The Sunday Post (Dundee)

The great escape: Music sessions in jail to shape rehab around the world

- By Paul English news@sundaypost.com

They have spent four years in jails around the country and emerged with songs of hope, reflection and empowermen­t.

Musicians from arts organisati­on Vox Liminis worked with prisoners and guest collaborat­ors to record the music co- written with people within the criminal justice system.

It is now hoped an academic study running parallel to the project could help shape the rehabilita­tion of offenders internatio­nally.

Looking At Colours Again is the final EP from Vox’s Distant Voices songwritin­g project with prisoners around Scotland. The initiative – a collaborat­ion between Vox Liminis and the University of Glasgow – has led to almost 300 new songs written in workshops led by Admiral Fallow frontman and Distant Voices leader Louis Abbott.

Indie acts such as Jo Mango and Martha Ffion have recorded songs for the EP, following the likes of folk favourite Kris Drever and Emma Pollock of The Delgados on previous releases.

Now the outcomes from the project are set to be published, with a leading criminolog­ist hopeful the insights gained through prisoners working in a creative setting can help influence approaches to rehabilita­tion internatio­nally.

Professor Fergus Mcneill, of University of Glasgow’s Scottish

Centre for Crime and Justice Research, hopes the findings from the collaborat­ions will help create a better understand­ing.

He said: “We have already published three academic papers, and have more in developmen­t. They are intended to challenge the discipline­s of criminolog­y, musicology, political science and sociology, both by learning from our findings and from our methods.

“We will produce learning resources to be directed at schools, colleges and universiti­es and reach people internatio­nally, maybe challenge how people understand these issues and become part of global debates about penal reform and abolition.”

The songs from the Looking At Colours Again EP were hoped to be performed as part of a festival later this year in Glasgow and Edinburgh, as well as a theatre production about returning to the community.

But with restrictio­ns around mass gatherings still in place the festival may be staged online, potentiall­y to a wider audience.

For singer songwriter Louis Abbott, the process of working with prisoners in jail, as well as after their release, has been rewarding.

He said: “It’s been great seeing the pride the folk we’ve worked with have taken in creating something.

“Many of them said they’d never be able to do something like this when we started. It offers a bit of hope. No matter what end of it you’re on, working with people to make something feels great.”

The songs on the five- track EP indicate themes of hope, recovery, addiction, empowermen­t and the passage of time.

“There are songs of regret but there are also songs of hope,” said Louis. “The songs are very colourful, we want people to respond to them.”

The sessions were held prepandemi­c, and the record was produced by Paul Savage, who has worked with bands such as Franz Ferdinand and Deacon Blue at his Chem19 studio in Blantyre.

Louis said: “I don’t think any of us came away from the sessions without feeling we’d achieved something, done some great work and met some interestin­g folk.

“People in prison are starved of creativity and human connection. That’s not a political statement, but the difference you see in a participan­t from day one to day three is astonishin­g. Some wouldn’t even look at you when they first come in. It’s about trying to build relationsh­ips.”

Professor Mcneill said: “We set out to change practices and change how people related to one another through creative collaborat­ion. One key learning from the project is how powerful making things together is.

“T h a t’s important as i t’s the antidote to alienation, estrangeme­nt, stigmatisa­tion marginalis­ation, and all the things that convention­al forms of criminal justice do to people.

“The project is something I’ll look back on with pride and gratitude for all it has taught me.”

 ??  ?? Country star Johnny Cash goes behind bars for famous concert at San Quentin prison in 1969
Country star Johnny Cash goes behind bars for famous concert at San Quentin prison in 1969
 ??  ?? Admiral Fallow’s Louis Abbott
Admiral Fallow’s Louis Abbott

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