The Scotsman

Songs of hope

Next month’s Celtic Connection­s will have to take place online, but various live festivals are planned for later in the year

- Jimgilchri­st

It may be a month till Burns Night, but the words “best- laid schemes” and “gang aft agley” do come to mind when trying to predict a year which opens with artists still facing grim times as live performanc­e withers in the shadow of Covid.

If nothing else, the pandemic has honed musicians’ online streaming skills: thus folk- rockers Skerryvore will put first- footing with a Ne’erday live stream and virtual tour of the Robert Burns Cottage at Alloway. Also going digitally worldwide is Glasgow’s Celtic Connection­s, usually spread across multiple venues but this year presenting nightly onlineonly performanc­es from 15 January to 2 February. The guest list includes Scottish acts such as Breabach, Chris Stout and Catriona Mckay, Eddi Reader and Ross Ainslie joined by such internatio­nal stars as Rhiannon Giddens and Le Vent du Nord.

Showcase Scotland, which enables promoters to hear Scottish acts during Celtic Connection­s, will also go online, prefaced by a webinar on “monetising online content” – surely a sign of the times.

What form other events, such as the Shetland Folk Festival, may take remains uncertain. The same goes for Stornoway’s summer fling, Hebcelt, which streams a Christmas show on 27 December, featuring Michael Mcgoldrick, John Mccusker and John Doyle.

Jazz Scotland is planning to hold Aberdeen Jazz Festival in March, the Lagavulin Islay Jazz Festival in September and Dundee Jazz Festival in November. The Edinburgh Internatio­nal Jazz and Blues Festival is planned for 16- 25 July and in the meantime it is streaming a New Year Jazz Gala for three days from 30 December, featuring singers Ali Affleck, Georgia Cécile and Luca Manning among others.

Glasgow Jazz Festival has been pencilled in for 18- 20 June and will probably mix live- audience and online performanc­es, while continuing to stream its “Winter Wednesday” online concerts into the spring. The Scottish National Jazz Orchestra, meanwhile, plan to go live, bringing their Pop! Rock! Soul! show to Perth, Edinburgh and Glasgow at the end of April.

Also touring in the spring is the young pianist Fergus Mccreadie, who scooped best instrument­alist category at this year’s Scottish Jazz Awards, and whose trio release their second album, Cairn, on the prestigiou­s Edition label next month. Fergus also crops up on Where Will the River Flow?, the debut album due in March from his fellow Royal Conservato­ire of Scotland alumnus, saxophonis­t Matt Carmichael.

Also in the flow is another Glasgow saxophonis­t, Paul Towndrow, whose imminent album, Deepening the River, features his Keywork jazzfolk fusion orchestra, while another past Scottish Jazz Award winner, pianist Brian Kellock, hopes to record with vintage jazz with saxophonis­t and clarinetti­st John Burgess.

Arbroath’s Hospitalfi­eld House plans a spring premiere for trumpeter Colin Steele’s commission, originally scheduled for this year, to mark the 700th anniversar­y of the Declaratio­n of Arbroath. And a concert originally proposed for this year to mark 30 years of jazz at Hospitalfi­eld may also materialis­e.

Meanwhile, jazz nights run by Viva Music have started, initially online, at Edinburgh’s Balmoral and Scotsman hotels, under the auspices of the Phoenix Project, with singer Ali Affleck involved behind the scenes and recent appearance­s from Mccreadie and the piano- sax duo of Paul Harrison and Martin Kershaw. Affleck is anxious to feature not just jazz but folk and classical performers.

On the folk scene, a clutch of birthdays includes the 70th anniversar­y of Edinburgh University’s School of Scottish Studies, whose archives are a treasure house of recorded music and song. Confirmed for May is a celebrator­y event at Edinburgh’s Tradfest, featuring Rebellious Truth, a lecture and performanc­e by Karine Polwart, plus a new work by the School’s artist in residence, Mike Vass. Recordings made during these performanc­es will be submitted to the 70- year- old archive – things coming full circle.

Greentrax Records will bring out their second album tribute to Hamish Henderson, the folklorist and poet who was one of the earliest members of the school and a tireless collector.

Edinburgh Internatio­nal Harp Festival, meanwhile, celebrates its 40th anniversar­y, running online from 9- 12 April, as its parent body, the Clarsach Society, marks its 90th.

Among the innumerabl­e performanc­es scuppered by the pandemic were those under the umbrella of the themed Year of Coasts and Waters. Some of these will be rolled over into the coming year, however, including events such as the Portsoy Traditiona­l Boat Festival, while Highland harpist Ingrid Henderson will tour with her multimedia, environmen­tally- themed show Message in a Bottle.

Also delivering an unequivoca­l environmen­tal message is Enough Is Enough, a collaborat­ion between Karine Polwart, street band activists Oi Musica and the Soundhouse Choir in response to November’s allimporta­nt COP26 climate change conference in Glasgow. Initially created as an online video, the project is attracting internatio­nal interest with its exhortatio­n to engage COP26 through collective music- making.

Meanwhile, the ever- industriou­s Soundhouse will continue their genre- spanning online Spotlight performanc­es, filmed at Edinburgh’s Traverse theatre. Like everyone else, they’re anxious to return to live gigs as soon as is safely possible.

Yet another anniversar­y will be the 25th of the National Piping Centre in Glasgow, including publicatio­n of a new tunebook. Some of these events will be part of the city’s Piping Live! festival, expected to combine online and live events from 7- 15 August in the countdown to the World Pipe Band Championsh­ips.

Piping Live! will also launch John Mulhearn’s book Let Piping Flourish, chroniclin­g the Dear Green Place’s influence in the developmen­t of pipe music – a suitably robust counterbla­st against Covid.

The SNJO plan to go live, bringing their Pop! Rock! Soul! show to Perth, Edinburgh and Glasgow in April

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 ??  ?? Chris Stout and Catriona Mckay will play at Celtic Connection­s
Chris Stout and Catriona Mckay will play at Celtic Connection­s

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