The Scotsman

KATHERINE WREN

- DAVID KETTLE http://nordicviol­a.wordpress.com/

Katherine Wren usually spends a lot of her time in the viola section of the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. But, despite the current lockdown and curtailmen­t of live performanc­es, she says she’s busier than ever: practising, learning new pieces (the difficult ones you put off during busier times), and also working on a project that’s close to her heart – Nordic Viola.

Her quietly pioneering project was partly inspired by a trip to Greenland in 2015. “I wanted to learn more about the country over a longer period of time, and become more embedded in the community,” she says of her reaction at the time.

The opportunit­y came with a sabbatical she took from the RSNO the following year. “It lasted for seven months in total, and I travelled to the Faroe Islands and Iceland, then I went to Shetland for a month, and finally I spent another month in Greenland during the winter, which was fascinatin­g.” During those visits, she played and improvised with local musicians, commission­ed composers to write for her and held workshops and masterclas­ses for young performers. Since then, her project has moved on dramatical­ly, with performanc­es across Scotland as well as in the Faroes and Iceland. “I never expected it to take off like it has done,’ she admits.

Nordic Viola has twice been nominated in the Making It

Happen category at the Scottish Awards for New Music: Wren will discover whether she’s won this year’s award on 14 April.

For her Scotsman Sessions performanc­e, she has chosen Joy by Orkney composer Gemma Mcgregor, one of the many works to have come out of Nordic Viola. “It was originally written for violin,” Wren explains, “but Gemma suggested it might work well on the viola, so she transcribe­d it for me to play. It was inspired by a quartet of Norwegian Hardanger fiddlers she heard at the Shetland Folk Festival, and she was trying to get a sense of the unusual tunings they use, and also the resonances of their instrument­s.

“It’s such a joyful, happy piece, so carefree – you can’t help but smile if you’re playing it or listening to it.”

 ??  ?? 0 Northern exposure: Katherine Wren’s experience­s colour this musical project
0 Northern exposure: Katherine Wren’s experience­s colour this musical project

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