Mairi Campbell
Mairi Campbell (born 1965) is a Scottish folk singer and musician. Campbell's songs and music have a rooted and powerful quality that range from the everyday to the universal, both in sound and subject matter.
Mairi Campbell | |
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Born | Mairi Campbell 1965 Edinburgh, Scotland |
Home town | Portobello, Scotland |
Musical career | |
Genres | folk music, Scottish music |
Instruments | Viola, fiddle, piano, vocals |
Years active | 1989 – present |
Website | www.mairicampbell.scot |
Campbell has been much praised for her singing voice and musical skills. She has won multiple awards including Scots Singer of the Year, Female Musician of the Year, Neil Gow Composition of the Year, and Tutor of the Year. In 2015 Campbell created her first solo theatre show Pulse, an autobiographical account of a musician seeking pulse, co-devised and directed by Kath Burlinson. Tracks from her 2015 album Pulse, a collaboration with the producer David Gray, feature in the show.
Campbell is one half of the duo The Cast, whose version of the Robert Burns poem "Auld Lang Syne" featured in the movie Sex and the City. Campbell is also a member of the ceilidh band The Occasionals,[1] and is a guest musician with the baroque ensemble Concerto Caledonia.[2]
Early life and music
Campbell was born and raised in Morningside, Edinburgh. She was brought up alongside her three sisters by their mother, the artist Marjorie Campbell and their father Archie, an academic at Napier University. Her mother and father ensured that all four sisters had a strong grounding in music. The sisters formed their own string quartet when Campbell was 11.[3]
Campbell studied the viola with Michael Beeston at The City of Edinburgh Music School from age 16. She went on to study with Csaba Erelyi at Guildhall School of Music in London where she was penalised for playing her own composition in her final exam.[4]
Music career
Campbell was a member of the Kreisler String Orchestra, an award-winning conductorless string orchestra, from 1989 to 1994. However she felt a strong hankering for traditional music and felt the need to "come home" to her own cultural roots.
In 1991 Campbell visited Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia, Canada. This marked a turning point and the start of Campbell's apprenticeship to traditional fiddle and Scots song. Over the next few years she taught step dancing and fiddle across Scotland and for the Scots Music Group.
The accordion player and multi-instrumentalist Freeland Barbour took her under his wing and she joined the Scottish dance band the Occasionals, in 1992. She was a member of the Ceilidh Collective and Bella McNab's dance bands.
Campbell initially gained prominence as one half of the folk band The Cast, alongside her husband David Francis, with whom she has had a long and fruitful collaboration. Their debut album The Winnowing was released in 1994. The album includes their version of Auld Lang Syne which was featured on the soundtrack of the 2008 movie Sex and the City. The song can be heard during the New Year's scene of the film, accompanying a montage of the main characters' activities that night.[5] The Cast recorded another two albums: Colours of Lichen in 1996 and Green Gold in 2007.
In 1999, Campbell and Francis were invited to perform their version of Auld Lang Syne for Sean Connery at the Presidential Awards in Washington, D.C., with President Bill Clinton in the audience.[6]
In 2011 and 2013 Campbell, Francis and the director Kath Burlinson made two shows of story and songs that marked the lives of Campbell's forebears. Red Earth is the story of her grandmother's life as the wife of Campbell's grandfather, a young doctor who died in China in 1938 during the Sino-Japanese War. Revival! marks the life of her paternal grandfather the Rev Duncan Campbell and his involvement with the Lewis Revivals in the 1950s. Campbell and Francis toured the folk clubs and village halls of Scotland with both shows. They incorporated moving narrative with fiddle and viola tunes and original and traditional songs.[7] They released the album Revival & The Red Earth in 2012.
In 2011, Campbell released her first self-titled solo album. Mairi Campbell features the songs "Portobello Sands" which tells of a mother keenly awaiting the return of her child. "Home (is not what I left behind)" is about her grandmother's return to Scotland from China in 1940. "She stitched upon my heart" is written for her own mother who was a fine artist and quiltmaker.
In 2014, Campbell released her solo EP, Seven Songs. This is a showcase of Campbell and Francis's songwriting. "If I should meet my Maker" is influenced by the life of her grandfather Duncan Campbell. "Jock Tamson's Bairns" is in the Scot's dialect and speaks of the darker side of Edinburgh.
Campbell has collaborated with other musicians throughout her life. She has been a member of the ceilidh band The Occasionals since 1992. Since 2011 she has played and recorded with the baroque ensemble Concerto Caledonia and guested with Mr McFall's Chamber.
In 2012, and again in 2014, Campbell was invited to support Joan Armatrading in concert after winning a slot in her National songwriters’ competition.[8]
In 2014, Campbell and her husband David Francis joined a group of artists including William McIlvanny, David Greig, Ricky Ross and Karine Polwart for the Bus Party, a bus tour of Scotland to embark on conversations about Scottish independence.[9]
From 2015: Pulse
In 2015 Campbell created her first solo theatre show Mairi Campbell: Pulse, a one-woman show that charts Campbell's journey to seeking pulse, using voice, movement, word and animation.[10]
Pulse is co-devised and directed by Kath Burlinson, who is known for her work on the 2012 hit Fringe show Wolf[11] and is founder and director of the Authentic Artist Collective.[12] Campbell and Burlinson have also worked together on the Youth Music Theatre UK’s production of Tales of the World's End in 2011, and in 2014 they co-led the Sounding Authentic retreat in London.
Pulse was showcased in Edinburgh in June 2015 and at Celtic Connections in January 2016. In August 2016, the show then ran for a month at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe to excellent critical and audience feedback.
"So, in the here and now, on a stage bare but for a rough-hewn pendulum – its flat stone culled from her family's croft – Campbell opens her throat in a spirit of belonging that is ancient and modern, and life affirming for all of us" Mary Brennan, the Herald ****
"a mesmerising performer with such a gift for accents and physical comedy that it's easy to forget her main job is folk musician" Andrew Eaton-Lewis, the Scotsman
In 2017, Pulse had a second successful run at the Fringe and Campbell took the show on tour around Scotland.
Campbell's 2015 album Pulse is a collaboration with the producer David Gray and features in the show Pulse.[13] The Musician, The Journal of the Musicians' Union, said of Pulse: "A beguiling brew of folk and trip-hop. Campbell's unearthly vocals are potent reminders of the rhythmic thrills of both traditional and modern dance music"
Teaching and retreats
Campbell has always been interested in teaching and combining that with creative flow and the subtle benefits and deep values of Scottish traditional music. She has had a continuous teaching practice since 1992, with experience teaching fiddle, violin, stepdancing and ceilidh dancing. She is also the only trained leader of InterPlay in the UK, a cross-form creative arts practice.[14]
She was the musical director of the Edinburgh-based Scots folk choir Sangstream from 2003 for 12 years.[15]
Since 2007, Campbell has been running music retreats on the Isle of Lismore in the Southern Hebrides in Argyll where she has ancestral links and a cottage and studio. Different weekend programmes now include fiddle music, singing, dancing, photography, poetry and craft.[16] In 2014, Campbell and Kath Burlinson created a new workshop, Sounding Authentic, which now runs annually on Lismore.
Personal life
At age 18, Campbell met Dave Francis, who is now her husband and duo partner, on Lismore, home to her great-grandmother Jane Livingstone. Francis taught Campbell the first tune she ever learned by ear, "The Boy's Lament for his Dragon". The couple have two children, Ada and Ellen, and live in Portobello.
Awards
2007 Scots Trad Music Awards: Scots Singer of the Year [1]
2007 Burnsong: winner
2008 Live Ireland Music Award: Best Female Musician of the Year
2008 Live Ireland Music Award: Best Composition of the Year
2011 Scots Trad Music Awards: Tutor of the Year
2011 Neil Gow International Composition Award: overall winner
2015 Scots Trad Music Awards: Instrumentalist of the Year 2015
2016 Scots Trad Music Awards: Event of the Year 2016 (nominee)
Discography
Solo work
Albums/EPs
Mairi Campbell (2011)
Seven Songs (2014)
Collaborations
CampbellGray
Pulse (2015)
The Cast
The Winnowing (1994)
Colours of Lichen (1996)
Greengold (2007)
Revival & The Red Earth (2012)
Singles
Auld Lang Syne – the single (1994)
Sheet music
Sheet music for songs from The Cast's album Greengold is available from Mairi Campbell's website
See also
References
- "Mairi Campbell (Fiddle, Viola, Vocals)". The Occasionals.
- "Revenge of the folk singers". Concerto Caledonia.
- Combe, Karen (Winter 2010). "The Portobello Reporter".
- Kemp, Jackie (12 June 2015). "Feel the Pulse". alledinburghtheatre.com.
- McQUILLAN, REBECCA (7 June 2008). "Sex and the City turns folk couple into stars". The Herald. Glasgow.
- "Dougie Maclean joins the choir to sing Caledonia". edinburghguide.com. 20 April 2011.
- Adams, Rob (19 October 2012). "Mairi Campbell & David Francis, Edinburgh Folk Club". The Herald. Glasgow.
- "Mairi supports Joan Armatrading". mairicampbell.co.uk. 10 September 2014.
- "Artists embark on 'listening' bus tour of Scotland before independence vote". The Guardian. 1 May 2014.
- "Mairi Campbell Pulse". mairicampbell.co.uk.
- "Wolf". authenticartist.co.uk/wolf/.
- "Authentic Artist".
- "CampbellGray Pulse". mairicampbell.scot.
- "Interplay in Scotland". mairicampbell.scot.
- "About Sangstream".
- "Lismore Music Retreats".