The Scotsman

Had We Never

- FIONA SHEPHERD

Scottish National Portrait Gallery

The white marble statue of Robert Burns which stands in the Great Hall of the Portrait Gallery has of late been complement­ed by Douglas Gordon’s deconstruc­ted response, Black Burns, around which the seating was arranged for this short, intimate programme, exploring the poet’s work in the context of his almostasso­ciation with the slave trade.

Immaculate a cappella renditions of two of Burns’ most celebrated works – Brian Bannantyne-scott’s rich bass rendering of Ae Fond Kiss and David James’ spectral yearning Slave’s Lament – reverberat­ed around the atrium. But the star attraction was the first live performanc­e of a very different interpreta­tion of The Slave’s Lament, composed by Sally Beamish using a patchwork of existing melodies, played with soul by the Scottish Ensemble and sweetly sung by reggae artist Ghetto Priest, himself the star of Graham Fagen’s video installati­on elsewhere in the gallery.

Makar Jackie Kay recited her poetic response to Gordon’s work, counting the ways Burns might have ended up in Jamaica as a cog in the slave trade if he had fulfilled his original intentions to take up work as a plantation book keeper. Later, she drew parallels with hard-won 21st-century liberties in Had We Never (Remix).

The programme was completed by Samuil Marshak’s Russian translatio­ns of Burns in musical settings by Shostakovi­ch – the foreboding O Wert Thou in the Cault Blast contrastin­g with the aggressive jauntiness of

Mcpherson’s Farewell – and Arvo Part’s minimalist lamentatio­n of My Heart’s in the Highlands, which was first written in 2000 for James, counterten­or of the Hilliard Ensemble, to sing, before Bannatyne-scott led on a hearty, expressive finale of Burns’ great equality anthem A Man’s A Man.

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