PERFECT PLATFORM FOR 2011 BLAS FESTIVAL 28/07/2011
An extravaganza of piping and much more besides is guaranteed when Blas 2011 takes over Eden Court Empire Theatre on Saturday, September 10. And there are now just six weeks left to lift-off. In “Celebrating the Regal Pipe”, Blas 2011 has assembled a stellar cast of top-class pipers with the MacDonald brothers of Glenuig, in their own inimitable style, leading the charge with panache. Their supporting cast features Mairearad Green, Seudan and the prodigious talents of Oban High School Pipe Band, who were crowned World Junior Champions in 2011. No surprise there then as their tutor is none other than one of the world’s best himself, Angus McColl, who is no stranger to Eden Court and championship piping. It promises to be an extraordinary evening’s entertainment according to Festival Director Donna Macrae. She said: “Anyone who has been in an audience with the MacDonald brothers knows what to expect - anything could happen - and that some sort of extravaganza is guaranteed. They never disappoint. The piping scene is a richly entertaining and vibrant scene at the moment and it is entirely fitting that we are staging this event just a week after the Piping Olympics and the Northern Meeting Competition at Eden Court. The balance and mix of our line-up should guarantee a remarkable evening’s entertainment. I suspect that the Oban band under the guidance of the legendary Angus MacColl may well steal the show. They have achieved a fantastic level of performance and success and they will grasp the opportunity to show us in Inverness what they are capable of and that they fully deserve their status as World Junior champions.” No doubt the pipers may be tempted to play the famous tune “Cabar-fèidh” to mark Scottish Natural Heritage’s support for the Blas Festival this year as part of their contribution to the Scottish Venison Partnership. SNH will be promoting venison, and offering a taste, at the Eden Court event, linking the land and culture with that healthiest of Scottish produce. Eden Court is also the venue, on Tuesday 13th September, for the world premier of a new commission “Balach na Bonaid”. Described as the folk world’s answer to “Peter and the Wolf”, Aonghas MacNeacail has reworked into Gaelic the adventure story “The Boy and the Bunnet” by celebrated Scots award-winning novelist, James Robertson. Newly commissioned music by Caithness pianist James Ross will add to the production which has as characters a stag, seilkie, a craw and a cat. The women take over Eden Court on Thursday 15th September with some of Gaeldom’s “great ladies of song” providing another top line-up in An Guth (The Voice) - Karen Matheson and her band, Kathleen MacInnes and her band, Annie Grace, Karine Polwart and Corrina Hewat, and young Gaelic singing sensation Canntaireachd led by Eilidh Mackenzie, Scottish Trad Awards Gaelic Singer of the year. This year’s Blas festival will deliver nearly 100 cultural events in venues across the Highlands ranging from community halls to Inverness Airport, The Jacobite Queen cruise boat and Eden Court Theatre and the Blas 2011 Grand Finale on Saturday 17th follows shinty’s big day in Inverness and the Scottish Hydro Camanachd Cup Final. The full programme and information about several ways in which to buy tickets – which are still available at a reduced rate until the end of this week (July 31) - is available from the festival website http://www.blas-festival.com.
CREATIVE SCOTLAND BACKS 2011 BLAS FESTIVAL 21/07/2011
The seventh Blas festival in the Highlands and Islands has received a major boost with the confirmation of £50,000 investment from Creative Scotland. The investment from the national leader for Scotland’s arts, screen and creative industries has enabled the organisers of Blas, which has established itself as the premier event celebrating all that is good about the Gaelic language and culture of the Highlands, to offer a packed programme of events which features top performers and two new commissions, one celebrating the culture of Scotland’s islands. This year’s Blas festival will deliver nearly 100 cultural events between 9 and 17 September in venues across the Highlands ranging from community halls to Inverness Airport, The Jacobite Queen cruise boat and Eden Court Theatre. Welcoming the news, Arthur Cormack of organisers Fèisean nan Gàidheal said: “The additional investment from Creative Scotland for Blas 2011 is a major boost. Most people will be aware of the funding pressures which we have had to face, in common with every other arts organisation and event. As part of Creative Scotland’s role is to enable creativity to shine at home and abroad, Blas will certainly be well burnished with this assistance. It will enable us to approach the starting date of the festival at the beginning of September with increased confidence and hopefully Creative Scotland will continue to invest in future Blas festivals.” Traditional music as well as Gaelic language and song are the bedrock of the festival but, for the first time, Blas will also have a strand featuring Gaelic writers, organised in collaboration with Comhairle nan Leabhraichean - the Gaelic Books Council. The 2011 festival is also a key part of the Year of Scotland’s Islands initiative and with tickets sales holding up well, the festival looks set to be a roaring success. Ian Smith, Portfolio Manager for Music and IP Development, Creative Scotland, said, “The Blas Festival is a true celebration of Highland music and culture, and this year’s line up doesn’t disappoint with performances from some of Scotland’s best traditional artists. The Blas Festival is also an excellent platform for the Fèis movement, offering young performers the opportunity to learn and develop their skills in traditional dance, music and song. We are delighted to have invested in the Blas Festival at a time when we are reviewing our interaction with the Highlands and Islands region as a whole.” Featured artists at Blas 2011 will include top musical talent such as Karen Matheson, Karine Polwart, Iain Morrison & Daibhidh Martin, Kathleen MacInnes, Maggie MacInnes & Colum Sands and chart-bidders Mànran. The Blas Festival is a partnership between Fèisean nan Gàidheal, the Promoters Arts Network and its main funder, The Highland Council. The full programme and information about several ways in which to buy tickets – which are still available at a reduced rate until the end of this week (July 31) - is available from the festival website http://www.blas-festival.com.
Early bird ticket opportunities for adults are still available for this year’s Blas festival, but only until the last day of July, when the offer closes. The “reel deal” tickets at much reduced prices will remain available to July 31 when the prices will revert to the full rate. Reductions for adult tickets normally benefit audiences with £14 tickets down to £12, and the £12 ones down to £10. From Sunday August 1, normal rates will apply and the prices will be as advertised on the Blas festival website and printed in the festival programme. Blas Director Donna MacRae said: “The response to our early bird offer has been very worthwhile and it is worth highlighting to people that there is still time to take advantage of the reductions as they represent very good value. We believe that the ticket pricing structure even at the full rate is very reasonable, but there is clearly an incentive now to beat the deadline at the end of the month. Some of our events are heavily subscribed so I would urge everyone, to avoid disappointment and take a look at what they would like to come and see. Then, obviously, to book tickets through the usual channels as quickly as possible. The sooner the tickets are secured, the better for everyone.” There has been world-wide interest in events at Blas 2011 with a party of 50 from Germany signing up to see the festival’s in-house band Inside Track at one of their dates on their extensive tour, at Inverness airport on September 12. High the list of events included in the early bird offer is Hallaig, a musical celebration of the poetry of Sorley MacLean with musical director Kenneth Thomson featuring compositions by Stuart MacRae, Mary Ann Kennedy, Eilidh Mackenzie, Marie-Louise Napier, Allan Macdonald, Blair Douglas, Donald Shaw, Allan Henderson and Kenneth Thomson. Hallaig was one of the cleared townships on Raasay. The poem on which this musical work is based was composed by Sorley MacLean in 1952, and was first published in Gairm in 1954. The poem is perhaps the best known of Sorley MacLean’s work, and a translation of ‘Hallaig’ by Irish Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney was published by Urras Shomhairle, the Sorley MacLean Trust, in 2002. Hallaig, under the musical direction of Kenneth Thomson, is being staged to mark the 100th anniversary of the birth of Sorley MacLean, in conjunction with Urras Shomhairle. Performers at Inverness Cathedral on Friday September 16 and Sabhal Mòr Òstaig on Skye on Saturday 17th September include Dingwall Gaelic choir, Brian McAlpine, Gordon Gunn, Dougie Pincock, Jenna Cumming, Rhona MacKay, Alasdair Whyte, Mary McCarthy, Jack Evans and Su-a Lee. ... Ends
Scotland’s Islands ensures Blas nan Eilean 27/06/2011
Scotland's Islands, in the midst of a year-long celebration of all that is special about them, are at the heart of this year’s Blas festival giving the audience a flavour of island culture – Blas nan Eilean. Additional funding of £30,000 has enabled Blas organisers to include a number of prestigious events which would not otherwise have been possible. Murdo Mackay of the Scotland’s Islands initiative said: “We are excited to include Blas 2011 as a flagship event in the Year of Scotland’s Islands, and look forward to this year’s enhanced programme including the new strand focusing on island culture. The festival is set to be a real draw for visitors to Skye as well as the island community.” The highlight of the unique collaboration between the two events is a special commission led by one of the UK’s top musicians Julie Fowlis. Combining newly composed and traditional material influenced by the uninhabited island of Heisgeir (often referred to as The Monach Isles) and building on her own family connections to the island, Julie has taken her inspiration from its geography, history and legends. Using lyrical, film, narrative and musical devices to bring different aspects of the work to life, ‘Heisgeir’ will feature acclaimed musicians Éamon Doorley and Duncan Chisholm. ‘Heisgeir’ will open the Blas Festival on Friday September 9 at Phipps Hall in Beauly. A week later, in the year marking the centenary of Raasay’s Sorley MacLean, Blas 2011 will reprise Hallaig, which was commissioned from Highland composer Stuart MacRae (whose parents are from Skye) by Urras Shomhairle, the Sorley MacLean Trust, for Celtic Connections 2009. Inverness Cathedral will be the venue for this unique musical celebration of the poetry of Sorley MacLean on 16 September with musical director Kenneth Thomson featuring compositions by Stuart MacRae, Mary Ann Kennedy, Eilidh Mackenzie, Marie-Louise Napier, Allan Macdonald, Blair Douglas, Donald Shaw, Allan Henderson and Kenneth Thomson. Hallaig will also be performed in Skye at Sabhal Mòr Ostaig on Friday, September 16. In a culmination of a very special synthesis, Blas 2011 celebrates the Year of Scotland's Islands with a series of "Island Cèilidhs" showcasing some of the best known Gaelic singers from the islands along with great traditional accompaniment. The line-up includes John (Seonaidh Beag) MacMillan, Mary Smith, Chrissie MacVicar, Paul MacCallum, Mary Catherine MacNeill, Iain MacKay and Ian and Murdo Cameron. In the style of the wandering minstrels of bygone generations, the Blas islanders are about to take the Highlands by storm and will give everyone a taste of what it’s like to be at an island cèilidh. The venues for the cèilidhs are Glendale in Skye, Glenelg Village Hall, Eigg, Mallaig, Raasay and Strathy. Arthur Cormack of Fèisean nan Gàidheal, the organisation contracted by the Highland Council to run Blas said: “We are very grateful to the Scotland’s Islands initiative for additional funding which has allowed us to programme unique elements of island culture into the 2011 Blas Festival but, more importantly, it allows us to take high quality events to communities in some of Scotland’s islands including Skye, Raasay and Eigg. We wanted to celebrate island culture in the islands as well as bringing island culture to mainland venues and working with Scotland’s Islands is allowing us to do so.”
For the first time, the 2011 Blas Festival will have its own band in residence when the festival takes off across the Highlands on 9 September. Now with a world-wide reputation, The Outside Track play a fabulous mix of Scottish, Canadian and Irish music and song and feature step-dance. Hailing from Scotland, Ireland, Cape Breton and Vancouver, its five members are united by a love of traditional music and a commitment to creating new music on its foundation. They will bring to Blas 2011 a unique blend of boundless energy and unmistakable joie de vivre – in anyone’s terms, the recipe for a real Highland Hooley. The Outside Track features Mairi Rankin from Mabou in Cape Breton (whose mother is from North Uist and went to teach Gaelic in Cape Breton) and Cape Breton Celtic Supergroup Beòlach on fiddle, vocals and step-dance; Canadian Traditional Singer of the Year nominee Norah Rendell on vocals, flute and whistle; BBC Young Trad Finalist Ailie Robertson on harp and step-dance; BBC Fame Academy Winner Fiona Black on accordion; and Cillian Ó Dalaigh of Trazz on guitar, vocals and step-dance. Each player within The Outside Track is a master of their chosen instrument with the band stacking up an impressive amount of international awards. This amount of talent alone would be enough to recommend the band but in this case the end result is genuinely greater than the sum of the parts. The band have enjoyed 5 years of extensive touring in the UK, Europe, Canada and the USA, including appearances at Celtic Connections, Celtic Colours, Goderich, Mission, Memoire et Racines, Sidmouth, and Whitby Festivals. This September, they will light up Blas 2011 as the Band in Residence. Festival Director Donna Macrae said: “We are delighted to have a band of the calibre of The Outside Track as our first ever Band in Residence. Individually, they are outstanding musicians and we are looking forward to hearing the sum of the parts when they appear together during a busy 9 days for the band at the festival in September.” The Outside Track will appear across the Highlands throughout the festival with shows including Ullapool, Portree, Invergarry, Ballachulish, Portmahomack and Poolewe. The band will also feature in school performances and workshops as part of the Blas Education Programme, organised by the Highland Council’s Arts Links Officer, which reaches around 5,000 school pupils annually. Now in its 7th full year, Blas has matured into a recognised cultural landmark and continues to forge links and work together with other organisations, celebrating the distinct Gaelic culture of the Highlands.
They say there is gold in the hills, but on one evening this September, there will be more than a sprinkling of gold dust on the stage of Fort William’s Nevis Centre when the Blas 2011 Festival comes to town. As part of the celebrations marking the 50th anniversary of Lochaber High School, Blas festival organisers have invited a group of some of the school’s illustrious (allegedly) former pupils, who have spread Lochaber’s fame far and wide, to reminisce and rejoice in their collective and individual past. From the world of politics and sport they will arrive, with no super-injunctions to protect their identities. They will be accompanied by some of the best musicians to have emerged from Lochaber’s vibrant music scene to provide a heady concoction of wit, repartee and entertainment. Amongst those joining the list of celebrities will be Catherine Macleod, Donald Park, Charles Kennedy, Duncan Shearer and a glittering array of local musical talent which will feature, along with others, the Lochaber High School pipe band. Trying to keep all of this in line will be two compères whom are also former pupils: Hugh Dan MacLennan who will perform a Michael Parkinson-type role, with musician and shinty superstar (his own description) Gary Innes the Graeme Norton-style counterpoint. Both have a well-known shared interest in shinty and have combined to head up an intriguing mix of nostalgia and fun the evening before the 2011 Camanachd Cup Final which this year links up with the Blas festival. Hugh Dan MacLennan said: “It’s fascinating to look back and try and get a handle on the impact a school like Lochaber has made on the national stage, never mind its contribution to the local community. If you consider the impact made in national politics and broadcasting by people such as Charles Kennedy and Catherine Macleod (whose mother taught me in Caol Primary School incidentally), then in the sporting sphere footballers Donald Park and Duncan Shearer, it is simply remarkable. They will have plenty tales to tell and who knows we may have a surprise or two up our sleeves. Along with the superb set of musicians we have assembled, kit should be quite a night.” This past year marks a significant milestone in the history of the Lochaber High School. Current Head teacher Jim Sutherland said: “When former pupils gathered to mark the 50th anniversary of the school it was quite apparent that former pupils were proud to have represented the school, both in terms of what they had achieved whilst there and what they had done thereafter, displaying all sorts of talents and performing with distinction in many areas far and wide. The line-up for Lochaber Gold is representative of that range of achievement and those appearing will, I am sure, act as great motivators and inspiration to the current pupils at the school that they can similarly go on and perform at the highest level, whatever stage they chose to perform on. Gary Innes’ role as musical director of the show is not without its risks as he is planning for the event presently not knowing whether he may be involved in the Camanachd Cup Final at Inverness with Fort William the next day. He said: “It would be hard to find another school which has produced such a fantastic set of musicians, especially since the 1990s when the whole thing seems to have taken off. We are all delighted to be able to contribute to this celebration of what we got in Lochaber High and I have no doubt that the work done by the Fèisean movement in Lochaber has been the driver which enabled us all to discover our roots and offer us the opportunity to develop our talents as musicians. Some of us don’t go so far back in the history of the school as others, but we are all part of it and this will be a great tribute to the school and what has gone on the area.” Along with Gary will be Kaela Rowan, James Mackintosh, Ewen Henderson, Megan Henderson, Duncan Nicholson, Ingrid Henderson, Iain MacFarlane, Allan Henderson, Annie Grace, Angus Grant, Andrew Stevenson and Ross Martin. Lochaber Gold is just one of a range of top quality musical events being staged by the 2011 Blas Festival organisers celebrating the rich heritage of the Highlands and Islands in the year of Scotland’s Islands. Blas is now firmly established as the premier Gaelic festival celebrating Highland culture.
Our first 3 press releases are below with a download version in Gaelic. ISLAND CULTURE TO THE FORE AS 2011 BLAS FESTIVAL LAUNCHES - May A strand of programming featuring top performers and a major new commission celebrating the culture of Scotland’s islands will be at the heart of this year’s Blas Festival, which has established itself as the premier event celebrating all that is good about the Gaelic language and culture of the Highlands. Blas organisers launched the 2011 programme at one of its event venues, Eden Court in Inverness. Blas will deliver nearly 100 cultural events all over the Highlands between 9 and 17 September in venues ranging from community halls to Inverness Airport, The Jacobite Queen cruise boat and Eden Court Theatre. Traditional music as well as Gaelic language and song are the bedrock of the festival but, for the first time, Blas will also have a strand featuring Gaelic writers, organised in collaboration with Comhairle nan Leabhraichean - the Gaelic Books Council. The festival is a key part of the Year of Scotland’s Islands initiative and will feature a new commission – Heisgeir – from Gaelic singing sensation Julie Fowlis, as well as a series of Islands Cèilidhs featuring some of our best-loved Gaelic singers performing in village halls across the Highlands. Another of the Scotland’s Islands events will celebrate 100 years since the birth of the Raasay-born poet Sorley Maclean. In a collaboration with Urras Shomhairle - The Sorley MacLean Trust - Hallaig, a piece of music composed by renowned Inverness composer, Stuart MacRae, inspired by one of MacLean’s most powerful poems, will be performed in Inverness Cathedral and at Sabhal Mòr Ostaig in Skye. The Blas programme was welcomed by the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Gaelic, Michael Russell MSP, who said: “It gives me great pleasure to welcome the launch of the Blas Festival programme for 2011. Blas has developed an excellent reputation over recent years for innovative events and high quality performances, and this year’s programme underlines this. This is a full and ambitious programme with top Scottish performers which will help strengthen the Gaelic language and enrich the cultural life of Scotland.” Featured artists at Blas 2011 will include top musical talent such as Karen Matheson, Karine Polwart, Iain Morrison & Daibhidh Martin, Kathleen MacInnes, Maggie MacInnes & Colum Sands and chart-bidders Mànran. The Campbells of Greepe – Kenna & Seumas Campbell, Mary Ann & Wilma Kennedy and Maggie Macdonald – will have a home appearance in Dunvegan, when a new book charting the history of this unique family will be launched by Stornoway-based publishers, Acair. The Blas Festival is a partnership between Fèisean nan Gàidheal, the Promoters Arts Network and its main funder, The Highland Council. The Leader of The Highland Council, Dr Michael Foxley said: "The Council's support for Gaelic and traditional music remains strong. Blas has grown to be the showpiece for our culture and I am greatly looking forward to the exciting programme of events planned for the autumn." Two other special events as part of Blas 2011 will celebrate the Fèis Movement. There will be a concert at Strathpeffer Pavilion celebrating 25 years of Fèis Rois and another, to be held on the top of Cairngorm Mountain, marking the 21st anniversary of Fèis Spè. Speaking at the launch, where he outlined the 2011 programme, Fèisean nan Gàidheal’s Chief Executive, Arthur Cormack said: “Blas has always made a virtue of involving young people in the festival and we are delighted to be celebrating the landmark ‘big birthdays’ reached by two Highland Fèisean. We will also see a number of Fèis Cèilidh Trail groups perform at the festival as well as pupils from the Centre of Excellence in Traditional Music at Plockton.” He said: “We will continue to ensure that Gaelic is used at every single Blas event and in all its publicity materials, making the festival a major promoter of the language. We are delighted that Blas is part of the 2011 Year of Scotland’s Islands initiative and we are extremely grateful to all the organisations that continue to invest in Blas.” Murdo Mackay of the Scotland’s Islands initiative welcomed the launch of the Blas programme: “We are excited to include Blas 2011 in our Year of Scotland’s Islands programme of events, and very much looking forward to the new strand focusing on island culture. The Year of Scotland’s Islands aims to highlight the unique culture of Scotland’s island communities, and the islands’ appeal as visitor destinations, in order to create a long lasting legacy and awareness of all that they offer for visitors and the communities themselves.” Leasaiche Cànain (Head of Language Usage) at Bòrd na Gàidhlig, Daibhidh Boag, congratulated the Blas Festival for presenting such a wide programme of events celebrating the region’s Gaelic-based music and culture: “The Blas Festival has grown to become one of the most important events in the Gaelic cultural calendar, in Scotland and indeed internationally. Bòrd na Gàidhlig is delighted to be supporting the event, through our focus in ensuring that Gaelic will be seen and heard as a matter of course, both in the promotion of the festival and at all events. Our support also ensures that young people across the Highlands can take part in the festival, with artists performing in their schools, raising awareness of Gaelic language and culture to new generations.” Festival Director Donna Macrae said: “There are a number of very exciting and unique events as part of Blas 2011. One is Balach na Bonaid – a new piece being premiered at Blas written by James Ross with narration in Gaelic from Aonghas MacNeacail, from text by well-known Scots writer, James Robertson. We will also be celebrating the 80th birthday of one of the musical legends of the Highlands - Aonghas Grant, the left-hander Lochaber Fiddler - who will appear in Glengarry Hall alongside our Blas house band, The Outside Track, which has members from Scotland, Ireland and Cape Breton. Another highlight will be Lochaber Gold - a celebration of former pupils of Lochaber High School who have gone on to make a living in music, politics, writing and broadcasting.” Donna continued: “We are also thrilled that the Camanachd Cup Final coincides with Blas 2011 and we will be providing music during the event to be held in the Bught Park in Inverness on 17 September, prior to our grand finale that evening in Eden Court. We are particularly pleased that our Schools Programme, organised by Lynn Johnson of the Highland Council’s Education Department, offers a fantastic opportunity for pupils across the Highlands to experience Blas events in their schools which tie in directly with the delivery of the Curriculum for Excellence.”
Blas On Track with Resident Band and Supersaver Tickets - April For the first time the 2011 Blas Festival will have a band in residence when the festival kicks off across the Highlands on 9 September. And festival-goers can take advantage of a very special low ticket price, by purchasing their tickets from the local promoters by the end of April, the festival organisers have announced. The Outside Track play a fabulous mix of Scottish, Canadian and Irish music and song and feature step-dance. They have been rapturously received around the world. Hailing from Scotland, Ireland, Cape Breton and Vancouver, its five members are united by a love of traditional music and a commitment to creating new music on its foundation. The Outside Track features Mairi Rankin of the Cape Breton Rankins and Beòlach on fiddle, vocals and step-dance; Canadian Traditional Singer if the Year nominee Norah Rendell on vocals, flute and whistle; BBC Young Trad Finalist Ailie Robertson on harp and step-dance; BBC Fame Academy Winner Fiona Black on accordion); and Cillian Ó Dalaigh of Trazz on guitar, vocals and step-dance. Festival Director Donna Macrae said: “Blas 2011 is on track to be very exciting and, in addition to the core programme now on sale, we have had some good news about additional funding which will allow us to add further events to the festival before launching the programme in May. Tickets are on sale now, though, for the first 20 or so events and we have been heartened by the reaction so far, and the fact that tickets started selling within hours of going on sale last month.” Now in its 7th full year, Blas has matured into a recognised cultural landmark and continues to forge links and work together with other organisations that celebrate the distinct Gaelic culture of the Highlands. Donna said: “The festival continues to enjoy the support of Highlands and Islands Airports Ltd and the airport will be one of the venues where the Outside Track will be appearing, on Monday September 12th, along with Iain Morrison and Daibhidh Martin, Brian Ó hEadhra and Maggie Macdonald. The airport restaurant transforms into a magical music venue for Blas”. The Outside Track will also appear across the Highlands throughout the festival with shows including Ullapool, Portree, Invergarry, Ballachulish, Portmahomack and Poolewe. The band will also feature in school performances and workshops as part of the Blas Education Programme, organised by the Highland Council’s Arts Links Officer, which reaches around 5,000 school pupils annually. The special Supersaver cheap ticket deal is being extended to festival-goers who would like to purchase their tickets well in advance of the September events. Blas has a special deal in place, until the end of April only, whereby a ticket that would normally cost £12 is being sold, through local promoters only, for only £9.00. There are also family deals available for a party of 2 adults and 2 children at £25.00. Arthur Cormack, Chief Executive of Fèisean nan Gàidheal, said: “In these challenging times where money is tight, we wanted to give individuals and families the opportunity to attend Blas events at an affordable price. We hope that as many people as possible who want to come to the festival take advantage of this unique ticket deal before the end of April, which offers great savings on the full prices.”
Cherishing Blas - March This year’s Blas Festival got off to a flying start with tickets starting to sell within hours of going on sale on 8 March. Despite concerns about funding dominating much of the latter part of 2010, the festival is going ahead and has programmed a core 20 events. News of additional funding is expected which will give the festival the support needed to programme further events in advance of its official launch in May, and enable Blas to deliver yet another successful series of events this September. The festival will spreads its wings even wider this year to celebrate a greater taste of all that is Highland, including music, song, Gaelic language, local food, nature, poetry, literature, guided walks and other strands yet to be announced. As usual Blas will celebrate the music of our Celtic cousins too, and artistes confirmed for Blas include American legends Cherish the Ladies, returning to Blas having been very well received in 2009. Celebrating 25 years as the most successful and sought-after Irish-American group in Celtic music history, Cherish The Ladies share their timeless Irish traditions passed down from fathers to their daughters. The all-female ensemble's spectacular blend of virtuosic instrumental talents, beautiful vocals, captivating arrangements and stunning step dancing showcases all the facets of traditional Irish culture. It has been aid by the Boston Globe that “It is simply impossible to imagine an audience that wouldn’t enjoy what they do”. Joanie Madden of Cherish the Ladies said: "We were absolutely thrilled to be a part of the Blas Festival a few years ago and can't tell you how happy we are to be invited back! We loved everything that the festival is about and it truly is an amazing traditional cultural experience for both the Highlands and for anyone thinking of visiting the region to take in the music, song and dance at the various venues all over the area while experiencing fantastic people and breathtaking views. On our European tour this September, we are making our only appearances in Scotland at the Blas Festival, so if you want to see 'the ladies' - we'll see you at Blas!!!!" Other artistes confirmed to date are Karen Matheson and her band, Kathleen MacInnes and band, Corrina Hewat and Karine Polwart, Dàimh, the Glenfinnan Cèilidh Band, Addie Harper, Christine Primrose, Christine Stone, Darren MacLean, The Campbells of Greepe, Fiona J Mackenzie, Gabe MacVarish with Ross Martin and Luke Daniels, Iain Morrison and Daibhidh Martin, Maggie MacInnes and Colum Sands, The MacDonald brothers of Glenuig, Mairearad Green, The Monach Isle Cèilidh Band and pupils from the Centre of Excellence in Traditional Music. Aonghas Grant will celebrate his 80th birthday with us in a special event at Invergarry and Gaelic chart-bidders Mànran will also be part of the line-up. One of the defining features of the festival is the participation of so many young people from the Fèis movement. Arthur Cormack of Fèisean nan Gàidheal said: “We are delighted that Blas is going ahead again this year. Despite having to reduce its funding commitment, the Highland Council has remained very supportive of the festival and Fèisean nan Gàidheal has been working hard to find alternative funding. Blas also offers a platform for the promotion of Gaelic and we have some exciting plans for this in 2011 and see the festival as an essential part of what we do since it gives the young people from the Fèisean an opportunity to appear alongside some of the best Highland artists working in traditional music.” Festival Director Donna Macrae said: “Bringing their incredible talents and enthusiasm to Blas events, these young people are the ongoing strength of the traditions we hold so dear and they are the promise of a rich future cherishing both the ancient traditions and forging the new. We look forward to another wonderful celebration of Highland music and culture in all its aspects. We are grateful to all our funders and to the hundreds of people, including our promoters and volunteers, without whom the festival simply couldn’t happen. This is a real Highland wide community endeavour.” Leader of the Highland Council, Dr Michael Foxley said: “Despite the difficult financial climate Highland Council is absolutely committed to supporting Blas which has become our paramount traditional music and cultural festival. In partnership with Fèisean nan Gàidheal we want to see Blas flourish and expand in the future.”
Over 5000 Highland pupils are taking part in the Blas Festival’s Schools programme that has top Scottish music acts and international artistes from Cape Breton performing for three to eighteen year olds. The programme takes the artistes, who are already playing at the Blas Festival (3rd-12th September), into the schools themselves. Pupils get the opportunity to hear about the culture, the Gaelic language, and listen to the music that Blas aims to keep alive in Highland communities. The schools programme is delivered in collaboration with The Highland Council’s Arts Links Officer, Lynn Johnson. She said: “Our aim is to engage children and young people in the region during the Blas Festival and provide them with the opportunity to participate in high quality arts and cultural experiences. The programme also links well to the new ‘Curriculum for Excellence’ in schools as it enables pupils to experience the inspiration and power of the arts. “Some of our events, such as walks by the council’s Rangers Service, are also open to the whole community.” The latest event took place in Kingussie High with Cape Breton performers Goiridh Domhnallach, Rachel Davis and Buddy MacDonald performing for over 100 pupils and staff who fully enjoyed the show. Councillor Michael Foxley, Leader of The Highland Council’s Administration, said: “This programme is being delivered in all areas of the region and underlines our strong commitment to the Gaelic language and culture of the Highlands. As well as attracting visitors from around the world, Blas and the schools programme provide our young people with exciting opportunities to take part in the arts, traditional music and reinforce the important historic and current links between the Highlands and Cape Breton.” Blas attracts political and public support 10/09/2010
Highlands and Islands MSP Rob Gibson has lodged a motion at the Scottish Parliament which congratulates the Blas Festival for its successful celebration of the region’s Gaelic-based music and culture. The motion comes as a spot survey of 100 festival-goers revealed 97% of respondents think the festival is important for its contribution to Highland culture. Other results showed that 92% said Blas entertainment is important; 57% thought Blas is particularly important during recessionary times; and that 75% would be going to two or more Blas events. Mr Gibson’s motion praised the engagement of local community organisers; the enthusiasm of Blas audiences; and the quality of homegrown talent of all ages performing at the festival. There was a note of warning in the motion as it also called on “non-governmental sponsors who value Scotland’s lively traditional culture to help ensure the life of the Blas Festival in future years, which are likely to see major cuts in central and local government funding.” Donna Macrae, Blas Festival Director, said: “Blas contributes approximately £700,000 to the Highland economy, as well as providing top entertainment across the region, making extensive use of the Gaelic language and providing opportunities for young people to get involved. We appreciate having the efforts of our organisers, audiences, volunteers and performers recognised in this motion at Holyrood. “It is our fervent hope that the value of the Blas Festival will continue to be recognised we will be able to wok with others to deliver a successful festival in the years to come that continues to make such a notable contribution to the culture and economy of the Highlands.” Weblink and motion: http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/Apps2/business/motions/Default.aspx?motionid=19705 S3M-06950 Rob Gibson (Highlands and Islands) (Scottish National Party): Celebrate Blas Festival 2010— That the Parliament congratulates the Blas Festival 2010 for celebrating Scotland’s Gaelic-based musical heritage in more than 30 venues from Caithness to Lochaber and Skye to Strathspey; notes the essential engagement of the local community organisers in collaborating to deliver the Highland-wide programme; celebrates the quality of homegrown, traditional musicians of all ages who deliver such a varied programme and welcomes the inclusion of Irish and Cape Breton musicians in the mix; encourages the Blas Festival to build on the multiple-venue model and on the enthusiasm of musicians and audiences, and calls on non-governmental sponsors who value Scotland’s lively traditional culture to help ensure the life of the Blas Festival in future years, which are likely to see major cuts in central and local government funding. Lodged on Wednesday, September 08, 2010 Off to a great start 04/09/2010
The Blas Festival opened last night with the gig at Hangar 2 at Inverness Airport catching the eye in today's media. Niteworks, Skerryvore and Shooglenifty have got us off to a great start! | |||||||||||||||||||

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