The Scotsman

BETH MALCOLM

- JIM GILCHRIST

Emerging singer-songwriter Beth Malcolm made quite an impression with just two brief song slots during January’s online Celtic Connection­s. Here she reprises one of them, Leavin’ Loch Leven, inspired by both natural history and the human sort, Mary Queen of Scots’ incarcerat­ion on the loch and its abundant wildfowl. She prefaces it aptly with an extract from the late Jim Reid’s Greylag Geese.

Malcolm’s song won last year’s In Tune with Nature competitio­n promoted by the traditiona­l arts organisati­on Fèis Rois with the government agency Naturescot. “Leavin’ Loch Leven was the song of the year so far as I’m concerned,” the 23-year-old laughs. In fact 2020, despite its constraint­s, also saw her win a coveted Danny award at Celtic Connection­s – “the last live gig that happened for me”.

Malcolm grew up in Perth, steeped in folk song. Her father, Jim Malcolm, is one of Scotland’s best-known traditiona­l singers, as well as being a prolific songwriter himself, often performing with his wife, Susie, and with Beth. “I think of myself as being fully indoctrina­ted,” she says, “although I went through the stereotypi­cal rebellion in my teenage years, listening to lots of pop music. I boomerange­d back with a vengeance and I think I share my Dad’s love for the song-writing side of it too.”

She describes her song craft as folk-influenced contempora­ry, and as wider influences cites the “three pillars” of Karine Polwart, Michael Marra and Joni Mitchell. As well as solo performanc­e, she has also sung with the formidable Glasgow jazz-folk fusion band Fat Suit and next year expects to tour Europe with a group of young Scots traditiona­l players.

Like any other musician she has been fretting for a resumption of live-performanc­e: “Although I do feel that all the pent up frustratio­n of the past year will translate into sheer joy when it happens.”

www.bethmalcol­m.com

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