The Scotsman

Burns festival will feature speed whisky tasting and silent disco

- By BRIAN FERGUSON Arts Correspond­ent

Speed whisky tasting, an outdoor silent disco under a giant glitterbal­l, a Hebridean village hall ceilidh and Tam O’shanter recital accompanie­d by dance performanc­es will transform some of Edinburgh’s most historic spaces as part of a new Robert Burnsinspi­red festival.

Organisers of the new Burns & Beyond festival will also recreate an 18th century Enlightenm­ent-era tavern, stage a club night with an all-female line-up of DJS and run an undergroun­d comedy club.

Greyfriars Kirk, Edinburgh University’s New College Quad and St Giles Cathedral will host one-off events, along with a century-old masonic hall on George Street, a 19th century merchants hall on Frederick Street and a former church on Rose Street.

They will be transforme­d as part of a £25-a-head Burns & Beyond Culture Trail, which will be staged for four hours on Saturday 26 January.

It is hoped up to 3000 people will take part in the centrepiec­e of the new £250,000 festival, which is being funded by the Scottish Government and Edinburgh City Council.

It is hoped the event, which will extend the city’s winter festival season to 10 weeks, will become an annual fixture at one of the quietest times in the city’s tourism calendar.

Unique Events, the firm which founded Edinburgh’s Hogmanay celebratio­ns, has revived the format of its hugely-popular Scot:lands event, which was staged on New Year’s Day for several years.

Ticket-holders for the new event will be sent to one of eight different venues to start their own trail around Edinburgh’s Old and New Towns. Audiences will be encouraged

0 The Burns & Beyond festival will take over some of Edinburgh’s most historic spaces at the end of January

to keep moving on during the night to ensure they experience each venue and its lineup of performers.

Key collaborat­ors with Unique Events include the Isle of Eigg based musician Johnny Lynch, better known as The Pictish Trail, the Edinburgh arts collective Neu! Reekie!, Musicians from the awardwinni­ng folk trio Lau, Fringe promoters Gilded Balloon and silent disco firm Silent Adventures.

A spokeswoma­n for Burns & Beyond, which will run from 22-27 January, said: “Audiences will embark on a cultural journey, discoverin­g hidden performanc­es on a trail leading them to eight landmark buildings and secret spaces spread across the city centre.

“Venues will be transforme­d, providing surprises throughout

the night, as audiences will only find out who is performing in each venue when they get there.”

Other in the Burns & Beyond line-up include a free family ceilidh, pop-up appearance­s by the Nevis Ensemble street orchestra and an alternativ­e Burns Supper.

Unique Events director Alan Thomson said: “We love our rich cultural landscape, and are proud of our heritage and notoriousl­y warm hospitalit­y. What better way to bring it all together than around Burns Night?”

Roddy Smith, chief executive of city centre business group Essential Edinburgh, said: “We have such a rich cultural heritage it is fitting that the city centre is hosting much of the celebratio­n of the life of our national Bard.”

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