
ABC2
24 January 2016
Sound
Atmosphere
Performance ![]()

Eleanor Nicolson, The Small Glories, Angus Munro, Michael Cassidy and Have Mercy Las Vegas
Afternoon gigs can be a dangerous thing when it comes to drawing crowds in from the street and eating into the regular habits of the public’s weekend. So it was with great relish that Hazy Recollections organiser, Scottish folk musician Findlay Napier, was in a position to disclose that the 170 tickets sold for this weekend’s show featuring Eleanor Nicolson, The Small Glories, Angus Munro, Michael Cassidy and Have Mercy Las Vegas, was the highest-selling Hazy Recollections since its inception in 2011.
Opening proceedings, the delicate eggshells which disguise themselves as teenage songbird Eleanor Nicolson’s songs would appear to be best enjoyed lying on a patch of summer festival grass with a midday sun beating down, eyes closed, and a cigarette between lips. Nicolson’s pure, untarnished hymns to heartache from her ‘White Noise’ EP were well received and the young Stornoway girl often displayed fleeting parallelisms with Eva Cassidy in songs such as “It’s Complicated” and “Whispers In The Rain”. The lovesick romanticism of “Sticks and Stones”, co-written by fellow Stornoway musician Colin McLeod, was an especially bewitching song, sang alongside accompanying musician Paul, which won the entire absorption of the ABC2 audience.

Manitoba-duo The Small Glories were added as a special guest only a day before the gig and instantly won favour with Cara Luft’s claw-hammer technique on the banjo. Dedicating “No Friend Of Mine” to their hometown after a shooting at a local school, Luft and JD Edwards haunting mouth organ continued to impress, and displayed story-telling at its finest during the maritime legend concerning a fisherman who never returned to his waiting wife in the beautiful “Long, Long Moon”. Five songs were enough to make a huge impression before the pair continued their travels to Arisaig, entirely sold out of all copies of their CD.
Findlay Napier introduced London-born but Scottish-raised keyboardist Angus Munro to proceedings. If it wasn’t already difficult enough following the terrific Small Glories, Munro had two audience members stood less than three feet away in front of him as he performed songs from 2013 EP ‘Shooting First’. Displaying an enviable vocal range, Munro’s plaintive “H.M” about Henry Moalison, the man with no memory, also showed off a terrific depth and intelligence in his lyric-writing. Slightly disappointingly, Munro’s warbling often outshone the musicianship to a point where the crowd appeared unsettled during songs such as “The Death Of Me” and “Mirror Man”. It was left to the lugubrious final song “Aftershave” to finish on a positive note, laying aside the doleful wailing for most of what prove to be Munro’s finest piece in his entire set.
Returning the gig to a more folk sound, the first ever winner of the Gerry Rafferty song-writing award Michael Cassidy stepped on to the stage. Used to performing with a full band, Cassidy brought only Connor Smith playing a Telecaster, along with him. This kept the attention focused on Cassidy’s captivating lyricism and personality which shone through songs such as “You’re Gone” and “The Road”. As delightful as Cassidy’s anecdotes were before each song, it was his creations which took centre stage with slow, thoughtful pieces such as “These Hands” and “Forever Is Falling Down” shining in the Paisley man’s set. It was perhaps a pity that there was little in the way of music from debut album ‘My Electric Heart’ but with a tour supporting Elia and the Bear next month, there will be ample opportunity for Cassidy to continue displaying the great range and depth of his song-writing to more people.
The only performance of the evening featuring a drummer was provided by folk-favourites Have Mercy Las Vegas. Whether or not it was the added presence of so many musicians on one stage which caused the energy levels of the listening crowd to increase remains to be decided but early EP track “Tear To My Eye” finally had people on their feet and moving. Despite some early banjo difficulties, new song “St Peter’s Blues” continued to drive the tempo upwards and showcase an increasingly impressive vocal performance by co-lead Eilidh Trotter. The band dynamic works best on up-tempo tracks such as “Pappy” from debut album ‘That’s Life” with fiddle, guitars, bass, banjo and drums conjuring up an intoxicating hysteria that demands the listener’s attention. Permitting one more song to be played due to the marginally early finish, Findlay Napier left HMLV to close the afternoon with the wonderfully bluesy number “Snakes and Horses”.
It was easy to see why today’s line-up had drawn such a healthy audience through its doors, from early school-age children to Celtic veterans, much of which will be available to listen to on Cumbernauld station Revival FM 100.8 FM who are licensed to record all the Hazy Recollections gigs during Celtic Connections.
Reviewer : Stephen Watt
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The main event was Drift, inspired by Betty Mouat, a 61 year old Shetland crofter, who in January 1886 drifted alone at sea for nine days from Shetland to Norway. Combining soundscapes, film, music, words & song this is a multi-media production the Mumble would have been proud of. Gerda Stevenson gallops through the libretto of Judith Adams with a great confidence & perfect delivery, & really invokes the colloquial loneliness of Betty’s trial. For the nine songs she sings – representing the nine days Betty was at sea – she is accompanied by an excellent band of acoustic musicians, who when not playing remain as still as rocks in a seastorm. Of the story given us, Macintyre hopes we would ‘glimpse the thoughts & emotions of someone whose life is hanging by a thread,’ & I dare say he has achieved his objective, a multi-sensory plunge into the North Sea which instead of freezing us to bones, warms us to the cockles of our hearts. For those wishing to experience Drift, it will be on tour this summer @
The final act of this night’s soul-easing music was Ewan Macintyre, who just so happens to be Symon’s son. An upbringing immersed in Gaelic culture shone quite clearly through his short but celebratory set of all that is best in Celtic music. His easy, honey-dripping vocals were bouyed up by some excellent melodically plodding double bass from virtuosoesque Conrad Mollesson, some neatly sliding Dobro from Gavin Taylor, & the salubrious soundsmithery of Adam Shapiro’s fiddle. Ewan had met Adam in Montreal, & together they recorded an album – You Probably Look Better Naked Anyway – which you can listen to & buy at the link below. On the night, the extended jams were lovely, & his recent return to the ‘mothership’ – ie Edinburgh – like Robert Johnson returned from the crossroads, is a welcome moment in the future of traditional Scottish music.










Director and solo violinist Joseph Swenson, an American of Norwegian and Japanese heritage, was the orchestra’s principal conductor in the early 2000s. He is himself a composer, and one of the most interesting items on the programme was his arrangement for orchestra and solo violin of Clara Schumann’s ‘Three Romances’. Earlier in the programme his performance of Massenet’s ‘Meditation’ seemed to start with a lack of confidence, but soon recovered; in the ‘Three Romances’, on the other hand, he was all confidence, and it was possible to feel his absolute and direct involvement in the music.
















Other instruments featured were the trumpet, trombone and guitar. For those wishing to explore further, The Roamin’ Jasmine released their first official CD last year (self-titled). They explore many influences from different eras and genres- sounds of Dixie are woven through with swing, blues, classic jazz and some of the songs were definitely rocking a Latino twang, with a couple of lovely calypso numbers reminiscent of long, white beaches, palm trees swaying in the wind and olive skinned señoritas.