The prestigious MG ALBA Scots Trad Music Awards is a staple in the traditional music calendar with an astounding seventeen categories this year. Winners will be revealed exclusively to a live audience of music fans and industry at Perth Concert Hall on Saturday 1st December. The event will be broadcast live on BBC ALBA, BBC Radio Scotland and globally through the BBC ALBA website and will be presented by Mary Ann Kennedy and Kim Carnie.
The full shortlist is below; among them Neo-trad quintet Elephant Sessions who are in the running for Live Act of The Year. Their history with the awards stretches back to 2014 when they won Up and Coming Artist of the Year in 2014, Best Live Act in 2016 and the astonishing Belhaven Bursary for Innovation in Music Award last year. Also competing for the crown are BBC Radio 2 Folk Award Winners Talisk and Isle of Skye’s, Niteworks.
Elephant Session’s band member Alasdair Taylor has received his first solo nomination for Composer of the Year sponsored by PRS for Music.
Nominees for the prestigious Trad Album of the Year features a handful of works including Alterum by Julie Fowlis, EVO by Skerryvore & The Seer by Lauren MacColl. This year marks the second Trad Album of The Year nomination for Ross Ainslie and Ali Hutton for their second album ‘Symbiosis II’.
Names for the most sought-after Gaelic Singer of the Year include Josie Duncan and Maeve Mackinnon. Màrtainn Skene Highland Dance Band are vying for Scottish Dance Band of the Year whilst The Arc Sessions, who bring some of Scotland’s best live music acts to Fochabers, Moray are up for Club of The Year.
Folk Band of the Year sees a nomination for Glasgow-based five-piece Ímar, who’s accolades include several BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, the BBC Radio 2 Horizon Award and were shortlisted for MG ALBA Album of The Year back in 2017.
The Belhaven Bursary for Innovation in Music returns this year, with the shortlist of ten released later this week.
Murdo MacSween, Communications Manager for the event’s title sponsor, MG ALBA, said: “We at MG ALBA are immensely proud to support Scotland’s world-class musical talent and we’re delighted to give the MG ALBA Scots Trad Music Awards a global platform on BBC ALBA, through our online stream on the BBC iPlayer.”
Alan Morrison, Head of Music, Creative Scotland, said: “From the standard bearers who keep our traditions alive to the grassroots organisations who inspire communities across all of Scotland, from the international stars of today to the emerging stars of tomorrow, there’s nothing quite like Na Trads when it comes to celebrating the sheer depth and breadth of our folk heritage. Scotland’s music flows through the heart of our culture, and the very best of it is on display in every one of these categories. Congratulations to all of the nominees and also to sector champions Hands Up for Trad, whom Creative Scotland is proud to support as a Regularly Funded Organisation.”
Provost of Perth and Kinross Dennis Melloy said: “As someone who has enjoyed and supported Scottish Traditional music most of my adult life, I am very much looking forward to welcoming the finalists of the 2018 MG ALBA Scots Trad Music Awards. The shortlist for this event is fantastic and I am sure we are all in for a treat!
These Awards feature leading Scottish musicians and singers. Known as the Folk Oscars, they are returning to Perth once again to put traditional Scottish music including Gaelic Song, Folk, Scottish Dance music, to Pipe Bands into the spotlight.”
Stuart Fleming, PRS for Music Senior Manager, Scotland & Northern Ireland, said: “From the folk clubs bringing some of Scotland’s best live music acts to the stage, to the composers writing the music we all love to hear, it is great to see so much talent recognised by the MG ALBA Scots Trad Music Awards. Congratulations to all of those nominated – these shortlists showcase the truly excellent culture of Scotland’s traditional music scene, which continues to go from strength to strength.”
The shortlists are as follows:
Album of the Year sponsored by Birnam CD
Alterum by Julie Fowlis
EVO by Skerryvore
Punch by The Poozies
Sanctuary by Ross Ainslie
Sandwood by Duncan Chisholm
Some Other Land by Adam Sutherland
Symbiosis II by Ross Ainslie and Ali Hutton
The Key by Blazin’ Fiddes
The Railway by Hamish Napier
The Seer by Lauren MacColl
The Belhaven Bursary for Innovation
Breabach
Dàimh
Fara
Inyal
Nae Plans
Niteworks
Rachel Newton
Siobhan Miller
Talisk
Tide Lines
Club of the Year Sponsored by Traditional Arts and Culture Scotland (Tracs)
Craigie Folk Club
Arc Sessions, Fochabers
Partick Folk Club
Shetland Accordion and Fiddle Club
Composer of the Year Sponsored by PRS for Music
Alasdair Taylor (Elephant Sessions)
Duncan Chisholm
Jenny Sturgeon
Sileas Sinclair
Community Project of the Year Sponsored by Gordon Duncan Memorial Trust
Taynuilt Ceilidhs
Care for a Ceilidh
Fèis Gleann Albainn
Ceilidh Makers
Event of the Year Sponsored by VisitScotland
Far Far from Ypres
Bothy Culture and Beyond, Celtic Connections
Findhorn Bay Festival
Mull Music Festival
Gaelic Singer of the Year Sponsored by Macmeanmna
Josie Duncan
Maeve Mackinnon
Eilidh Cormack
Ruairidh Cormack
Instrumentalist of the Year Sponsored by Royal Scottish Country Dance Society
Mike Vass
Laura Wilkie
Patsy Reid
Calum Stewart
Live Act of the Year Sponsored by Greentrax Recordings
Karine Polwart
Findlay Napier
Niteworks
Elephant Sessions
Talisk
Citty Finlayson Scots Singer of the Year Sponsored by Traditional Music and Song Association
Iona Fyfe
George Duff
Hannah Rarity
Christine Kydd
Scottish Dance Band of the Year Sponsored by National Association of Accordion and Fiddle Clubs
David Kennedy SDB
Susan MacFadyen SDB
Martainn Skene Highland Dance Band
Iain MacPhail SDB
Scottish Folk Band of the Year Sponsored by Threads of Sound
Paul McKenna Band
Ímar
Dàimh
Ryan Young and Jenn Butterworth
Kinnaris
Scottish Pipe Band of the Year
North Lanarkshire Schools
Inverary and District
Preston Lodge Novice B Pipe Band
Scottish Power Pipe Band
Trad Music in the Media Sponsored by Skipinnish
The Groove is Not Trivial (Film)
Scots Radio
Pipeline, BBC Radio Scotland
The National
Music Tutor of the Year Sponsored by Creative Scotland’s Youth Music Initiative
Anna Wendy Stevenson
Grant McFarlane
Heather Anderson
Mhairi Marwick
Up and Coming Artist of the Year Sponsored by Royal Conservatoire of Scotland
Heisk
Assynt
Project Smok
Eabhal
Venue of the Year Award Sponsored by Musicians’ Union
Beacon Arts Centre, Greenock
Crafts and Things, Glencoe
Glenbuchat Hall, Aberdeenshire
Drygate Brewery, Glasgow