The Scotsman

Moving take on the rise and fall of Greenock rock n’ roll

- ANDY CLARK JOYCE MCMILLAN

The history of rock music in Scotland is long, proud, complicate­d, and often inspiratio­nal. It’ s a story filled with the passion of young working-class people who found little inspiratio­n in the official culture of the state they were living in, but heard in the postwar transatlan­tic wave of blues, jazz and rock’n’roll a voice they could adopt as their own.

Andy Mcgregor’s new short film ever young, created in lock down at the Beacon Arts Centre in Greenock, is ane wand exceptiona­lly moving reflection on this familiar story,the remembered rise and fall of a 1990s Greenock rock band to an exploratio­n of whether that creative impulse still has the power to bring a sense of freedom and renewal, in what seem like much darker times.

The film acts as a taster for a full-length stage musical, Battery Park, which is planned for next year; and it takes the form of a dialogue between the band’ s former singer and song-writer, Tommy – now in his late forties, and slumped in the bar of his local bowling club – and a young student called lucy, who insists on talking to him about her enthusiasm for the band’s music and his songwritin­g, and turns out to be more closely connected to the band’s story than Tommy ever imagined.

In this brief extract for the Scotsman Sessions, Clark – who plays Tommy in the film, opposite superb young scottish actress Rosie Graham–introduces­us to the story of the band he once led, along with his brilliant brother Ed; we also catch filmed glimpses of the band’s remembered glory days, and of contempora­ry Greenock, one of Scotland’s most battered and spectacula­r post-industrial towns.

Andy Clark is one of Scotland’s most sought-after stage actors, always focusing on theatre work despite appearance­s on television series including River City, Rebus and Taggart. Over the last 20 years, he has played well over 50 major roles in scottish theatre production­s. A dedicated ensemble actor, he has already appeared in Scotsman Sessions based on Morna Young’s Lost At Sea (2019), and Liz Lochhead’s short Scots version of Tartuffe; and at Christmas 2018, he made full use of his musical skills, as bob cratchit in the citizens’ theatre’s Achristmas Carol at the Tramway.

Andy Mcgregor, by contrast, is a backstage powerhouse of small-scale musical theatre making in Scotland, a writer, director and composer who has built a formidable reputation, over the last decade, for Play, Pie And Pint musicals including Spuds and Crocodile Rock, and across a huge range of theatre from children’s shows to the annual paisley arts centrepant­o. He also teaches and directs at the Royal Conservato­ire of Scotland, where he trained. For Mcgregor, music is always an integral part of theatre; and here, he seizes the chance to tell a powerful story with all his usual play-writing flair, but also to explore a theme–the making of new music, and its power to offer new beginnings when everything seems lost – that could hardly be closer to his heart.

The full 25 minute film of ever Young is available to watch at https://www.beaconarts­centre.co.uk/beacon-connect/beaconconn­ect-watch/ever-young/

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