cost £25.85 or £13.20 (child), but Storm’s appearance is free for all the family, as Vision Mechanics’ 10-metres tall moving artwork, created entirely from recycled and natural resources, begins her journey from Victoria Bridge (from around 9.30am), moving through the city to the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall, accompanie­d by a specially commission­ed soundtrack by Mairi Campbell. Full route details will be announced on Monday.

2. SKIRL POWER: A CELEBRATIO­N OF WOMEN IN PIPING (January 19, 8pm, GRCH, Strathclyd­e Suite). Tickets from £16.50 incl booking fee (seated)

Bagpiping was long considered a male art, but Limerick-born uilleann piper Louise Mulcahy has uncovered fascinatin­g evidence that women have been practising it for 100 years. For tonight’s show, she’s assembled seven fantastic female musicians from across the Celtic world including Sheila Friel, Maire Ni Ghrada, Marion McCarthy, Alana MacInnes, Robyn Ada McKay and Enora Morice. Creating wonderful music on a variety of different pipes, this is the first ever cross-cultural celebratio­n of women in piping.

3. GET REEL: THE BIG FLING ¬ SCOTTISH DANCE BAND EXTRAVAGAN­ZA (January 21, 7.30pm, Glasgow Royal Concert Hall). Tickets from £22 incl booking fee (seated)

Tom Orr, Gary Innes, Marie Fielding, John Carmichael and other leading fiddlers, accordion-players and whistlers from top dance bands gie it laldy from the main stage, playing a range of Scottish and Irish tunes to set those feet tapping. If you simply can’t sit still, why not take the floor at one of Celtic Connection­s’ ever-popular ceilidhs at Maryhill Community

Central Halls (£15.40, including booking fee).

4. A PORTUGUESE HOLIDAY: ANA MOURA WITH MOISHE’S BAGEL (January 24, 7.30pm, Glasgow Royal Concert Hall). Tickets from £22, incl booking fee (seated)

Escape the winter chills on a trip to sunny Portugal with world-renowned fado artist, Ana Moura. Her intoxicati­ng live performanc­e is supported by Scotland’s Moishe’s Bagel, an audacious five-piece who blend klezmer, Balkan, Celtic, jazz, Middle Eastern and classical music. Enjoy an unforgetta­ble evening with a truly internatio­nal vibe.

5. A NIGHT ON THE TOWN Choose from Manran 10th Anniversar­y Party With Band Of Burns (January 24, 7.30pm, Barrowland Ballroom) and Salsa Celtica 25th Anniversar­y Big Band And Project SMOK (February 1, 8pm, Old Fruitmarke­t). Tickets from £22 each show, incl booking fee (standing)

For a top weekend night out, these celebrator­y events promise plenty of Celtic Connection­s party spirit. Manran blends Gaelic and English songs with traditiona­l instrument­ation and rock rhythms; Salsa Celtica present a unique fusion of Latin and Scottish/Irish music. On both nights, those iconic venues will be jumping.

6. BARD COMPANY: AULD LANG SYNE WITH BBC SSO & SPECIAL GUESTS (January 25, 7.30pm Glasgow Royal Concert Hall). Tickets from £24.20 incl booking fee (seated)

Burns suppers are all very well. Whisky is dispatched, puddings eviscerate­d,

then a whisky-and-haggis-fuelled afterdinne­r speaker murders the Bard’s lyrical gems. Celtic Connection­s’ Burns Night offers something different: a chance to enjoy some of Rabbie’s greatest musical poetry, as performed by Eddi Reader, Karen Matheson, Shona Donaldson and Jarlath Henderson, with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra.

7.ART OF AFRICA: BEMIS PRESENTS LES AMAZONES D’AFRIQUE & SPECIAL GUESTS (January 25, 7.30pm, Tramway) Tickets from £18.70 incl booking fee (seated)

World music fans shouldn’t miss this groundbrea­king show from all-female West African supergroup, Les Amazones D’Afrique. A musical and political force of nature, this band campaigns against misogyny and violence against women. And their music is electric: Barack Obama is among their fans. Tramway presents the UK premiere of their brand new album, Amazones Power, along with the showcase finale of the new Celtic Connection­s In The Community programme, a partnershi­p with ethnic minority voluntary sector organisati­on BEMIS. Performanc­es from five Glasgow communitie­s will celebrate the city’s diverse cultural traditions.

8.THE AMERICANA DREAM: ANAIS MITCHELL AND BONNY LIGHT HORSEMAN (January 29, 8pm, Old Fruitmarke­t) Tickets from £24.20 incl booking fee (standing)

Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter Anais Mitchell creates sublime, folkinspir­ed music, and recently won eight Tony awards for her folk opera, Hadestown, as well as a Grammy nomination for the show’s spin-off album. Tonight’s audience can revel in Mitchell’s own band set, as well as a performanc­e by her new folk supergroup, Bonny Light Horseman. The trio – Mitchell, multiinstr­umentalist Josh Kaufman and Eric D Johnson of the Fruit Bats ¬ release their first ever album during Celtic Connection­s, and the Glasgow gig is its UK premiere performanc­e. Not to be missed!

9. THE SURREAL THING: RETURN TO Y’HUP: THE WORLD OF IVOR CUTLER

(January 29, 7.30pm, Glasgow

Royal Concert Hall). Tickets from £24.20 incl booking fee

The bucolic island paradise of Y’Hup was the true home of the late, great musical philosophe­r Ivor Cutler – or so the Govan-born maverick often insisted. His 1959 debut album, Ivor Cutler Of Y’Hup, joyfully referenced the flora, fauna and “critters” of this fantastica­l kingdom, which has been summoned back into being by musicians Raymond MacDonald, Matt Brennan, Malcolm Benzie and Andy Monaghan in new album, Return To Y’Hup. It’s launched tonight at this unique Celtic Connection­s show, presenting new arrangemen­ts of Cutler’s music and guest performers including Stuart Braithwait­e, Kris Drever, Stuart Murdoch, Emma Pollock, Karine Polwart and James Yorkston.

10. A CLASSICAL ACT: SKY & LAMMERMUIR FEATURING TESSA LARK, PHAMIE GOW AND THE RSNO (January 30, 7.30pm, Glasgow Royal Concert Hall). Tickets form £24.20 incl booking fee (seated)

Classical music buffs are in for a treat as Grammy-nominated Kentucky-born violinist Tessa Lark, below, performs the European premiere of Sky, the concerto specially written for her by US composer Michael Torke. Scottish harpist and composer Phamie Gow shares the bill with a 20th anniversar­y performanc­e of Lammermuir: the hauntingly evocative piece she wrote as a Celtic Connection­s New Voices commission back in 2000. A glorious evening, orchestrat­ed by the Royal Scottish National Orchestra.

11. LET’S GET MUSICAL: COME AND TRY WORKSHOPS

(Various dates, venues and prices)

If you long to enjoy Celtic Connection­s from the stage rather than the stalls, the festival offers plenty of chances to learn traditiona­l instrument­s – including fiddle, whistle, bodhran drum, clarsach and ukulele – or sample musical traditions such as beatbox and samba. There are children and adults’ “come and try” sessions for complete beginners and masterclas­ses for advanced musicians, as well as singing and songwritin­g workshops. https:// www.celticconn­ections.com/ workshops

12. SIMON THACKER’S SVARAKANTI WITH AFSANA-KHAN, JACKIE SHAVE & SUKHVINDER SINGH “PINKY”, WITH NAD-HAARA (February 1, 7.30pm, Oran Mor) Tickets, £22 incl booking fee (seated)

Enjoy a cross-cultural celebratio­n courtesy of Simon Thacker’s SvaraKanti: the Scottish-born guitarist, composer and all-round musical polymath’s Indo-Western group, which combines the classical, folk and spiritual traditions of the Indian sub-continent. He’s joined by top Bollywood star, Afsana Khan, Grammy-winning tabla-master Sukvinder Singh “Pinky” and violinist Jackie Shave – leader of the Britten Sinfonia. Fusion music from brand new Scottish/Indian project Nad-Haara Bran completes the show.

For further informatio­n and hundreds more events visit www.celticconn­ections.com

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 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­S: MARISA PRIVITERA/LAUREN DESBERG ?? Main image: Les Amazones; left: Moishe’s Bagel; above: The Ivor Cutler tribute: Matt Brennan, Raymond MacDonald and Malcolm Benzie
PHOTOGRAPH­S: MARISA PRIVITERA/LAUREN DESBERG Main image: Les Amazones; left: Moishe’s Bagel; above: The Ivor Cutler tribute: Matt Brennan, Raymond MacDonald and Malcolm Benzie
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