The Scotsman

Tradfest to culminate in an act of rebellious truth-telling

- Jimgilchri­st For further informatio­n and ticketing see www.edinburght­radfest.com and www.livestream.snjo.co.uk

While spring heralds both welcome sunshine and an easing – to a degree – of Covid restrictio­ns, live performanc­e with audiences remains an uncertain if faintly discernibl­e prospect. The internet ingenuity of musicians and events organisers, however, continues to stream quality performanc­e hither and yon, and Edinburgh’s springtime Tradfest is no exception.

Tradfest’s ambitious ticketed online programme kicked off yesterday with a vibrant celebratio­n of northern fiddle music, Shetland Springs, presented in associatio­n with Shetland Folk Festival and bringing together some of the isles’ finest exponents, curated by Catriona Macdonald and co-starring fellow Shetlander­s Margaret Robertson, Chris Stout and Ross Couper.

The festival’s main programme, broadcast daily until 10 May, has been producedby Douglasrob­ertson and Jane-ann Purdy of Soundhouse. Performers include Edinburghb­ased Romanian singer-songwriter Lizabett Russo, banjo virtuoso Aaron Jonah Lewis, piper Malin Lewis and Scottish folk bands including Shooglenif­ty, Moishe’s Bagel, Old Blind Dogs and the Kinnaris Quintet.

The festival also sees the Scottish Storytelli­ng Centre host the launch of Scotland Online: A Directory of Musicians, a comprehens­ive listing of musicians working and recording in Scotland. Presented by the Traditiona­l Music Forum and TRACS (Traditiona­l Arts Culture Scotland), it features pre-recorded performanc­es by harpist Rachel Hair and multi-instrument­alist Ron Jappy, Gaelic singer Maeve Mackinnon with Ali Hutton and Luc Mcnally and flute-fiddle duo David Foley and Jack Smedley with guitarist Jenn Butterwort­h.

As its finale, Tradfest adjourns to a venerable venue indeed for its inaugural Rebellious Truth lecture, given by singer-songwriter Karine Polwart in conjunctio­n with Edinburgh University’s Department of Celtic and Scottish Studies, whose School of Scottish Studies and its national treasure of an archive this year celebrates its 70th anniversar­y. The lecture, as well as performanc­es by Polwart and Mike Vass, the School’s current traditiona­l artistin-residence, will live-stream from Scotland’s first purpose-built concert Hall, St Cecilia’s, built by Edinburgh Music Society in 1762.

It seems a fitting conjunctio­n of old and new for Polwart’s talk, in which she describes folk song as “a wee window into the experience­s of those who lived before us, the challenges they faced and the fights they fought in their own times that yield us many of the rights and privileges we enjoy now.” Equally immersed in current affairs, however, she examines the blights of misogyny and sexual violence, as well as women who rebelled against norms, as recounted in traditiona­l song.

Another ancient Edinburgh landmark taking to the wired world in spectacula­r fashion is St Giles’ Cathedral, which becomes the venue for a collaborat­ion between the Scottish National Jazz Orchestra and the Edinburgh-based Russian multimedia artist Maria Rud, renowned for her heady combinatio­n of live painting, music, architectu­re and state-of-the-art technology through her Animotion shows in such iconic spaces as the National Museum of Scotland and Edinburgh University Old College Quad.

Running online from 12-15 May, her collaborat­ion with the SNJO, titled Where Rivers Meet, promises to be the orchestra’s “most ambitious, multi-dimensiona­l event to date,” according to its director, saxophonis­t Tommy Smith.

As Rud paints, her vivid, everevolvi­ng images will be projected directly on to the unique “canvas” provided by the breathtaki­ng Gothic interior of the High Kirk, while the SNJO, featuring Smith and fellow saxophonis­ts Paul Towndrow, Konrad Wiszniewsk­i and Martin Kershaw, evoke the simmering creative spirit of the Sixties free jazz movement, playing music by such notable exponents as Albert Ayler, Ornette Coleman, Dewy Redman and Anthony Braxton.

For Rud, the improvisat­ory nature of the music will inspire new imagery. For Smith, the performanc­e will be “all about expression, the deepest emotion of our inner voice. The soloists must bare their souls – that was the challenge and the achievemen­t of much of the best of the free jazz of the 1960s and beyond. And that's what we're after here.”

The snjo will collaborat­e with russian multimedia artist Maria Rud at St Giles’ Cathedral

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 ??  ?? Karine Polwart’s lecture and gig will be broadcast from St Cecilia’s Hall
Karine Polwart’s lecture and gig will be broadcast from St Cecilia’s Hall

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