FIVE STARS review – Traditional dance music made rows of seats an unnecessary impediment

★★★★★

Glasgow

Celtic Connections

The Scotland Herald!

 

CELTIC CONNECTIONS: REVIEW read the full article

Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino,

O2 ABC, Glasgow

Keith Bruce

FIVE STARS

Boasting a name longer than one understands racehorses are permitted, Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino (CGS) hail from the heel of the boot of Italy in Puglia and sing in a mixture of Salentino and modern Italian. Their presence in the city for the first time is precisely what makes Celtic Connections special. As well as a moving contemporary song about the migrants perilously arriving in their country today (its title translated by leader Mauro Durante as One Way Ticket), the sextet, joined for some of the set by a very lovely dancer, play traditional dance music that made the rows of seats installed in the venue an unnecessary impediment.

With three very different and very fine singers in their number as well as virtuosi on pipes, whistles, button accordian, fiddle, bouzouki and tamburello, CGS are like a Mediterranean version of the high energy Quebecois groups we have seen and heard in previous years. Durante’s party-piece of tuned feedback on a solo for tambourine and Shure SM57 microphone was a first in my listening experience however.

If CGS are hot, support act Complete are effortlessly cool. A sharply-suited acapella quartet from South Africa, who have been mentored by Hugh Masekela and Ladysmith Black Mambazo’s Joseph Shababala, they too are in the city for the first time, and it is unlikely the festival will contain anything more multi-cultural than their version of My Yiddishe Mama, or their take on Gaelic waulking song.

And if the showstopping I Love My Beautiful Woman is available as a download, I hereby instigate a campaign for our new favourite boy band to have the Valentine’s Day Number One.

 

Follow us live on BBC radio 3

BBC Celtic Connections

 

Mary Ann Kennedy live from Glasgow at one of the world’s biggest winter music festivals, with special late-night performances from the CCA, the BBC’s hub on Sauchiehall Street.

On the line-up tonight is one of world music’s classic bands, Taraf de Haidouks, who for 25 years have taken the energy and intensity of Romanian gipsy music to the world; Songhoy Blues, a young desert blues punk band from Timbuktu in Mali; and Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino from southern Italy, one of the country’s oldest folk bands but now in its second generation, refreshing the songs and dances of Puglia’s pizzica and tarantella traditions.

Celtic Connections is held in 20 venues over 18 days with 300 events taking place throughout the whole festival, involving over two thousand musicians from 26 countries. Scots and Irish Celtic music is at the centre of the festival, but it has always embraced the music of the Celtic cultures of the USA, Canada, France and Spain, together with the closely connected cultures of Scandinavia and eastern Europe. In recent years the Festival has also connected with traditions across Africa and Asia. The concerts range from the most traditional to the most experimental, all brought together in the context of one of the world’s liveliest folk cultures, with a never-ending stream of young Scottish musicians who are reinventing their own traditions for their own time.

This is the second of two live late-night sessions from Glasgow’s Centre for Contemporary Arts, each featuring some of the best acts from the Festival. It is part of BBC Music’s extensive coverage of Celtic Connections, also featuring on BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio Scotland, BBC2 TV in Scotland, and BBC Music Online.

Tickets available from the BBC Tickets website from Friday 16th January.

 

Recording Quaranta, the new CGS album

ph. Vincenzo De Pinto

Recording is done! we’re full of emotions, now waiting for this new album just like you! “I will never leave my dreams aside”