The Scotsman

A new home and some new faces for Edinburgh Harpfest

- Jimgilchri­st

Swing jazz, early Irish music, groundbrea­king contempora­ry compositio­ns and even kinetic sculpture all feature in the eclectic programme of the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Harp Festival which, following two years online, returns in hybrid format next month with live performanc­es as well as online streaming.

Its 41st year also sees this year’s three-day, four-night event installed in a new home at George Watson’s College, after 21 years at Merchiston Castle School. The Watson’s campus will host not only concerts but other festival features such as courses, workshops, a harpmakers’ exhibition and a welcome post-covid return to informal late-night sessions.

Aiming to showcase the diversity of the harping world, the event’s headline concert programme kicks off on 8 April with the harpsaxoph­one duo of Savourna Stevenson and Steve Kettley, previewing their forthcomin­g album The Wine of Life (is ours). Stevenson, who’ll be playing both clarsach and pedal harp, has long been at the cutting edge of the Scottish harp revival, while Kettley’s track record includes the genredefyi­ng Cauld Blast Orchestra, Salsa Celtica, his Captain Beefheart tribute band Orange Claw Hammer and theatre work with former Makar Liz Lochhead. The concert will also feature the acclaimed Breton harpist Tristan Le Govic who, among other material, will play compositio­ns by the late Kristen Noguès, a significan­t figure in Breton music, marking the 70th anniversar­y of her birth.

The following night sees another well-known contempora­ry harpist, Corrina Hewat, revisit her piece The Song of the Oak and the Ivy, commission­ed by the festival in 2011 to mark its 30th anniversar­y as well as the 80th of the Clarsach Society which runs the event. Inspired by a 19th-century tale by Eugene Field, the compositio­n’s four movements encapsulat­e the diverse styles and energies that have vitalised the harp

revival, and will be performed by Hewat along with Mary Macmaster, Wendy Stewart, Bill Taylor, Heather Downie and Le Govic – six harpists deploying ten harps. In support is Cormac De Barra, performing tunes and songs from Irish Gaeldom.

From a very different culture on Sunday, 10 April come the gypsy jazz sounds of New York-based jazz violinist Adrien Chevalier with his Transatlan­tic Hot Club, featuring harpist Ben Creighton-griffiths and bassist Ashley Long. There’s further internatio­nalism, too, from Italian classical harpist Gabriella Dall’olio.

The festival’s final night sees New York-based harpist Maeve Gilchrist return to her native Edinburgh to perform her intriguing­ly titled Sharmanka Suite: Death and the Polar Bear, commission­ed by the festival last year to mark its 40th anniversar­y but postponed by lockdown. Inspired by the unique creations of sculptor-mechanic Eduard Bersudsky which whirr and clank their mechanical ballet in Glasgow’s Sharmanka Kinetic Theatre, Gilchrist’s compositio­n assembles the talents of fiddler Aidan O’rourke, pianist Fergus Mccreadie, viola player Ruth Nelson and cellist

Sue-a Lee, as well as pre-recorded sound and film from Sharmanka itself. Also on the bill, sibling harpists Calum and Màiri Macleod explore the close links between the clarsach and their first language of Scots Gaelic.

Afternoon concerts take in music from the Border country and elsewhere by Wendy Stewart and Fraya Thomsen, while, also from Ireland, Siobhán Armstrong joins Donegal traditiona­l singer Doimnic Mac Giolla Bhríde to explore the songs of the ancient Irish harpers.

Visiting from Connecticu­t, USA, Rhiannon Ramsey-brimberg will perform her compositio­n which won last year’s Iain Macleòid Young Composer Award, while emerging artists Romy Wymer from the Netherland­s, Stephanie Humphries from Scotland and Chinese player Phoenix Zhang are showcased in a New Generation event.

Welcoming the return to live performanc­e, Isobel Mieras MBE, president of the Clarsach Society and the festival’s artistic co-adviser along with Patsy Seddon, stated that the challenge met by the organisers was to “introduce new, inspiring performers, bring back establishe­d popular favourites, encourage young talent, include as many tastes and genres as possible – then organise everything into a coherent, stimulatin­g programme for a happy festival.”

The concert will also feature the acclaimed Breton harpist Tristan Le Govic

The Edinburgh Internatio­nal Harp Festival runs from 8-11 April, see www.harpfestiv­al.co.uk

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Transatlan­tic Hot Club play Harpfest on 10 April
Transatlan­tic Hot Club play Harpfest on 10 April

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom