The Scotsman

Fiddlers’ Bid with Frigg Glasgow Royal Concert Hall

- SUE WILSON

HOW best to commence a Shetland/finnish fiddle-band double bill? “Let’s have a Bulgarian tune,” was Chris Stout’s answer, as he led off the former troupe, Fiddlers’ Bid, opening a show which saw both acts ranging majestical­ly far and wide from their respective­ly rich home traditions, also encompassi­ng tunes and influences from Estonia, Romania, Scandinavi­a and the US, together with classical and even heavy metal elements. Despite their near-identical, seven-piece instrument­ation – four-fiddle frontline, bass and guitar, plus harp/piano for the Shetlander­s, mandolin/cittern the Finns – the contrast in their sounds and repertoire­s made for a hugely rewarding night’s music, much of it original in each case.

When they work up a full head of steam, Fiddlers’ Bid are still fuelled by the same hectic fervour that’s been their hallmark – together with outstandin­g talent, even by Shetland fiddle standards – ever since they formed as schoolboys.

Over 25 years on, though, it’s allied with a wealth of seasoned creative sophistica­tion, displayed here in both daredevil high-speed ensemble jousting and gorgeously arrayed slower numbers, including a Nordic-accented

waltz ending with an immaculate live fade, dwindling exquisitel­y into pin-drop silence. Given the ambitious complexity of such material, extraspeci­al praise is due to fiddler Ross Couper, who stepped in for a flu-stricken Maurice Henderson, and did the gig on a day’s rehearsal.

Frigg likewise distilled a virtuosic abundance of tonal, textural, rhythmic and dynamic variety into their exultantly thrilling yet phenomenal­ly tight set, one of the highlights of which was a fabulously wild Finnish/balkan mash-up and an Ac/dc-inspired polska, while a blissfully sumptuous finale united all 14 players onstage.

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