Monday, October 15, 2012

Awash in Celtic Colours

Celtic Colours overwhelmed Cape Breton and turned us into music gluttons.

Colours bills itself as an international music festival. The claim is a fair one. Apart from the cast of local musical luminaries we were entertained by tunesmiths from the Shetland Islands, Denmark, Ireland, even Finland and Estonia, and by someone from our own Victoria neighbourhood, fiddler-trumpeter extraordinaire Daniel Lapp.

Apart from familiar fiddles and guitars, performers made music using bouzoukis and banjos, harps and harmonicas, pipes and penny whistles, trumpets and tambourines.

Apart from official concerts – there were 46 of those to choose from over a nine-day period – we frequented CBC Radio tapings at Knox Church in Baddeck and followed that up with another daily freebie at the Alexander Bell national historic site.

Without exception, none of the artists cheated their audience – everybody we saw seemed hell-bent on delivering their musical all. Though there wasn't an act we disliked, our top favourites were Irishman John Doyle, Newfoundland band 'The Once' and the aforementioned Daniel Lapp.

By the time the last bow was drawn over the last fiddle string we had seen thirteen events. Perhaps that strikes the gentle reader as a sufficient number but, no, we were a little sad to see the festival end. On the other hand we console ourselves with the knowledge that it is only a twelve-month wait till Celtic Colours #17 takes flight.

Meanwhile hues of another sort – the forest russets, golds and scarlets of autumn – have transformed the green hills of Cape Breton into a Jacob’s coat of intense colour. The swelter of August is but a memory and we are not tempted to revisit the old swimming hole. The woodshed is restocked – a good thing given the demands we put upon our trusty Drolet woodstove. Ice has yet to make its first appearance in the wash basin but on Saturday morning the outside thermometer registered just three degrees; I screwed up my courage to take a shower as a brief snow flurry underscored that summer is gone. We claim that in summer our screened porch is the freshest, airiest, finest bedroom the world has to offer; even so, the autumn chill drove us indoors three weeks ago.

Our 2012 Cape Breton days are numbered and the number is small – three to be precise. On Thursday we fly to Toronto for a three-day visit with nephew Michael and family, then to Vancouver for a day with Lexi, Ben and company. It is nearly five months since we departed Victoria; on or about October 23 we’re eager to pick up where we left off back in May.

1 comment:

Mary Sanseverino said...

We can hardly wait to hear all about your summer adventures. Celtic Colours got some good air play on CBC out here too. Looks like a good time was had by all.

See you soon!