Raising the Profile of Gaelic SongNORTHINGS hears about the work of Highland Council’s Màiri Mhòr Gaelic Song Fellow, Dingwall-based singer FIONA MACKENZIE |
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| FIONA MACKENZIE was appointed as Highland Council’s Màiri Mhòr Gaelic Song Fellow when the post was set up in 2002. Brought up in Moray, she is a Gaelic learner who has done much to promote the development of Gaelic song through her ongoing work in the Fellowship, and as a performer. Fiona released the first collection of Gaelic carols on CD, Duan Nollaig (Greentrax), late last year. She is a former Gold Medal winner at the National Mod, and was voted Traditional Music Personality of the Year at the Scots Trad Awards in 2004. She sings with the Inverness Gaelic Choir as well as leading Fionnar, a choir she set up in 2003 to encourage young Gaelic singers drawn from all over Scotland. She is a regular contributor to Northings. NORTHINGS: Fiona, for those not familiar with the Màiri Mhòr Gaelic Song Fellowship, can you explain how it came into being? FIONA MACKENZIE: The Fellowship was inaugurated in 2002 as a follow up to the literary fellowship that Highland Council had established, and they wanted to launch a similar project to work with Gaelic song, and to give it a bit more profile. I started really with a clean canvas, and it was up to me to develop the programme, which was initially for three years, but was further extended in 2005. N: And the name? FM: It was called the Màiri Mhòr Fellowship after Màiri Mhòr nan Oran (Mary Macpherson), a Skye woman who wrote and sang Gaelic songs. They chose that name because they wanted a figurehead who represented the fight for Gaelic culture within the Highlands, and the strength of the people, and Màiri Mhòr filled the bill. N: How did you go about mapping out the job from that blank canvas? FM: First of all I contacted all of the schools in the area to try to gauge what sort of support there might be for offering something within the curriculum, whether or not they were Gaelic medium schools. I spoke to as many teachers and providers of music tuition as I could, and advertised within the Highland Council itself for people who might be interested in coming to community classes. I then went out and visited schools, and I reckon I have been around about three-quarters of the schools in Highland Region now. However, I came to realise that was not the best way of utilising my time or my skills – it is great to have that element of personal contact, but it is not very time-efficient. From that realisation we developed the Seinn o ho ro Seinn teaching package, which included a double CD. Every school in Highland got a copy of that, so that if it wasn’t practical for me to go to a particular school, they had a resource the teachers could use, and if they were keen, I could back that up with workshops or whatever. N: But your work hasn’t been limited to schools? FM: No, and it is not totally restricted to Highland Region, either. I had the discretion to do some work outside of the Highland Council area, and I gradually established a network of contacts in the arts world outside of the Council area that I could also offer Fellowship services to, working with festivals or other organisations. I’ve worked extensively with Fèisean nan Gàidheal, for example, and one of the things that has developed that I didn’t necessarily expect is that I have become something of an international reference source for providing all kinds of information and contacts on Gaelic song. That has really taken off, and I am deluged with requests from all over the world now, which is an indication of the growing response to Gaelic song globally. |
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N: Have you done work with professional musicians through the Fellowship? |
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N: How did Highland 2007 impact on your work? |
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N: How did you get started on performing? N: You mention the Mod, which continues to come under fire in certain quarters – how important do you think it is in the current context of Gaelic song? |
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N: Overall, then, are we in a healthy situation as far as Gaelic song is concerned? Links |
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16 Mar 2010 | |
09 Mar 2010 | |
19 Jan 2010 |
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March 2010 Editorial |
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