The Scotsman

SNJO Tales of the Tribe Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh

- JIM GILCHRIST

Saxophonis­t Tommy Smith’s latest ploy for the Scottish National Jazz Orchestra he directs was a beguiling one, in every sense.

Recruiting four stalwarts of the traditiona­l folk world – Gaelic singer Julie Fowlis, flautist and piper Michael Mcgoldrick, accordioni­st Phil Cunningham and fiddler Megan Henderson – he wrote them into big-band arrangemen­ts inspired by the goblins, mermaids and other creatures of Scottish folklore.

These often terrifying entities were evoked by poems commission­ed from Meg Bateman, Tom Pow, Christine De Luca and Peter Mckay, read by actor Blythe Duff. They came couched in soundscape­s frequently as unnerving as the tales themselves, pendulumin­g between the folk quartet’s lightsome jigs and reels, Fowlis’s beautifull­y delicate singing and the full-blown jazz forces.

The SNJO could generate a mellow background drift of woodwind and brass, or a dark and stealthy swing, before erupting into horror movie mode as the nightmaris­h Redcap claimed another victim or a mermaid dragged some hapless seafarer into the depths.

A winsome Gaelic air from Fowlis might be taken up by Smith on tenor sax, or a theme on Mcgoldrick’s uilleann pipes born off by powerhouse drummer Alyn Cosker. The Dragon of the Islands, for instance, saw a lovely fiddle and pipes air progress over rasping bass trombone to a fierce climactic trumpet duel between James Copus and Christos Stylanides. There was fiery saxophone sparring, too, between Smith and Konrad Wiszniewsk­i prompted by the enchantres­s-hag Glaistig.

Sometimes, though, these otherworld­ly entities could cast a wan eye on our own cruelties, Meg Bateman’s Water Horse bitterly citing “your cannon, gunpowder and bayonet”. And special mention must go to Blythe Duff, who reflected the brilliance of the music by imbuing her readings with clarity, wit and often sanguinary relish.

 ?? ?? 0 Tommy Smith wove mythical creatures into new jazz works
0 Tommy Smith wove mythical creatures into new jazz works

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