The Scotsman

Patti Smith and co invoke people power for COP26

- FIONA SHEPHERD

Pathway to Paris Theatre Royal, Glasgow

On the eve of COP26, the Theatre Royal hosted the latest thoughtful creative agitation from Pathway to Paris, a nonprofit organisati­on bringing artists, poets and musicians into the climate movement.

Founders Jesse Paris Smith and Rebecca Foon, on piano and cello respective­ly, have some influentia­l connection­s, not least veteran climate campaigner Bill Mckibben who Mced much of the evening, and Smith’s mother – High Priestess of Punk, Patti Smith.

But we also heard directly from those at the sharp end – from Mary Kinyua, the Chair of Fairtrade Africa, Ugandan youth activist Vanessa Nakate and Mohamed Nasheed, the former President of the Maldives, who survived an assassinat­ion attempt earlier this year. All speak with dignity, purpose and urgency about their particular frontlines, so much so that the actions the audience were encouraged to take part in – shining Little Sun lights, writing a letter to Jpmorgan Chase exec Jamie Dimon –

felt rather meagre in comparison.

New York’s Soundwalk Collective underlaid two specially commission­ed pieces with their field recordings and ambient soundscape­s. Tibetan composer Tenzin Choegyal led Khandroma on singing bowl, Himalayan flute and soulful lamentatio­n. From the roof of the world, they dived to the ocean floor as Patti Smith intoned the slow, sombre Cry of the Lost, unfolding like a real-life fable of marine apocalypse, later complement­ed by her own portentous My Blakean Year.

Fife’s finest, Kenny Anderson – aka King Creosote – joined this internatio­nal line-up to perform a couple of his distinctiv­e aching lullabies. Smith, a professed fan, swapped lyrical notes and joined him for the melancholy uplift of Pauper’s Dough and the pair were augmented by the rest of the climate cast plus members of Belle & Sebastian, The Pastels and Future Pilot AKA for a suitably stirring finale of Smith’s autonomous anthem People Have the Power, an evergreen affirmatio­n needed now more than ever.

 ?? ?? Patti Smith, the High Priestess of Punk
Patti Smith, the High Priestess of Punk

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