Teine | |
| HEBRIDEAN CELTIC FESTIVAL DAY 1 (Town Hall, Stornoway, Wednesday 14 July 2004) | |
15 July 2004PETER URPETH sees the 2004 edition of the Hebridean Celtic Festival get off to a flying start.THE HEBRIDEAN CELTIC FESTIVAL opened its doors this year to the sound of Teine, a young quartet of singers and multi-instrumentalists from Lewis whose presence on this hallowed stage is not only justified by the quality of their music, but is also totally symptomatic of the vitality, self-confidence and optimism that this Festival brings to the island. “A great opening night in which your writer did not know whether to laugh, cry or clap, but that’s what great music does to you.”The main act of the evening was Maggie Macinnes and her band. Maggie is one of only very few singers working in Gaelic traditional music today who can sing these songs in the ‘first person’ and can make the listener feel as though he or she is being addressed as an individual with similar clarity and with the full force of the same reality. Such singers remind us that the voice and song are central to what makes us human beings, and songs are the impulsive consequences of our most profound emotional needs and our need for community. This music is as contemporary as it comes. In the band was guitarist Kevin MacKenzie, a fluid and inventive soloist more usually found in the jazz cellar, and it is from there that he acquired the taste for a fresh range of nuances in his acoustic playing - at times Reinhardt, and at others Frisell and Metheny, but always MacKenzie. With Brian McAlpine on keyboards, Charlie McKerron on fiddle and Findlay MacDonald on pipes all on hand, the evening was not going to pass without a riot of reels, and that is what we got. Now, as ever, people make festivals, and if only I had the time and space to tell you about the American visitor to this Festival whose one time day job was as Harvey Keitel’s Elvis voice coach. Maybe tomorrow… (Peter Urpeth claims to be the Gold Medal winner in the Best Photo on a Festival Press Card Competition) © Peter Urpeth, 2004 See also July 2004 Review: Hebridean Celtic Festival Day 2 Related Links: | |