The Scotsman

KENNY MATHIESON

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it to save their lives, perform with accuracy or effect any one of Clementi’s or Beethoven’s charming and classical sonatas – music full of artistic skill, and melodic and harmonic beauty, and far easier, withal, M. Chopin’s compositio­ns have a peculiar charm, which, however, is only brought out by his own exquisite manner of playing them.

We suspect that many of the salient points of melody in his compositio­ns are reminiscen­ces of the popular airs of Poland – of his own ill-fated land, and that the touching expression he gives to these arises from “feelings too deep for tears.”

The infinite delicacy and finish of his playing, combined with great occasional energy, never overdone, is very striking when we contemplat­e the man – a slender and delicate-looking person, with a marked profile, indicating much intellectu­al energy. WORLD CHAMPIONSH­IPS IN EDINBURGH Ten hours of continuous piping and drumming, including a contest for the world’s pipe band championsh­ip, ended with a massed display by over 1000 pipers and drummers in the rugby internatio­nal ground at Murrayfiel­d as dusk was falling on Saturday evening.

Drawn from all the 85 bands which had been competing for honours since 11 o’clock in the morning, they took ten minutes to enter the field, into which they were led by four ladies’ pipe bands.

Huge crowds, which brought the attendance figures to 36,000 for the whole day, heard them playing together in the “El Alamein” march composed by Pipe-major William Denholm, who was one of the competitor­s. The tremendous volume of sound was echoed by ringing cheers from the spectators as the massed bands then joined in “Highland Laddie,” as a salute to Sir Iain Colquhoun of Luss, chieftain of the gathering.

It was the first occasion on which the world championsh­ip, hitherto competed for at Cowal Games, has been promoted by the Scottish Pipe Band Associatio­n. The winners were the Bowhill Colliery Pipe Band, from Fife (Pipe-major C. L. Sutherland), who were already the European champions. As a close second came the Clan Macrae Society Pipe Band (Pipe-major J. F. Nicoll), who also won the world’s drumming championsh­ip for their performanc­e.

The principal contest began at 5.30 and lasted for two hours. Each of the 26 bands which had entered for it played a march, a strathspey, and reel, and the noble tunes brought round after round of applause from the crowded stands and terraces. AN AMBITIOUS FESTIVAL IN GLASGOW TO PROMOTE CELTIC MUSIC KICKS OFF AT THE WEEKEND IN THE ROYAL CONCERT HALL.

The growing clamour among Scots for Celtic roots music – both contempora­ry and traditiona­l – has sparked a January experiment which raises hopes of an annual folk extravagan­za at Glasgow’s Royal Concert Hall.

The instant, do-it-yourself mega-festival, Celtic Connection­s has no major backer, and will have to sink or swim by its box office appeal, abetted by some modest sponsorshi­p, notably from the Scottish Wildlife Trust.

In some respects, though, it has much in common with the Glasgow Jazz Festival – principall­y, a hankering to pack the bill with the biggest names available, and an impatience with any notion that the way to create a successful festival is to build up in gradual stages.

There has certainly been nothing gradual about the birth of Celtic Connection­s.

The idea was first mooted in the summer, and began as a joint venture between Cameron Mcnicol, director of the Concert Hall, and BBC Radio Scotland.

It then mushroomed dramatical­ly from there, as Colin Hynd of the Concert Hall explained.

“The first batch of names which came out of those initial talks were strong, but tended to be from the traditiona­l side of the music. We then took the decision to try to widen the scope and the appeal of the festival by drawing on some of the newer bands like the Lost Soul Band (January 18), the Old Blind Dogs and Iron Horse (10 Jan), and one or two artists who are on the fringes of folk and rock, like the Mccluskey Brothers (Jan 22) or Martin Stephenson (Jan 15).

“What we are looking to do with the festival is to represent Celtic and Gaelic culture as widely as possible, and we will be having some talks and exhibition­s to support the music programme as well.

“We believe that we have covered a lot of ground in very little time, and we are hoping that we will attract quite a few different audiences across the two weeks.

“The Concert Hall has never really attempted anything similar to this, but we have had a good response to folk music in the past, and we hope that will continue here.”

It is hard to argue with Hynd’s summation of the programme, which seems to feature just about everybody who is anybody on the traditiona­l music scene, and largely defies sensible paraphrase.

A taster selection of the treats in store would include an all too rare opportunit­y to hear Canadian singers Kate and Anna Mcgarrigle (Jan 13), Irish giants The Chieftains (Jan 11), De Dannan (Jan 14) and Altan (Jan 10), and Scottish favourites like Capercaill­ie (Jan 23) and Battlefiel­d Band (Jan 21). That, however, is only the start. Other featured names in the main auditorium include the likes of Aly Bain and Phil Cunningham (Jan 11), Gaelic rockers Wolfstone (Jan 9), Uillean pipe wizard Davy Spillane in a double bill with the dazzling Northumbri­an piper Kathryn Tickell (Jan 12), spiky Irish singer Mary Coughlan (Jan 15), and The Boys of the Lough (Jan 20).

Even without those concerts, however, the events scheduled for the smaller Strathclyd­e Suite (which will be laid out in cabaret-style with tables, rather than in the less appealing regimented rows of chairs) and the Exhibition Hall would make a respectabl­e festival on their own.

The Concert Hall are clearly taking their remit seriously, and have committed themselves to further festivals in 1995 and 1996. That amounts to a very considerab­le financial risk at a time of year when audiences have not traditiona­lly been lured out of the post-christmas slump by, well, anything at all, really.

“January is an unusual time, but we actually had very little choice– the only practical alternativ­es were July, during the Glasgow holiday, or August, when we would be running against the Edinburgh Festival.

“It does make it a bit of a gamble, perhaps, but we are looking at the event in terms of a three year spread to establish it fully.

“It means that the hall will be alive with lots of events at a time when it is usually empty, and we are hoping that people will respond to the chance to get themselves out and come and hear some very fine music.”

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