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    Simon Thoumire Orchestra

    The Simon Thoumire Orchestra are an elite [but occasional] ensemble of top musicians from both the folk and jazz music worlds. The orginal idea for the orchestra came from Jim Sutherland’s band ‘Someotherland’, an always increasing in size 11 piece band that performed around Scotland for a couple of years.

    The STO first came together for the performance of ‘Celtic Connections Suite’ in January 1997. The rehearsals were in the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall and Simon and Dick Lee had just flew in from Hong Kong at 9.30am that morning. There were two mad rehearsals that led up to a great gig the following evening in the Celtic Connections Club at the Central Hotel, Glasgow. There were a few other gigs after this and then ‘Music for a New Scottish Parliament’ came along. This was first performed in the Queens Hall, Edinburgh and featured 4 politicians talking for 1 minute on why people should vote their political party into the new Scottish parliament. This was a lot of fun and had a few surprise moments instore for the band. The piece was performed again to open the BBC Music Live event in Glasgow and was a tremendous success.

    The last performance of the STO to date was in January 2000 in St Alouicias Church, Glasgow. The piece performed was The Scottish Requiem – music written to commemorate the people who have lived through the centuries. All the texts were from the Roman Mass and translated into Scots giving the music a relevance to Scotland. The piece featured 2 bagpipes, 3 fiddles, 2 singers, Drumchapel Choir and Hyndland Strings.

    Over the years the 'Orchestra' has featured
    · Simon Thoumire - concertina
    · Eilidh Shaw - fiddle
    · Anna-Wendy Stevenson – fiddle
    · Aidan O'Rourke – fiddle
    · Alan Henderson - fiddle
    · Mike Katz - bagpipes, whistle
    · Rory Campbell – bagpipes, whistle

    Iain MacInnes - bagpipes

    Finlay MacDonald - bagpipes

    David Milligan - piano
    · Alyth McCormack - voice
    · Fiona MacKenzie – voice
    · Elspeth Cowie – voice
    · Petrea Cooney - voice
    · Kevin Mackenzie - guitar
    · Phil Bancroft – sax
    · Rob Hall – sax
    · Dick Lee - clarinet
    · Tom MacNiven - trumpet
    · Colin Steel - trumpet

    Claude Deppa - trumpet
    · Neil Harland – double bass
    · Simon Thorpe – double bass
    · Tom Bancroft - drums
    · Ian Copeland – drums
    · John Rae – drums
    · Hyndland Strings
    · Drumchapel school choir

    Contact details:

    Email: simon@scottishtraditionalmusic.com
    Phone: +44 (0) 131 441 3135
    Web Site: http://www.simonthoumire.com/


    Interviews:

    Alan McIntosh Brown


    One of Scotlands Brightest young composers tells Alan McIntosh Brown about pushing the barriers of music.

    One of Scotlands Brightest young composers tells Alan McIntosh Brown about pushing the barriers of music.

    Simon Thoumire is a young man going places. He’s sprinted up through the ranks to a position where his musical services are much in demand.His original work is being commissioned by festivals and he has his own flourishing record company.

    His musical career began in his home city of Edinburgh at the tender age of nine. " I was in the Boys Brigade" he says "and I played the bagpipes. But sometimes piping is all about piping and not so much about music", he says, not altogether tongue in cheek. "My Mum and Dad used to have these old McCalmans records and we used to dance round the room to them, so that’s how I really got into Scottish music."

    He was impressed by the concertina playing of the Mac’s Hamish Bayne. "I just heard it and totally loved it." He says. Simon’s sister was learning accordion at the time with legendary Edinburgh teacher Chrissie Leatham. "She knew a concertina player called Tom Ward who got me a concertina and that’s what happened," he says.

    After a musical apprenticeship in Scotland’s accordion and fiddle clubs, he played with the Hopscotch Ceilidh Band before joining Seannachioe in 1987 at the age of 17 and was with them for 5 years. Quite a lot happened in that time: the band made a record, Simon won the BBC Young Tradition Award in 1989, recorded an album with guitarist Ian Carr and then another one with Seannachie.

    This was followed by The Simon Thoumire Three and a well-received album Waltzes for Playboys before his brilliantly titled Green Linnet release March Strathspey and Surreal took the ear of reviewers. At this point he decided to more major composing and contacted the Celtic Connections Festival. "I said: I’ve got this idea ro write a suite – a folk/jazz one for nine people with lots of sax, trumpet bagpipes and fiddles. I was just getting into writing bigger pieces and listening to quite a lot of records," he says.

    His latest big composition is The Scottish Requiem, again done for Celtic Connections. "I’m greatly patriotic and just love Scotland and I just want to write about Scottish things," he says, "but it’s not necessarily mountains or anything like that but more about the people. I wrote the music commemorating the last thousand years of the Scottish people using the Roman mass, but had it translated into Scots by Rod Paterson. Then I wrote the music for choir and orchestra, bagpipes, Scottish fiddles and solo singers as well. It hasn’t been recorded yet but hopefully it will be later this year."

    Last year he he commemorated a very special event by releasing Music for a New Scottish Parliament on his own label. "I decided that we had this momentous coming up and no one was doing too much for it," he says. "I wanted to write a new piece of music using old styles and old traditional stuff, but the new parliament had to go forward so I wanted a piece of contemporary music. It came out on the first July, the day of the Parliament opening. It was great to be able to commemorate that."

    Another feather in Simon’s cap is his record company Tartan Tapes, which began to cater for the tourist market. "Basically the tourist stuff out there is total crap," he says. "There’s a lot of companies doing it and it makes a lot of money, I wanted to put records out that tourists would want to buy and take home with real traditional musicians." He’s now created a fiddle-orientated subsidiary Foot Stompin’ Records which has already released albums by Liz Doherty and Fiddlesticks.

    His latest solo concertina album is available only on his web.site – that’s www.tartantapes.com – and Simon classes his own music as still very experimental."I play lots of reels and jigs but also work with some freer concepts." He says."I’m working on free music but in a Scottish way. I think we should be listening to everybody’s music and not just pigeon-holing it. So many folk musicians just listen to folk music. You’ll learn form other folk musicians but you’ll learn as much listening to Oscar Peterson or Pinchas Zukerman or someone like that."

    There seems to be no end to Simon’s creativity and while he may continue to keep us guessing musically, the end result will always be both challenging and satisfying.

    Alan McIntosh Brown



    Albums:


    Music for a New Scottish Parliament
    A limited edition CD to mark an exciting time in Scotland's history when its people voted for its own Parliament after a lapse of 300 years.
    £10.99

    Celtic Connections Suite
    Simon Thoumire was specially commissioned by the Celtic Connections to write a piece to mark the opening of their late night club. The piece was written for an elite ensemble of 9 folk and jazz musicians and was performed two years running at the great festival.
    £10.99





    Performer Index

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