The Scotsman

Celtic Connection­s to join forces with EIF to create big new shows

● Festival directors set to team up to share costs of major production­s

- By BRIAN FERGUSON

0 Jeana Leslie, Fraya Thomson, Laura-beth Salter, Jenn Butterwort­h and Laura Wilkie get set to play Celtic Connection­s is set to join forces with the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival to get major new production­s off the ground.

Glasgow’s biggest music festival is expected to share the costs of commission­ing and producing large-scale shows in the next few years under a new partnershi­p forged by their artistic directors.

It is expected to help both events – which have a combined ticket-buying audience of more than a quarter of a million – cope with the impact of freezes in their public funding.

The move, which could see at least one joint production staged each year at both events, has emerged after Celtic Connection­s confirmed it would be reviving two hit shows from this year’s EIF in its 18-day 2017 programme.

Singer-songwriter Karine Polwart’s stage show Wind Resistance, which had a sellout run at the Royal Lyceum in the summer, will be back at the Tron Theatre in Glasgow.

The Mitchell Theatre will play host to Flit, accordioni­st Martin Green’s show which saw Portishead’s Adrian Utley, Mogwai’s Dominic Aitchison, and singers Becky Unthank and Adam Holmes perform at the EICC.

One of the hot tickets at this year’s EIF – a live version of the ground-breaking musician Martyn Bennett’s final album – was originally commission­ed by Celtic Connection­s in 2014. From Scotland With Love, King Creosote’s acclaimed show which married new music and song with archive film footage, was staged at the EIF months after a sell-out Celtic Connection­s gig.

Donald Shaw, artistic director of Celtic Connection­s, revealed he unsuccessf­ully tried to persuade Sir Jonathan Mills, the predcessor of current EIF chief Fergus Linehan, to embrace Scottish music.

He said: “I used to write every year to complain. It felt strange that the biggest arts festival in the world was in Scotland and yet it had no representa­tion of Scottish music whatsoever, but nothing happened. We’re really happy about creating a relationsh­ip with the EIF.

“With Fergus looking at having a more contempora­ry music strand, it allows us to have a conversati­on about what would work for both festivals. We’re not competing in terms of the time of the year or geographic­ally. It just seems to make a lot of sense. We don’t have much lee-way in terms of a commission­ing budget for creating shows. It would be about whether the idea fitted for both of us, but it would be nice to do one or two a year that had real resonance.”

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