Tag Archives: Hamish Napier

Folk / Singer-songwriter: EP review – Greenshanks ‘Stormbird’

Greenshanks is the alter-ego of Will Boyd-Wallis from Strathspey in the Scottish Highlands. He gained recognition performing at Glasgow’s Celtic Connections in 2023 where he was a finalist at the Danny Kyle Open Stage. Stormbird is his debut EP and after forty years of playing and writing music, this is the first time any of his songs have been officially released.

The five-track EP features a stellar cast of notable musicians from the Scottish contemporary folk scene. As well as Boyd-Wallis (vocals, guitar, guitalele), Stormbird boasts Hamish Napier (harmonium, organ, piano); James Lindsey (double bass, electric bass): James Mackintosh (percussion); Ross Ainslie (low whistle); Becky Doe (viola, violin); and Iain Forrest (slide guitar).

Will Boyd-Wallis: “This EP has been a long time coming. The first track Fistful of Sand has been growing in me ever since I was a boy when my mother told me that my great-great-grandfather was born on the Isle of Rum on the West Coast of Scotland. He was evicted and sailed to Nova Scotia, eventually settling in New Zealand.  This story led me to move to the Highlands in my early twenties with a vow to put something back. I dedicate this EP to my mother Maha, great-granddaughter of John Mòr McLean.”

Putting that something back has, for Boyd-Wallis, resulted in him dedicating the past thirty years to working in caring for woodlands, moorlands, mountains and coasts in hard-to-reach places in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland and he adds:

“All of the other songs have been inspired by the many people, places and creatures I have met on my daily life and work with the National Trust for Scotland.  I am grateful to all of them – animal, plant and mineral – for all the joy and comfort they have given me.”

From the aforementioned ‘Fistful of Sand’, which immortalises the pain and suffering of the Rum islanders as a result of the clearance of 1826; to ‘Sandstone’, described as a modern-day Selkie song; to the title track which outlines a life-enhancing encounter with a storm petrel chick on the island of Hirta in St Kilda, the Stormbird EP reveals Boyd-Wallis to be a fine storyteller and songwriter. The songs are sung with passion and conviction but also genuine tenderness. Along with some seriously good musicianship and some lovely cover art and beautifully-written liner notes, it makes for a highly impressive recording debut.

Released: 7th March 2025 https://greenshanks.com/

Folk/electronica: album review – Barry Reid ‘Breathing Space’

A noteworthy figure on the Scottish music scene, Barry Reid has made his presence felt both through membership of bands like the Treacherous Orchestra and Croft No. Five, and also as a studio engineer and producer. Breathing Space, however, is Reid’s debut solo album.

Inspired by the rural landscapes of Ross-Shire and Inverness-Shire and recorded at his own Rose Croft Studio in the Highland village of Muir of Ord, Breathing Space fuses folk and electronica to create ten self-composed instrumental tracks.

Alongside Reid, the album boasts an impressive line-up of guest musicians in Lauren MacColl, Hamish Napier, Laura Wilkie, Innes Watson and Ali Hutton.

“For many years I’ve wanted to make an electronic based album of music that not only reflects myself as a musician but also the places I love to be in, where I find calm amongst all the chaos,” Reid writes in the album sleeve-notes.  

He’s not the first to do this, of course. A number of musicians have been tempted to explore that intersect of folk and electronica and in recent years we’ve been seeing more albums treading this same path. However, both for the sheer wealth of instruments involved (which include acoustic guitar, synthesizers, harmonium, drums, samples, keyboards, percussion and vocal drone as well as fiddle, flute and whistles from the assorted guest musicians) and for the incorporation of mood-setting sounds from the natural landscape, Reid has come up with something that’s both evocative and highly inventive.

Released: 2 March 2022

www.spad.org.uk

Folk: album review – Hamish Napier ‘The River’

My review was originally published by Bright Young Folk here

Hamish Napier is an in-demand folk musician who has collaborated with a number of key acts on the Scottish folk scene. The River, however, is the debut solo album from this Strathspey-born composer and multi-instrumentalist, and is very much inspired by a childhood spent growing up on the banks of the Spey. “The River brings to the surface vivid sonic images of occurrences, past and present, along the mile-long stretch of the Spey that flows past my childhood home,” Napier tells us in the extensive sleeve notes.

The album includes a stellar cast of renowned Scottish folk musicians, including Sarah Hayes (Admiral Fallow) on flute, James Lindsay (Breabach) on double bass, Martin O’Neil (Duncan Chisholm) on bodhran, as well as Callum MacCrimmon singing Canntaireach, the ancient chanting language of the bagpipes.

Perhaps symbolic of the constantly changing flow of any river, there is a breadth of sounds and moods explored on this album. Opening track Mayfly puts one in mind of some early 70s prog rock passages, a folky Tubular Bells if you will. It’s perhaps an unusual start but provides a captivating experimental feel which immediately encourages the listener to want to explore further.

The Whirlpool meanwhile is a lovely tune with flute and whistle. It has been written as a round – in celebration of the whirlpool that constantly spins and spins just a few hundred yards from the Old Spey Bridge.which captures the frenetic natural cycle of the river as an ever-changing dance. The mood changes considerably with The Dance, beginning with gentle, sombre piano.

Of course, no aquatic-inspired folk, be it river or sea, is complete without harrowing tales of tragedy and death, and the beautiful but mournful Drowning of the Silver Brothers is inspired by the fate of two local boys who mysteriously drowned in the 1930s. Clearly not forgotten locally, this piece serves as a haunting but fitting tribute to the boys and the mystery that surrounds them.

Another memorable track is Floating, which has a funky electronic feel to it demonstrating just how far Napier is prepared to cast his musical net in order to capture the range of moods and emotions he feels moved to express in this album. The two-part The Spey Cast closes the album. The first part is a thought-provoking gentle piece inspired by the death of an old fly fisherman while the second part is a fast and furious musical romp which reflects the mixture of chaos and hilarity that is the town’s annual raft race.

For those with a love of Scottish folk, particularly those with a keen interest in experimentation and innovation within the Celtic world and who love to hear the sound of boundaries being pushed, this is an album well worth exploring.

Released January 2016

http://www.hamishnapier.com/

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