10 theatre shows to see right now across Scotland
Edinburgh-based playwright Zinnie Harris’s remix of Shakespeare’s Macbeth returns to the Scottish stage after runs in London and New York.
Senior Features Writer
Born in Germany, raised in Northern Ireland, resident in Scotland more or less since 1982. Fond of tea, Tottenham Hotspur and Touch of Evil. I’ve written one book (Whose Side Are You On?, Yellow Jersey, 2011), and interviewed Tracey Emin twice. Hopefully no one holds either against me.
Born in Germany, raised in Northern Ireland, resident in Scotland more or less since 1982. Fond of tea, Tottenham Hotspur and Touch of Evil. I’ve written one book (Whose Side Are You On?, Yellow Jersey, 2011), and interviewed Tracey Emin twice. Hopefully no one holds either against me.
Edinburgh-based playwright Zinnie Harris’s remix of Shakespeare’s Macbeth returns to the Scottish stage after runs in London and New York.
WHAT’S the most fun you can have listening to the radio? For the last two weeks it’s been catching Courtney Love’s Women on 6 Music. Stripped across Monday to Thursday at the end of each night (all eight episodes are now available on BBC Sounds) the Hole front woman has been telling her life story from childhood to stardom, and from marriage to Kurt Cobain to his tragic death and beyond.
REASONS to be cheerful, let’s face it, are difficult to find in 2024. The world’s on fire, Donald Trump is still a thing, and newspapers are attacking the National Trust over a scone recipe. But at least we have a new record from The Zutons.
So, here we go, 10 Scottish albums worth rediscovering. Of course this is a totally partial, subjective list picked for effect, and on a hiding to nothing. But that’s the fun of it, right?
WE are a little early for our meeting with John Burnside. A week too early, according to his diary. “I’ve got you down for next Friday,” he says as Gordon the photographer and I crowd into his office in Kennedy Hall at St Andrews University and try to find seats amongst all the books.
There was a time when Forsyth and Jimmy Tarbuck (Brucie and Tarby) were, for some of us, the unacceptable face of light entertainment.
Andrew O’Hagan meets me in the kitchen of his flat on the top of a tenement in Edinburgh’s New Town. The flat is as elegantly turned out as he is. Maybe O’Hagan’s colour palette is a little more restrained than the interior design of his surroundings, but he clearly fits in here.
It’s a history that takes in the Reformation, witchcraft, battles, shipwrecks and the condescension of the author of Waverley and Ivanhoe. The result is a fresh take on the story of Scotland that reminds us that there is never one story.
IT turned out to be a surprisingly low key Easter Bank Holiday on the radio last Monday. Radio 2 offered up a couple of hours of Tony Blackburn’s Sounds of Soul (never a bad thing), Radio Scotland stuck mostly to the schedule with The Afternoon Show and then repeated Nicola Meighan’s For the Record conversation with Eddi Reader, first broadcast last month. 5 Live, when it wasn’t running trailers for podcasts (maybe tone it down a bit folks), offered up an afternoon of EFL football commentary.
Given that he engineered Meat is Murder and The Queen is Dead for The Smiths, produced their swansong album Strangeways Here Come, went on to work with Morrissey on his solo work, produced five and a half Blur albums, including Parklife, and has collaborated with The Pretenders, The Kaiser Chiefs, Suede, The Cranberries and New Order, you’d have to say that, on the whole, record producer Stephen Street’s CV is pretty decent.
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