The Scotsman

Mary Ann Kennedy celebrates the Clyde at this year’s Mòd

- Jimgilchri­st

Back in 1988, as the Glasgow Garden Festival was in full effloresce­nce on the south bank of the Clyde, just across the river, Mary Ann Kennedy was winning the coveted Gold Medal for Gaelic singing at the National Mòd. She celebrated by nipping across the newly opened Bell’s Bridge to the periphery of the Garden Festival, where there was an ice cream parlour: “It was probably Nardini’s,” she recalls, “but by some weird coincidenc­e they had an ice cream flavour called ‘Gold Medal’.”

Thirty years on, Kennedy, long establishe­d as a Gaelic singer, harpist and broadcaste­r, is preparing for this month’s Royal National Mòd in Dunoon by creating a celebratio­n of the Clyde in music and song as part of an extensive Mòd fringe programme. Kennedy, who grew up amid Glasgow’s vibrant Gaelic community, has seen the Clyde “at its scabbiest,” and her piece, Cluaidh: Ùrachadh na

h-aibhne – “Clyde: A River Recovery”, will evoke the way in which the river and its firth have regenerate­d over recent decades, and not just in environmen­tal terms.

In preparing for the concert, she has been working with Scottish Natural Heritage, who will have a presence at the Mòd, increasing­ly viewing environmen­tal and cultural concerns as interconne­cted. Mixing traditiona­l material and her own compositio­ns, Cluaidh evokes episodes in the river’s history, ranging from the once great shipyards to traditiona­l seaweed harvesting. The project is given a certain synergy as part of the countdown to her next album, which she describes as a love song to her native Glasgow, due for release in the spring.

It may be a celebratio­n of regenerati­on, agrees Kennedy, speaking from Lochaber where she and her husband, Nick Turner, run Watercolou­r Music Studios, “although it doesn’t avoid why there has to be regenerati­on in the first place because of the state the river was in before.”

She has drawn her geographic­al parameters as stretching from the Broomielaw to Ailsa Craig, which gives her plenty of scope. One song she uses is a 19th century one by the Mull-born bard John Macfadyen, who lived most of his life in Glasgow, and whose Òran don Clutha is a mock-heroic epic about the busy Clutha ferries which once plied the urban river. Another borrowing is from the traditiona­l piobaireac­hd

Pilililiu, evoking the song of the redshank, of which the Clyde once again boasts a healthy population.

There’s a Gaelic translatio­n of Michael Marra’s iconic Mother

Glasgow, while compositio­ns of her own include one about Glasgow’s Galgael traditiona­l boatbuildi­ng venture, which pursues its own distinctiv­e form of social regenerati­on. The finale involves a tune for her uncle, Calum Sheumais Chalium, forester and footballer: “He knew the Gaelic for every bird and blade of grass.”

Her fellow performers are guitarist Finlay Wells, from Oban, piper Lorne Macdougall, who hails from Carradale, Argyll, while husband Nick has been creating electronic and “found sound” backdrops for the show. Also involved are Caoimhe and Saorsa Ni Bhroin, from one of the few families still speaking the Cowal dialect of Gaelic (their father, Àdhamh O Broin, is probably best known as Gaelic consultant to

Outlander), and pupils from two Gaelic-medium schools, Sandbank and Whinhill, in Dunoon and Greenock respective­ly.

Her interest in pointing up connection­s between Gaelic culture and the wider environmen­t is endorsed by SNH’S deputy chair, Angus Campbell, who is enthusiast­ic about the environmen­tal agency being involved in the Mòd: “If we’re supporting the Gaelic language, we have to be seen to be doing more than just producing a Gaelic plan and tying in to things like the Mòd is a very good platform for us. The Clyde is very much an example of an environmen­t that’s changing, being reborn in different ways, yet still supporting a city and its people and very relevant to Gaelic culture.”

The Royal National Mòd runs in Dunoon from 12-20 October. Clyde: A River Recovery, is at Dunoon Town Hall on 16 October.

A River Recovery will evoke the way in which the river and its firth have regenerate­d

 ??  ?? Mary Ann Kennedy has been working with Scottish Natural Heritage
Mary Ann Kennedy has been working with Scottish Natural Heritage
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