The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Big awards show can hopefully spark a lively traditiona­l music scene in city

- Alistair Heather

The biggest awards in Scottish traditiona­l music are happening in Dundee on Sunday – and it’s going to be a hell of a showcase. BBC Alba broadcasts the Scots Trad Music Awards every year, as the glitzy night rattles through awards for outstandin­g singers, up-and-coming musicians, innovative bands and all the people within the culture and country who keep the trad music scene buzzing with vibrant life.

The whole thing is punctuated with performanc­es from outstandin­g acts.

I’m presenting it in Scots, alongside the BBC Alba stalwart and brilliant singer in her own right Mary-ann Kennedy, who’ll be doing the Gaelic segments.

Between the two of us we’ll slip in some begrudged lines in the King’s English too. But no too much.

The event is yet another example of the positive economic impact of Gaelic on Tayside.

Just a month or so ago, the leading Gaelic competitio­n, the annual Mòd, came to Perth and livened up a sleepy week in the Fair City with evening gigs, daytime workshops and regular ceilidhs and sessions in the pubs.

That’s a lot of money through the tills of pubs – the Gaelic mob are a drouthy enough bunch when the moment arises.

But the event also generated bodies in hotel beds, taxis, cash to caterers, to temporary venue staff, employment for local sound engineers, lighting engineers and all the rest besides.

The Scots Trad Music Awards are a big deal for Dundee

Na Trads – which is the shorthand for the Scots trad music awards – is even bigger. A lot of real money will roll into Tayside for these awards.

And frankly, anyone who hopes to reduce the value of our indigenous languages like Gaelic down to a mere profit-and-loss spreadshee­t is already so base and mercantile, so devoid of spirit and soul, that they arnae worth bothering with.

It’s just useful that we remind ourselves (when so many froth at the mooth aboot polis cars haein Gaelic on them) that there’s a huge amount of money produced when big cultural events come along

There’s layers of excitement for me with these awards being in Dundee.

One is obviously that I get to present them. I will roam the boards of the Caird Hall introducin­g acts, smiling inanely and applauding heartily.

I’ll be on the same stage David Bowie trod, just a few decades later. Some buzz.

Another layer is just the tremendous quality of the musical talent that will be on display. Natrads gets the best.

If you arnae plugged in to the traditiona­l music scene – and many of us arnae – then you’ll likely no be familiar wi the names on stage.

But you’ll absolutely be blown away by what they can do.

Old traditions, new talent – and a prime platform for Dundee

For decades, an increasing­ly confident, rejuvenate­d and experiment­al tide has been turning within the traditiona­l music scene.

Nae mair are we limited to foostie auld boys strumming oot wistful anthems of yesterday as the sum total of our national art.

Now the scene is youth-led and super talented.

Groups like the The Shee and Kinnaris Quintet are doing things you just wouldnae have imagined.

And Dundee has, to date, missed out on this.

Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Glasgow have really buzzing sessions every single night of the week, where deeply talented musicians from all sorts of background­s meet and share tunes.

A few wee gatherings aside, we lack the real engine-room sessions that liven up the other big cities.

This is a bit of a shame in my book because we have such a tremendous musical and song heritage.

The poems of Marion Angus and Violet Jacob, for example. Or the singing of Jim Reid.

The recorded ballads from across the centuries demand fresh generation­s of singers.

Arbroath’s Steve Byrne won Scots Singer of the Year in 2019.

Monifieth’s Calum Maccrimmon has won four awards over the years with his outstandin­g band Breabach.

Na Trads coming to town gives the city a chance to reckon with this national cultural renaissanc­e.

It’s also a chance to show off Dundee to a wide audience.

And none of this would be happening if it wasnae for our indigenous languages, Gaelic and Scots, which are the mediums of the awards and a great deal of the songs.

And talking of tradition, how good is soup? I’ve started a new job where they have soup for just £1.05 in the canteen and its a different flavour every day.

Carrot and apple was an unwelcome curveball, the roasted parsnip a triumph.

I think soup is a thing that Scotland does better than any other country I’ve ever lived in or passed through.

Our root veg is tasty and abundant. Our evenings are dark and chill and they suit a soup better than any other meal.

And, luckily, our grannies have left us with a billion class recipes (meaning carrot and apple need not be repeated).

Great. Good old soup.

Tremendous quality of musical talent will be on display

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 ?? ?? SOME BUZZ: Alistair and Mary-ann Kennedy, who will be on the Caird Hall stage on Sunday to present the Scots Trad Music Awards.
SOME BUZZ: Alistair and Mary-ann Kennedy, who will be on the Caird Hall stage on Sunday to present the Scots Trad Music Awards.

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