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Scotland takes the stage in USA
03/06/2003
More than 100 Scots from every part of the country will
travel to Washington DC next month to take part in the
world-famous Smithsonian Folklife Festival.
The final list of people and organisations chosen to
celebrate Scottish culture has now been announced, and
includes musicians, storytellers, craftspeople, dancers,
scholars, cooks, historians, poets and linguists.
Participants from Orkney and Shetland to the Borders,
from the Western Isles to all our major cities, will travel
to Washington this summer, bringing Scottish traditional
culture to millions of Americans, and boosting promotion of
Scotland in the key US market.
The prestigious annual Smithsonian Folklife Festival,
which this summer will celebrate the traditional living
cultures of Scotland, Mali and Appalachia, is central to a
showcase of Scottish culture.
Scottish Minister for Tourism, Culture and Sport Frank
McAveety welcomed this opportunity to show Scotland's
strong cultural traditions to an influential international
audience.
Mr McAveety said:
"Scotland at the Smithsonian promises to be an amazing
experience. The continuing excellence, vibrancy and variety
of cultural traditions within contemporary Scotland will be
presented to an international audience in a unique way
through lecture, film, performance, display, demonstration
and exhibition.
"The Executive is committed to promoting Scotland's
traditional and contemporary culture and to raising
Scotland's international profile in partnership with
others."
The Folklife Festival will run from June 25-29 and July
2-6 , with more than one million visitors expected to
attend this world-renowned outdoor event on the National
Mall, surrounded by the US Capitol, the Washington Monument
and Smithsonian Museums.
Festival performances take place on stages on the Mall,
and the Festival also features workshops, interviews and
discussion sessions at which participants have an
opportunity to explain and discuss their particular art as
well Scottish culture in general with Festival visitors
Scottish participation in the Folklife Festival and
associated events will receive financial backing from the
Scottish Executive, VisitScotland, Scottish Arts Council
and National Museums of Scotland and is supported by
cultural organisations throughout Scotland.
The Scottish Executive has contributed over £300,000
towards the creation and running of the Scottish programme,
with VisitScotland and the Scottish Arts Council each
contributing £50,000. In total, VisitScotland anticipate
spending nearly £500,000 around the various activities that
are taking place.
Founded in 1846 in Washington DC, the Smithsonian is an
educational and research organisation consisting of the 16
national museums of the US, a zoo, magazine, press and
recording company. The Smithsonian's Center for Folklife
and Cultural Heritage produces an annual Folklife Festival
on the National Mall in the heart of Washington DC. The
Festival is a research-based educational 'museum without
walls' devoted to grassroots cultural heritage. This year's
event will focus on Scotland, Mali and Appalachia. Further
details on the Folklife Festival can be found on their
website at www.scotlandindc.com
In addition to more than one million visitors from
across the US and around the world who visit the Festival
in person, American TV, radio and press reaches some 40
million people.
In addition to sponsoring the Folklife Festival,
VisitScotland has worked in partnership with the
Smithsonian Associates to bring about, for the first time,
a series of lectures and performances on Scotland's culture
and history, which has been running from March until
June.
National Museums of Scotland are taking their acclaimed
'Celebrating Scotland's Crafts' exhibition to the
Smithsonian's Arts and Industries Building on the Mall from
20 June to 12 September. The exhibit's 106 present-day
objects, produced by traditional methods, highlight the
continuation of specialised skills and crafts passed down
through the centuries from generation to generation.
List of Scottish Participants
MUSIC
- Battlefield Band (Central Belt)
Alan Reid, co-founder, vocals/keyboards
Mike Katz, Highland pipes/small pipes/whistles/bass
Alasdair White, fiddle/whistles/bouzouki/bagpipes
Pat Kilbride, vocals/guitar/cittern
Over the past three decades, Battlefield Band has played
a central role in the Scottish folk music revival. Although
undergoing several changes in personnel, Battlefield
continues to write and record important, innovative
material. The band's extensive touring schedule makes it
one of the best-known Scottish traditional bands in
America.
www.battlefieldband.co.uk
- Dr. Margaret Bennett (Skye/Edinburgh) -- Noted as a
folklorist and scholar as well as an exceptional Gaelic
and Scots singer and storyteller, Bennett is an
Honorary Research Fellow at University of Glasgow and
appears at the Festival as both a performer and a
presenter.
www.margaretbennett.co.uk
- City of Washington Pipe Band (Washington, D.C.) - A
"local band," City of Washington is an internationally
respected and award winning "Grade 1" band in the
highly competitive world of Scottish piping.
www.serve.com/cowpb
- Phil Cunningham (Portobello/Inverness) - Co-founder
of the seminal 1970s band Silly Wizard and the 1980s
supergroup Relativity, Cunningham is a gifted
accordionist and a respected composer as well as a
central figure in the world of Scottish traditional
music.
www.philcunningham.com
- Johnny Cunningham (Portobello/Massachusetts) - An
extraordinary fiddler, composer, and entertainer,
Johnny Cunningham was a co-founder of Silly Wizard,
member of such noted groups as Relativity and Night
Noise, and a mainstay of numerous Masters of Celtic
Fiddle tours in the United States.
Now based in New England, he tours extensively and is a
regular headliner at international festivals and concert
series.
Christopher Stout, fiddle
Andrew Gifford, fiddle
Maurice Henderson, fiddle
Kevin Henderson, fiddle
Catriona McKay, clarsach (harp)/piano/vocals
Johnathon Ritch, bass
John Hutchison, guitar
Young eight-member fiddle-based band from Shetland
dedicated to both old and new Shetland traditional music.
Fiddlers' Bid tours internationally, but the Festival is
their introduction to American audiences. In addition to
their considerable artistry, they are enthusiastic and
knowledgeable representatives of Shetlandic culture.
www.fiddlersbid.com
- Alasdair Fraser (Clackmannan/California)
Alasdair Fraser, fiddle
Nathalie Hass, cello
One of Scotland's finest fiddlers and performers, Fraser
is revered by Celtic music lovers on both sides of the
Atlantic. Many Americans recognize his playing from movie
soundtracks (The Last of the Mohicans, Titanic),
performances at Kennedy Center and Lincoln Center, and for
work with his critically acclaimed band Skyedance. Now
based in California, he directs the 100 member San
Francisco Scottish Fiddlers and his Valley of the Moon
Scottish Fiddle School, which has spread interest in
Scottish fiddle styles throughout North America. He is
joined by Natalie Hass on cello.
www.alasdairfraser.com
- The Fochabers Fiddlers (Fochabers, Morayshire)
James Alexander, director
Members: Colin Black, Patricia Bonnar, Liam
Bourret-Nyffeler, Carol Brown,
Kerry Cattanach, Fiona Christie, Rachel Christie, Carol
Deeney, Louise Duncan, Lindsay Eccleston, Fiona Evans,
Alexandra Gordon Smith, Amanda Hall, Moray Hillson,
Georgina Innes, Hannah Jackson, Karen Laing, Sott McBey,
Ross McDonald, Kirsty McLennan, Mairi McLennan, Duncan
Menzies, Edward Mills, David Milne, Kathryn Milne, Laura
Milne, Jenny Mitchell, Heather Munro, Eilidh Pattison,
Lynette Reid, Philip Scarffe, Anna Smith, Jill Thomson,
Ruth Thomson, Katrina Wallen, Sarah Watson, Claire Watt,
Laura Watt. With Hilda Alexander, Katherine Robertson,
James Robertson.
This young people's fiddle orchestra group from
Fochabers in northern Scotland has several recordings and
international tours to its credit. Led by James Alexander,
the group's activities reflect the importance placed on
traditional arts and arts instruction in Scottish
communities.
www.celtscot.ed.ac.uk/fiddle/fochabersfiddlers.htm
- Scott Gardiner (Forfar) - Gardiner grew up on a
farm near Forfar in eastern Scotland. He is an
enthusiastic singer of North East bothy (agricultural)
ballads, many of which he learned from Tam and Anne
Reid of Cullerlie, Aberdeenshire.
- William "Billy" Jackson (Glasgow/North Carolina) -
A pre-eminent Scottish harper and founding member of
the legendary band Ossian, Jackson is also well known
as a composer, arranger, teacher, and performer. His
song "Land of Light" won The Glasgow Herald's 1999
"Song for Scotland" competition.
www.harp.dial.pipex.com/william.htm
- Alison Kinnaird (Edinburgh/Temple) & Christine
Primrose (Lewis) - One of Scotland's foremost exponents
of clarsach (harp) music, a scholar of harp history, a
singer, and a renowned glass artist, Kinnaird was
awarded the M.B.E. for services to music and art in
1997. Christine Primrose, with whom she often performs
and records, is an outstanding Gaelic singer from the
Isle of Lewis, who teaches traditional song at the
Gaelic College in Skye. Both performers have won top
honors at the National Mod and the Pan-Celtic Festival
in Killarney.
www.templerecords.co.uk
- Ishbel MacAskill (Inverness) - A leading
interpreter and teacher of Gaelic song, story, and
culture, MacAskill was recently featured on the
Scottish Women's Tour and 2003 Celtic Connections
Concert series.
freespace.virgin.net/ishbel.macaskill
- Iain MacDonald (Glenuig/Benbecula) - A superb piper
from a family of amazing pipers, MacDonald is also an
excellent composer. A former member of Ossian and
Battlefield Band, he is currently on the staff of the
Gaelic College Sabhal Mor Ostaig on the Isle of Skye.
www.roshvenrecords.com
- Adam McNaughtan (Glasgow) -- Songwriter, editor of
Vol. 5 of the "Greig-Duncan Collection of Folk-Songs of
the North-East," bookseller, singer, Honorary Research
Fellow at the University of Glasgow in Scottish
studies, former teacher, and authority on the City of
Glasgow. His songs are frequently recorded by other
performers and many have become Scottish classics.
www.greentrax.com
- Brian McNeill (Falkirk/Glasgow) - An eminent
songwriter, singer, fiddler, and multi-instrumentalist,
McNeill was recently appointed Head of Scottish Music
at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music & Drama and
a mainstay of the Celtic Connections concert series. A
co-founder of Battlefield Band and Clan Alba, he has
been a leading figure in the Scottish folk music scene
for more than three decades. McNeill has numerous
recordings to his credit, and his songs and tunes are
widely played and recorded by other artists.
www.brianmcneill.co.uk
- Dr. Ed Miller (Edinburgh/Austin, TX) - A well-known
singer, folklorist, and teacher, Miller is familiar to
American audiences as a performer at festivals, clubs,
Highland Games, and Burns Suppers. He also hosts
"Folkways" on KUT-FM Austin, leads folksong-based tours
to Scotland, and teaches at folk music camps throughout
the United States.
www.songsofscotland.com
- Fin Moore (Dunkeld) -- An excellent piper, Fin will
also be assisting his father, Hamish Moore (see below),
in demonstrating the making of Highland and Scottish
Bellows Blown pipes.
www.hamishmoore.musicscotland.com
- Karine Polwart (Edinburgh) - This important young
singer and songwriter is already a veteran of several
major groups, including Battlefield Band, and is
currently performing with Malinky.
www.malinky.com/karine.htm
Anne Reid (Cullerlie, Aberdeenshire) - With her late
husband Tam Reid ("King of the Bothy Ballad"), Anne
transformed their traditional farm into a small
agricultural museum. For many years, the Reids' ceilidhs
and festivals have been a mainstay of the Aberdeenshire
cultural scene. An excellent singer in her own right, she
is also an excellent cook and demonstrates her skills in
both areas during the Festival.
- The Singing Kettle (Kingskettle, Fife) - Famed
throughout the UK for their lively presentation of
children's songs via concerts, CDs, videos, and
frequent media appearances. Smithsonian Folkways
Recording has just released The Singing Kettle:
Singalong Songs from Scotland in conjunction with the
Festival.
www.singingkettle.com
- Sheena Wellington (Dundee) - An excellent performer
and eloquent expert on Scottish music and culture,
Wellington's recent accomplishments include her a
capella rendition of Burns's "A Man's a Man for A'
That" at the opening of Scottish Parliament in 1999 and
her participation in the recent Scottish Women's Tour.
http://www/scotfolk.com/wellington
- Gary West (Pithlochry, Perthshire) -- A noted piper
and mainstay of the Scottish folk music scene, West has
played with Vale of Atholl Pipe Band, Coelbeg, and the
Scottish supergroup Clan Alba. He is a full-time
lecturer in the University of Edinburgh's Department of
Celtic and Scottish Studies, and a host of BBC Radio
Scotland's weekly piping program, Pipeline.
www.garywest.co.uk
The Wrigley Sisters (Orkney Islands)
Jennifer Wrigley, fiddle
Hazel Wrigley, guitar/piano
Excellent young fiddle and piano virtuosos from the
Orkney Islands, the Wrigleys are preserving Orkney's local
musical traditions while at the same time composing
important new material.
www.wrigleysisters.com
DANCE
Freeland Barbour, accordion
Ian Hardie, fiddle
Kevin MacLeod, banjo/mandolin
Gus Millar, drums
Robert Whitehead, accordion
Sheila McCutheon, caller/dancer
Grant Sinclair, dancer
Headed by accordionist virtuoso Freeland Barbour, this
leading Edinburgh ceilidh group has been active since 1986
and frequently plays large festivals and dances throughout
Scotland. Excellent instructors of Scottish ceilidh dance,
the group has three CDs to its credit.
mysite.freeserve.com/theoccasionals
- Maria Leask (Lerwick, Shetland) - A dedicated
dancer and dance historian, Leask has been active in
teaching and documenting Shetlandic dance traditions
for the Shetland Arts Trust throughout Scotland and
Europe.
- Deryck and Gareth Mitchelson (Angus) - Renowned
exponents of Scottish dance, the Mitchelson Brothers
specialize in Highland and step dance and are in great
demand throughout the world as performers and teachers
of traditional Scottish dance.
www.celticspiritdance.com
STORYTELLING / NARRATIVE / ORAL HISTORY
- Stanley Robertson (Aberdeen) - Master storyteller
Robertson grew up in a traditional Traveller's
household. Nephew of the legendary ballad singer
Jeannie Robertson, his family is an internationally
renowned repository of Traveller's lore, Scottish song,
balladry, stories, and folklore from Aberdeenshire and
North East Scotland. He was recently appointed as a
community researcher at the Elphinstone Institute,
University of Aberdeen.
www.abdn.ac.uk/elphinstone.kist
- Lawrence Tulloch (Yell, Shetland) - Born in 1942 in
Yell, Shetland, Tulloch grew up listening to stories
told by his father, the renowned storyteller Tom
Tulloch, and other community members. He has
participated in numerous storytelling festivals and is
one of Shetland's foremost storytellers.
www.veesikrecords.co.uk
- Western Isles Storytelling Group (Outer Hebrides) -
For several years, Chrisella Ross of the Gaelic Arts
Agency in Stornoway, Lewis has worked with local
storytellers in the Gaelic community to develop
narratives based on their lives and experiences as
crofters, fishermen, and island residents. She will be
joined by Christina MacLean and Iain Macaulay.
POETRY / LANGUAGE
- Sheena Blackhall (Aberdeen) - A Creative Writing
Fellow at the University of Aberdeen's Elphinstone
Institute, Blackhall is a prominent Doric poet,
storyteller, and singer, and is active in workshops and
school programs. Her Scots languagge website,
Elphinstone Kist,documents and encourages the writing
and speaking of Doric - a distinctive version of Scots
spoken in North East Scotland.
www.abdn.ac.uk/elphinstone/kist
- Bill Innes (Glasgow) - A native of the Outer
Hebrides, Innes is a passionate advocate of Gaelic
poetry, language, and culture. His presentations and
translations have been internationally acclaimed; his
book, Chì Mi, won a National Mod literature prize.
- Billy Kay (Ayrshire/Scots) A noted writer,
documentary producer, broadcaster, and authority on
Scots and Scottish culture, Kay's accomplishments
include the BBC/Odyssey series, and the book Scots: The
Mither Tongue, as well as numerous plays, short
stories, poems, dramatizations, and awards.
www.sol.co.uk/b/billykay/billykay.htm
Aso: Leabhar Mor na Gaidhlig / Big Book of Gaelic
- An innovative arts project, The Big Book of Gallic
marries Gaelic poetry from Ireland and Scotland with
the art of leading contemporary Irish and Scottish
artists to create a modern answer to the Book of Kells.
For the Festival, Proiseact Nan Ealan/The Gaelic Arts
Agency in Stornoway, Lewis, has reproduced a series of
panels containing information about the Project and
some of the remarkable artwork that it has inspired.
www.gaelic-arts.com
GAMES
- Lexie and Ross Dunn (Glasgow) - Children's game
experts Lexie and Ross Dunn from The Big Top in Glasgow
teach workshops on Scottish traditional games to
children and teachers in school districts throughout
Scotland.
PANTOMIME
- Pantomime director and writer Alan McHugh (Glasgow)
-- who in addition to his successful acting career
(Sunset Song; Taggart; etc.) writes, directs, and stars
in the annual panto at the Adam Smith Theatre,
Kirkcaldy - is joined by RSAMD students William Barlow,
Joanna Horton, and Lee O'Driscoll for workshops on the
Scottish version of this uniquely British form of
holiday entertainment.
CRAFTS / EXHIBITS
Sporran Making
- Marcus Eagleton (Murthly, Perthshire) - Trained by
his mother, Janet Eagleton, M.B.E., Marcus handcrafts
sporrans in a small workshop in back of his family
house. The grandson of a cobbler and great-grandson of
saddle maker, he makes both very traditional and very
contemporary sporrans for customers that include
celebrities as well as the King's Own Scottish
Borderers, the Queens Pipers at Balmoral and Buckingham
Palaces, and the Scots Guards.
http://www.scottishsporrans.co.uk
Harris Tweed
- Donald Angus Martin (Isle of Lewis) - A Harris
Tweed weaver from the Outer Hebrides, Martin weaves the
celebrated fabric at his croft. In addition to weaving,
Martin is also a fine Gaelic singer.
www.harristweed.org
Tartan
- Lochcarron of Scotland, Waverley Mill (Galashiels,
Scottish Borders) - Founded in the 1930s, Lochcarron is
a family business owned by Alistair Buchan, the fourth
of five generations of weavers. The company is a major
producer of both tartan and cashmere for traditional
markets as well as trendier firms, such as Vivienne
Westwood and Comme des Garcons. Buchan is also the
Chair of the Tartan Authority and extremely
knowledgeable about the history of tartan and its
traditions. Lochcarron employees Ritchie Douglas, Susie
Douglas, Alwyn Johnson, and Katie Purdie demonstrate
tartan designing, manufacturing, and finishing, and
explain the history and culture of The Borders region
of southeast Scotland. www.lochcarron.com
Kilt Making
- Keith Kilt School / Robert McBain & Martin
Flynn (Keith, Morayshire) --
McBain, founder and the director of the internationally
renowned Keith Kilt School trained and served as a tailor
in the British Army for 14 years before returning to his
home town of Inverurie. Realizing that there was a shortage
of well-trained kilt makers, he established a kilt-making
school in Keith as a local economic revitalization project.
Since 1994, he has trained more than 75 kilt makers, who,
in turn, have established the Keith Kilt Guild. McBain is
joined by his apprentice Martin Flynn.
Kiltschool@moray.org
Knitting
- Ann Eunson (Shetland) - An excellent knitter,
Eunson also makes traditional Shetland "white" or
"wedding ring" shawls fine enough to be pulled through
the womb of a ring. She spins wool from her own sheep
to create the yarn.
- May MacCormick (Sanquhar) - One of the few
craftspeople who still knit in the black-and-white
Sanquhar style, using ancient, complex, and beautiful
patterns that are rarely seen outside her remote rural
area of Dumfries & Galloway in southwest
Scotland
- Anne Sinclair (Fair Isle) -- A master knitter, she
learned patterned knitting and other Fair Isle crafts
from her mother. Four generations of her family
currently are involved in indigenous craft production.
Trained as a teacher, she has lectured, and published
material on Fair Isle history, folklore, culture, and
dialect, and is also an excellent singer.
www.fairisle.org.uk
Tapestry Weaving
- Dovecot Tapestry Workshop (Edinburgh) --
Established in 1912 by two of William Morris's master
craftsmen, Dovecot has played a major role in 20
th century tapestry revival. Master weavers
Douglas Grierson, with over 40 years experience, and
his former apprentice David Cochrane, with 15 years on
the job, employ traditional, time-honored skills to
produce tapestries based on contemporary designs - like
a magnificent 18-square meter "To a Celtic Spirit" they
recently completed for Scottish artist Alan Davie.
www.dovecotstudios.co.uk
Silversmithing
- Graham Stewart (Dunblane) -- Considered one of
Scotland's leading silversmiths, Stewart is a
second-generation silversmith. His work ranges from
traditional spoons and quaichs (traditional Scottish
bowls) to modern interpretations of such traditional
objects as bowls and teapots. His work is often
commissioned by and for museums and as presentation
pieces. Recently, he was one of a selected few
silversmiths commissioned to produce items for the
Scottish First Minister's Bute House residence in
Edinburgh.
Orkney Chair Making
- Jackie and Marlene Miller (Kirkwall, Orkney) --
There are no trees on Orkney - a key to understanding
why this handsome, distinctive type of armchair unique
to the northern islands of Scotland is traditionally
made of driftwood and braided sea grass ropes. Jackie
learned to make these traditional chairs from his
family and now makes them full-time at his shop, Scapa
Crafts.
www.scapacrafts.co.uk
Bagpipes
- Hamish Moore (Dunkeld, Perthshire) -- Moore is an
esteemed maker of Highland pipes, Scottish Small pipes,
and Border pipes. As a maker and performer, he has been
the key figure in the revival of the bellows-blown
pipes of Scotland as well as the rediscovery of older
regional and pre-military Highland piping traditions.
He is joined by his son and apprentice Fin, an
excellent piper.
www.hamishmoore.musicscotland.co.uk
Clarsach / Scottish Harp
- Yule Harps/Jack Yule - Born into a family of
ploughmen and foresters in East Lothian, Yule served a
formal apprenticeship as a boat builder at Cockenzie on
the Firth of Forth before establishing himself as a
joiner and cabinetmaker. He turned his skills to harp
making in the early 1980s and his instruments are now
played by leading performers of the Celtic harp
throughout the world. He recently moved from
Silverburn, Midlothian to Colorado.
Golf Club Making
- Heritage Golf of St Andrews (St Andrews, Fife) --
Originally from Yorkshire, Heritage's Managing Director
Barry Kerr served a formal apprenticeship to a
fourth-generation Scottish club maker and has been
making golf clubs for more than 40 years. Heritage
specializes in both historic (pre-1930s) and
contemporary clubs, as well as historic, hand-sewn/
hand-molded golf balls. Kerr is accompanied by one of
Heritage Golf's master craftsmen, Angus McLean.
www.hertiage-golf.co.uk
Curling Stone Making
- Kays of Scotland (Mauchline, Ayrshire)- The only
remaining curling firm in Scotland, and the only one in
the world to make curling stones from legendary Ailsa
Craig granite, Kays is a small, family-run firm that
dates back to the 1850s. Master craftsmen Jimmy and
Russell Wyllie demonstrate the care and skill that go
into transforming a boulder into a finished curling
stone.
www.kaysofscotland.co.uk
Basket Making
- Ewan Balfour (Brae, Mainland, Shetland) - Having
learned to make kishie baskets (a backpack-type basket)
from Lowrie Coupland, Balfour is the last traditional
basket maker in Shetland. In addition to being a
dedicated artisan, he is also crofter and a former
Guiser Jarl at the famous Viking-inspired Up-Helly-A'
Festival held in the Shetlands each winter.
Boat Building
- Ian Best, Boat Builder (Fair Isle) - Ian grew up on
Fair Isle, the most remote inhabited island in Great
Britain. Intrigued by the historical relationship
between local Viking-inspired Shetland "yoals" and
coastal craft still made in Norway, he served a formal
apprenticeship as a wooden boat builder in Norway. His
light, clinker-built 23' Ness Yoals, made from Scottish
larch, can be rowed, sailed, or motored.
www.fairisle.org.uk/ianbestboatbuilder
SCOTTISH HISTORY / HERITAGE AREA
Genealogical Tourism
Jacqueline Hampson , VisitScotland:
www.ancestralscotland.com
Joanna Baird, Scottish Archives Network (SCAN):
www.scan.org.uk
Susan Corrigall, Scottish National Archives:
www.nas.gov.uk
Martin Tyson & Stephen Chatterley, Scottish Register
Office: www.gro-scotland.gov.uk
Staff from VisitScotland/ancestralscotland.com, The
National Archives of Scotland, The General Register Office
for Scotland, and The Scottish Archive Network will help
Festival visitors use on-line resources to explore Scottish
genealogy and history.
The Court of the Lord Lyon King of Arms (Edinburgh)
*Mrs. Elizabeth Roads, the Lyon Clerk, and the Court's
heraldic artist Jenny Phillips explains the Lyon Court, its
history, current work, relationship to the Scottish Justice
system, and its ceremonial responsibilities.
www.heraldry-scotland.co.uk/Lyoncourt.htm
Stone Masonry/Stone Restoration (Culzean, Ayrshire)
*Master stonemason Andrew Bradley heads the National
Trust for Scotland's Stonemason Apprenticeship Scheme at
Culzean Castle in southwest Scotland. With the help of his
apprentice Ross Davidson, he demonstrates the crafts of
stone carving, masonry, and lime slaking and explains how
they are used in the preservation and restoration of
Scotland's built heritage.
www.nts.org.uk
Building & Restoration (Edinburgh)
*Alan Simpson, conservator of heraldry, frames, and
three-dimensional objects for Historic Scotland will
demonstrate and explain the many crafts and skills needed
for museum-quality restoration work and discuss his work at
Historic Scotland's properties throughout Scotland.
www.historic-scotland.gov.uk
OCCUPATIONS / OCCUPATIONAL CULTURE
Off-Shore Oil Industry
- Oral historians Hugo Manson and Terry Brotherstone
of The Oil Lives Research Project at the University of
Aberdeen, join offshore oil workers Bob Ballantyne,
Alexia Green, and Dennis Krahn to talk about their
lives and experiences on the North Sea oilrigs and the
impact of the industry on the culture of North East
Scotland.
Whisky Making
- William Grant & Sons (Dufftown,
Morayshire)
Employees of Glenfiddich and Balvanie distilleries in
the Speyside region of northern Scotland demonstrate and
explain the art and mysteries of making fine single malt
Scottish whisky. Both distilleries are owned by the fifth
generation of the founder, William Grant, and many of the
workers come from multi-generational whisky-making
families.
www.grantusa.com
COOKS
- Principal cook: Janet MacRae (Loch Alash) -- Chair
of the Scottish Women's Rural Institute,
(http://www.swri.org.uk).
- Participating Cooks: Margaret Bennett, Alexia
Green, Anne Reid, Sheena Wellington
PRESENTERS
- Maureen Barrie (Edinburgh) - The project manager
and educator from the National Museums of Scotland in
Edinburgh, Maureen attends the Festival as an
interviewer and presenter, and makes occasional
appearances as Dr. McWhat?: The Tartan Time Lord.
www.nms.ac.uk
- Dr. Valentina Bold (Dumfries) -Bold is a folklorist
and Head of the Celtic Studies Department at the
University of Glasgow's Creighton Campus in Dumfries.
No contact details.
- Fiona Ritchie (Perthshire/Matthews, NC) - As
host/producer of "The Thistle & Shamrock®" from
National Public Radio, which broadcasts to more than
380 stations weekly across the United States, Ms.
Ritchie is one of the best-known Scottish voices on
American media. thistle.npr.org
- Dr. Ian Russell (Aberdeen) - The Director of the
Elphinstone Institute, University of Aberdeen, Dr.
Russell is an eminent folklorist and researcher of
North East Scottish culture.