It is over a week since the excellent Rannsachadh nan Gaidheal conference in Edinburgh at which I met many old friends and good colleagues, and managed not to disgrace myself or, I trust, Dr. Meg Bateman in our joint plenary presentation. There were many interesting papers - especially one given by Emma Anderson on early woodwind instruments in the Gaidhealtachd, which appealed to my prehistoric leanings, although she was focussing on the written word and the meaning of the Old Gaelic word stoc.
John MacInnes was there with his wife Wendy and daughter Catriona. John was receiving due accolades for his outstanding work as a researcher, scholar and generous colleague over many decades, and Wendy was very much included in that. A joyous occasion. Back on the croft we enjoyed our first new potatoes - Red Duke of York, superb with our own fillet steak and courgettes. The cows are out on the Common Grazings, looking sleek and well and no great distance from the bull, which is encouraging. Warm sunny south-westerly winds make this ideal lying-out-in-the-heather weather, of which I have done far too little in my life. A couple of my poems have been chosen for a new book, Scotia Nova and I will be attending the Yestival events in Ullapool on the 19th and possibly Harris on the 17th to present them and others. Soon it will be time to prepare a lecture for the Clan MacLeod parliament in Dunvegan on the 20th. This is the Stanley MacLeod Memorial Lecture, so I shall be sporting my ancient MacDougal kilt with pride. Sun and warm zephyrs and no midges have made these last two days qualify as halcyon days - and yesterday one of our cows gave birth to a fine brunette, named Debbie after a friend who was visiting earlier in the week. I managed to bag and bring in some peats, in between searching for the calf - all our cows give birth out in the open in a place of their choice, so we have to go and search for them to make sure everything is OK, which it nearly always is. Otherwise preparing for my part of a joint plenary lecture my colleague at Sabhal Mor Ostaig, Dr.Meg Bateman, and I are giving at Rannsachadh nan Gaidheal in Edinburgh next month.
Hey-ho - still no calves, though swollen udders and rear ends tell us the big events are imminent. A castration of our neighbour's calf was the big event today. 6 weeks old, but a massive fellow and really strong. It took two of us to keep his tail up while the vet did the necessary. I nthink his testicles are still lying out there somewhere for the birds. The birds love such things. At least this calf didn't give out those deep-throated bellowings that you sometimes hear when they are being castrated, and which reach deep into one's masculine soul. Time to get back to 18th-century aesthetics - or something of that sort.
Back from the Galway Early Music Festival, playing bronze age horn and having a wonderful time with some of the finest exponents of prehistoric music.
Highlights for me were playing with Simon and Maria O'Dwyer for Moonfish Theatre's delightful shadow-puppet re-telling of Buile Shuibhne - the Mad Sweeney story. The visuals were witty and imaginative and John Rogers read the script splendidly. We improvised the music with minimal rehearsal, but it all went well. The big event was Romans & Celts, War & Peace which featured Ludic Scaenic in the first section and Ancient Music Ireland in the second - all playing reconstructions of instruments from 2000 years ago. The final section was a musical battle to which the Festival organiser brought eventual peace - much to my disappointment . . . but it was a privilege to be a part of it all and the sounds in St Nicholas's wonderful acoustic were thrilling, especially when our Celtic section played a healing tune. It was great to catch up with one of the most revered figures in Music Archaeology - Cajsa Lund - whose programme of Music on Board the Royal Swedish Flagship Kronan (Lost 1676) was a fascinating musical insight into a tragedy caused by the usual business of an incompetent boss ignoring the advise of the people who actually knew what they were doing. It was also great to meet Jacopo Bisagni for the first time. He gently corrected me over my mis-remembering of an obscure Old Gaelic tale about triple pipes. I fear he hasn't heard the last of me! I managed to slip in a meeting with Fergus Kelly, the expert on Early Irish Law. We are blood relations but, I fear, his scholarship is so far ahead of mine that any scholarly relationship would be best described as distant. He was kindness itself. This was on my way to visit family in Co. Wicklow and climb to the Motty stone with my brother and sister-in-law and see my cousins on the family farm, stocked with the finest sheep and lambs I have seen in ages. Back in Glasgow, an evening chewing the fat with my fellow-students of long ago, John and Lily Geddes, brought back many splendid memories and a chance to hear Irlandaise - a beautiful piece by John for two cellos. The next day, Dr. Graeme Lawson and I took the train to Mallaig and headed home to Skye to discuss the writing up of the High Pasture Cave find of a c300BC bridge for a stringed instrument. This is a project we have long been involved in and the commission to write it up for Historic Scotland gives us a chance to review all the evidence thoroughly. The bridge was found on the Island of Skye, just eleven miles from where I live, and it is a sensational find of international significance. Now to return to responding to a reader's wise, but challenging comments on an article I wrote for Scottish Gaelic Studies. Being the fool who steps in where angels fear to tread, I am touched that whoever the reader was, has not metaphorically swept me off the stage with one beat of his or her wing. Onward and upward! My son Sean and I have almost finished cutting the second long bog - Sean building them into a wall to dry. Beautiful cool dry weather for the work. No midges, very occasional sun, and occasional larks and obstreperous cuckoos.
The cocktail hour approacheth, methinks . . . Sunday 27th April
Just back from Glasgow, helping launch Quaich - a fascinating anthology of translation in Scotland today, for which I was honoured to write a Foreword. There was an excellent turn-out for some fine readings, and I got to read Christopher Whyte's translations into Gaelic of Brian Johnstone's beautiful wee studies of early Celtic saints which Brian read in English. On Friday I attended the Association of Scottish Literary Studies award of Honorary Fellowships. My dear friend James Reid Baxter was awarded one - and a colleague of many years, Lesley Duncan, was amongst those honoured too. And there was Flora MacNeill, the doyenne of Gaelic singers for generations, being duly honoured. Jo Miller sang with that fresh direct utterly honest way of hers, as lovely as I remember when we first worked together back in the late 1980s. And, new to my ears, Alasdair Whyte, with a beautifully pitched intense Gaelic voice. What a joy! This was the sort of occasion which, in a more culturally aware society and with a more culturally responsive media, would have been widely covered by press, radio and television. The list of Honorary Fellows includes many of the top names in Scottish literature in English, Scots and Gaelic - poets, novelists, historians, critics. It was a heart-lifting event and a joy to see the best of people in our culture being truly honoured with excellent presentation speeches by Ian Brown. All this was in the company of my close friend Alan Riach who, whenever energies seem to flag, stirs one up with the insistence that "there is more damage still to be done!" - a need to be always clearing the decks and starting afresh. Back on Skye we have had help preparing the lazy beds and the potatoes are now all planted. My wife, Bar, and I finished cutting one of the long peat bogs - again with help from the wonderful Shona MacLeod and her friend. Shona renewed all our dry-stane dykes magnificently over the last couple of years. One of our neighbours' cows has calved - a fine leggy male called Yorkie. They're all named after chocolate bars. Our males are named after Scottish composers, but we are still waiting for Deedee to produce and have no idea what the sex will be. If male, his name will be Hume as the last male was Tobias. Perfect timing as Concerto Caledonia have just come out with a simply wonderful CD Captain Tobias Hume - A Scottish Soldier. It's on the Delphian label DCD34140 and the playing and singing are stunning and, of course, the music is fascinating and wide-ranging in mood. It's a must buy. Now to finalise my presentation for the Celtic Revival in Scotland conference in Edinburgh on 1st-3rd May. This is how one does such things: First, you send a title to the organisers, months in advance, not having a clue what you will actually say. Second, you send them an abstract of what you are going to say, so they can print it in the programme. It helps if by then you do have a clue as to what you are going to say, but it has not always proved necessary. Third, you write the whole darned thing out, prepare the images in a Powerpoint, and make the sound files (having edited them on a sound editor). This is usually completed not more than 6 hours before you actually deliver. Fourth, you listen to those speaking before your presentation and realise you have to re-jig half of it to fit in. Fifth, (always assuming there isn't the very common failure of the technology) you scrabble your way through your re-written script, re-ordered images, and sound files on a disc that are now in the wrong order, occasionally putting on the wrong example. This is the presentation - your big moment in the sun. Finally, you have exceeded your allotted time and are invited forcefully to draw to a close, shut up, and sit down. Be prepared for questions such as "is it true that you have eaten otter?" I do but jest, of course (hem-hem), but there are many academics out there who will recognise much of the above. Onward and Upward! Being new to blogs, I am not sure how much of one's daily life is likely to be of interest.
The cows, at any rate, are enjoying the first new growth and are luxuriating in the spring sunlight. and rejoicing in the fact that they are all free from Bovine Viral Diarrhoea, which is being eradicated from the whole of Scotland. A forward-looking policy. I am gathering resolve to have a go at cutting a few peats, though a recent heart episode and leaky heart valve may limit my activities to listening to the larks - if they've arrived and if they are audible . . . Down in the Heatherwood hospital, surrounded by other elderly over-weight heart cases with strange London accents, my heart was lifted by the voice of a Scottish nurse from Luss - brilliant at her job. We reminisced about the bridge at the head of Glen Luss and she found out for me that it was built by William John in 1770 to celebrate the arrival of black-faced sheep in Scotland. William John carved a splendid ram's head on the bridge, so it is called The Tup Bridge. Of course not everyone welcomed the sheep - that was, in part, the start of the Clearances. A good review of my 3 CDs has come out in the April issue of International Record Review, which is, well, heartening, but I have sadly had to cancel appearances at the Edinburgh International Harp Festival and a concert to celebrate the bi-centenary of Nathaniel Gow. It would have been an honour to have taken part. I am also missing the celebration of the publication of a Festschrift for the great Gaelic scholar, John MacInnes. I contributed a chapter and would have loved to be there to raise a glass to him - but I am still intending to give a paper at the Celtic Revival Conference in Edinburgh at the start of next month and may yet get to Galway Early Music Festival for a gathering of all the crazy eccentric musicians who play bronze age horns, carnyx, trompa creda and who knows what not else. A unique opportunity to parade through the streets blowing my dord iseal (deep bronze age horn). Simon and Maria O'Dwyer, John Kenny, John Mescal, Barnaby Brown, and Peter Holmes - all the best of friends, all touched by that wonderful freedom which breaks through all the conformities and opens up new worlds. |
John PurserJohn Purser is widely known as a composer, musicologist, poet, playwright, and broadcaster. Archives
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