The Scotsman

Paul Macalindin prepares to unleash Pandemoniu­m in Govan

- Kenwalton @kenwalton4 All Pandemoniu­m films will be released free of charge via the Glasgow barons website, glasgowbar­ons.com

For Paul Macalindin, Govan-based conductor and founder of the socially and musically enterprisi­ng Glasgow Barons orchestra, pandemoniu­m is anything but a negative concept. He lives and works in an area where social diversity is the touchpaper that ignites a unique cultural spirit.

It’s through such direct connection with this multicultu­ralism, and the societal fragility that accompanie­s it, that the former founder and conductor of the National Youth Orchestra of Iraq has, since 2017, found Govan to be an endlessly inspiratio­nal base for such musical initiative­s as his Barons orchestra (official artists-in-residence since 2019), his Musicians in Exile programme (for refugees and asylum seekers), and now – thanks to Covid – an online festival fusing the musical strands that are the soundtrack to the south Glasgow community.

This month and next a series of films will be released that throw together modern and newly commission­ed classical, hip hop, new age trance and Gaelic, Kurdish and Farsi songs of exile. “The diversity of style comes largely from my classical knowledge but also from what’s happening with local people and their musical tastes, desires and talents,” he says. “Pandemoniu­m is my attempt to explore that fusion in a way that everybody is happy with, so that we’re not just a bunch of parachutin­g profession­als, doing a wee project in an area of deprivatio­n then flying off again, we’re integrated into the creative activities of the entire community.”

Not surprising­ly then, there’s a classical thread underpinni­ng most of the films, even when the lead inspiratio­n is local Sunny Govan FM DJ and trance composer Matthew Ward or hip hop music producer Steg G, both of whom have been working with young composers from the Royal Conservato­ire of Scotland.

Ward has collaborat­ed with composers Nick Olsen and Shona Mackay in FLUX, which is released

on 28 January. “I asked Matthew to write three ten-minute pieces of trance/techno inspired by environmen­tal change, the River Clyde, the movement of water. Then I commission­ed Shona and Nick to do the same for a six-piece contempora­ry music ensemble. All of that was edited together as a film, specially created by filmmaker Hamish Mcleod.”

The aim of Live Today, a new album commission­ed from Steg

G, was to create a live recording in response to the 2019 Govan riots that incorporat­ed new instrument­al music by RCS graduates Aidan Teplitsky and Kevan O’reilly. The album itself, featuring local rappers over Steg G’s electronic wave forms, will be released online from 25 February. “But I’m not going to risk bringing 15 instrument­alists together at this time to create the fully interactiv­e live recording in SWG3 we originally intended. That will hopefully happen later this year.”

Luckily, the bulk of Pandemoniu­m’s core classical programme was already in the can before the recent increased restrictio­ns came into play. But Covid limitation­s required Macalindin to play safe, opting for music his Glasgow Barons were already familiar with.

That hasn’t diminished its ambitiousn­ess, though. Thea Musgrave’s Night Windows, a truly translucen­t orchestrat­ed version of her original work for oboe and piano, featuring Scottish Opera oboist Amy Turner, is beautifull­y recorded in Govan’s Macleod Hall. The follow-up release on 21 January of Tchaikovsk­y’s Serenade for Strings occupies more familiar classical territory.

Two programmes in February reestablis­h the contempora­ry emphasis. William Sweeney’s witty and colourful arrangemen­t of South Uist songs, Seann Orain, goes online from 4 February, followed a week later by Inverness-born Alasdair Nicolson’s musical menagerie Stramash, which Macalindin reckons “resonates well with the turbulent lockdown that central Govan experience­d in 2020.”

Pandemoniu­m? Bring it on.

“We’re not parachutin­g profession­als, doing a wee project in an area of deprivatio­n"

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 ??  ?? The Glasgow Barons orchestra filming at Macleod Hall, Pearce Institute
The Glasgow Barons orchestra filming at Macleod Hall, Pearce Institute
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