The Scotsman

Calum Maccrimmon on escaping the frenzy of the tour schedule

- Jimgilchri­st Frenzy of the Meeting is on Breabach Records. For tour details, see www. breabach.com For more on the Scots Fiddle Festival, see www.scotsfiddl­efestival.com

When you seem to be on a hectic rollercoas­ter of planning, recording and touring with one of the biggest bands on the internatio­nal folk circuit, it’s no bad thing to draw breath and reconnect with the roots of your music. That at least is the gist of a recent blog by Calum Maccrimmon, one of two pipers in the award-winning Highland quintet Breabach.

The group are currently touring to promote their latest album, Frenzy

of the Meeting, a jaunt which kicked off in St Ives, Cornwall, in September and is wending its high-powered way through the UK to finish in Ullapool’s Ceilidh Place on 1 December – not forgetting a wee detour to the Celtic Colours festival in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia early last month.

Perhaps they should have called the album Frenzy of the Tour Schedule; however, it’s a characteri­stically classy production, mixing fiery pipe-and-fiddle-led instrument­als with mellow interludes, including some thoughtful songs written by Maccrimmon and singer-guitarist Ewan Robertson.

Their last album, Astar, featured numerous guests, including friends made while touring in the Antipodes. This latest just features the quintet, with digital layering at times producing an almost orchestral sound, such as the string drift of Prince’s Strand. “Essentiall­y we laid down the live tracks,” says Maccrimmon, “then we had a few days in the studio to get extra instrument­s down, with Megan Henderson sometimes doing three or four additional violin lines.”

Similarly the band’s bassist, James Lindsay, overlaid some sonorous bowed bass as well as discreet Moog synthesise­r, as in the opening of the title track, a dramatic, fiddle-led treatment of an old piobaireac­hd fragment, with Maccrimmon singing cantaireac­hd, the traditiona­l vocal method of transmitti­ng piobaireac­hd.

And it was at least partly piobaireac­hd that prompted Maccrimmon to voice his thoughts in last month’s blog, “A Gathering Thought”. In September he and another piper, John Mulhearn, with whom he runs the Big Music Society which takes an innovative approach to the art of piobaireac­hd, organised a show in Stornoway as part of the Blas Highland Festival. Entitled Crossing the Minch, the event celebrated the music of the legendary Pipe Major Donald Macleod and, as Maccrimmon relates, following a fairly intense period of writing, recording and touring with Breabach, it “kind of woke me up and subsequent­ly reinvigora­ted me to delve deeper within myself musically”.

“It’s hard to put into words,” he tells me. “I think it was simply being in the company of good people that loved music.”

He laughs: “Of course you can argue that I’m always in that kind of company. But, in a nutshell it was the idea of a small group of like-minded people getting together not to play a concert so much as to just play music in each other’s company, doing what they love doing.”

There was a moment during the event when a senior piper, the wellrespec­ted John Wilson, shouldered his pipes for an informal rendition of Macleod’s piobaireac­hd Queen

Elizabeth II’S Salute: “John’s piping in that unexpected moment took my breath away.”

No coincidenc­e, then that the 36-year-old Maccrimmon is currently seeking further tuition in cantaireac­hd from elder exponents such as Wilson. And like other members of Breabach (fellow piper James Duncan Mackenzie and bassist James Lindsay have both produced albums over the past year or so), he keeps busy with other projects. Clearly, however, touching base has its benefits.

Shifting from pipes to strings, this month also sees the return of Edinburgh’s Scots Fiddle Festival, which runs from 16-18 November – a major showcase for the instrument. The opening concert features a specially commission­ed, multimedia suite from composer Mike Vass, joined by fiddlers Patsy Reid, Jenna Reid and Lauren Maccoll, while other guests over the weekend include Sarah-jane Summers and Orcadian band Saltfish Forty and the Kinnaris Quintet reprising their recent debut album, Free One.n

“I think it was simply being in the company of good people that loved music”

 ??  ?? Calum Maccrimmon is juggling his solo project with playing in Breabach
Calum Maccrimmon is juggling his solo project with playing in Breabach
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