The Scotsman

Grasping the baton at landmark celebratio­n

- David Pollock

Scots Women: Generation­s O’ Change City Halls, Glasgow JJJJ

The Scots Women Live from Celtic Connection­s 2001 album recorded a landmark concert, in which many of Scotland’s finest establishe­d and upcoming female folk singers were celebrated through a collection of songs in the Scots language. Among those featured were Cilla Fisher, Sheila Stewart, Corrina Hewat, Elspeth Cowie, Sheena Wellington and Karine Polwart.

Whether there were plans for a twentieth anniversar­y concert during what turned out to be the lockdown period is unknown, but this 23rd anniversar­y reunion – organised by the Traditiona­l Music and Song Associatio­n of Scotland – was more than welcome, with many original talents and a new generation of singers involved.

Attended by an audience as multi-generation­al as those onstage, the feeling in the room was one of warmth and celebratio­n. Led and musically directed by young Aberdeensh­ire folk singer and Scots language advocate Iona Fyfe, the ensemble comprised 14 singers, whose varied tones created the most powerful effect when all came together to bookend each of the show’s two halves with powerful choral harmonies.

Alongside a trio of musicians playing guitar, mandolin and fiddle, they opened with the title song of the concert and were later led by Wellington in a musical version of the poet William Soutar’s Ballad and Aileen Carr on Aberdeensh­ire traditiona­l The Bonnie Wee Lassie’s Answer (aka Farewell Tae Glasgow City).

The ensemble also played

Folk singer and Scots language advocate Iona Fyfe

Follow the Heron in tribute to the absent Polwart, and the finale featured Strong Women Rule the World by the concert’s original musical director Brian Mcneill, The Parting Glass in tribute to the late Sheila Stewart, and the closing Freedom Come-all-ye.

On the way, Hewat’s interpreta­tion of Sydney Goodsir Smith’s poetry for voice and harp particular­ly grabbed the attention, while Natalie Chalmers, Amy Lord, Ellie Beaton and mother and siblings trio Tripple were among the many young singers more than holding their own.

It was a packed evening of outstandin­g traditiona­l song, with the sense not so much that a baton was being handed over, but that all were grasping it tightly together at once.

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