Saturday, 31 December 2011

New Shetland Life out 6 January!

Featuring an exclusive, hard-hitting piece by former council chief Dave Clark, a profile of Shetland-born EIS boss Ronnie Smith, a heroic tale of Arctic survival, Lerwick's poisonous pies, and a marvellous photo essay on the late lamented North Star by Chloe Garrick. Who also took this front cover shot of the Market Cross in snow:

Wednesday, 21 December 2011

Hillswick sunrise

http://www.beatcroft.net.

All the January issue stuff now with Andrew Morrison at Shetland Litho. We're having to hold over at least three major articles until February - only fair to give them a proper amount of space, rather than squeeze to fit.

Next issue out on January 6th.

Sunday, 18 December 2011

Top 10 albums of 2011

Tom Waits: Bad as Me
Gillian Welch: The Harrow and the Harvest
Frank Turner: England Keep My Bones
Babybird: The Pleasures of Self Destruction
Laura Marling: A Creature I Don’t Know
Josh T Pearson: Last of the Country Gentlemen
Ryan Adams: Ashes and Fire
British Sea Power: Valhalla Dancehall
Arcade Fire: The Suburbs
Sweet Inspiration: The Songs of Dan Penn and Spooner Oldham (compilation)

...in my humble opinion

Tuesday, 6 December 2011

The editor's predictably elderly ultimate top ten albums (for now)

NOTHING LESS THAN 35 YEARS OLD!

Rod Stewart: Every Picture Tells a Story
Van Morrison: It's too Late to Stop Now
Bruce Springsteen: Darkness on the Edge of Town
Bob Dylan: Blood on the Tracks
Joni Mitchell: Blue
David Lindley: El Rayo X
Rory Gallagher: Live in Europe
Randy Newman: Good Old Boys
Rolling Stones: Get Yer Ya-Yas Out
Jackson Browne: Late for the Sky

Monday, 5 December 2011

David Nicolson's top ten albums

David Fraser Nicolson's top ten albums of all time:

The Blue Nile- A Walk Across the Rooftops

Springsteen- Nebraska

ABC- The Lexicon of Love

Undertones- Undertones

The Beatles- Abbey Road

Radiohead- The Bends

My Vitriol- Finelines

Richard Hawley- Lady’s Bridge

Dr Feelgood- Stupidity

Death Cab for Cutie- Plans

Sunday, 4 December 2011

Read the editorial, Sandy Cluness on independence and Shetland, and more...

Three 

Three excerpts from December's magazine are now available to read online, free, here .

Thursday, 1 December 2011

Shetland Life: some extra bits and pieces - and please comment

Hallo, and welcome to the first Shetland Life editor's notebook...some extra bits and pieces will be coming up here, not available in the print edition, and hopefully we'll get your reaction to the magazine as comments, especially your Ultimate Top 10 Albums (as per Clive Munro's excellent new column).  You can email me direct via shetlandlifeeditor@gmail.com .

Oh, and if you're not in Shetland but would like to subscribe, email adverts@shetlandtimes.co.uk . From the Sunday after publication, some of the content (not all, and no pictures) will be posted here .

OK, here's a couple of things - the full, uncut editorial (we ran out of space in our bumper 52-page magazine this month) and a bit, not all, of Clive's column on choosing his top ten albums of all time. Enjoy...and buy the print magazine! Or Sigurd'll get you!



Editorial: Messy celebrations

Shetland knows how to celebrate. 
In winter, there’s a natural tendency to ‘coorie in’,  to nestle around the stove and huddle together against the darkness and raging storms outside.  But long experience has taught islanders that you need fight off and illuminate the darkness, to get out and about, socialise and affirm both community and the light that’s on its way. Eventually, it will be spring.
There are risks to both these activities: those who rarely move from the hearthside (or the centrally-heated tellyside, more often  these days) can find themselves afflicted with cabin fever. Fjøgstad feerie: Grumpiness, irritability and a tendency to shout (and sometimes throw things) at the flat screen TV. Especially during X Factor, Strictly and, in my case, any appearance of Jools Holland. Family flyting can become ferocious, too much gets drunk, eaten or smoked. And I’m not talking about  leaving your reestit mutton too long above the Rayburn.
But Shetland’s vibrant social life - be it Up Helly A’s and the necessary preparations for them, dances, weddings, balls, parties or  the recent eruption of birthday bus and hennie night culture - comes with complications. Again, the alcohol thing. We all drink too much at this time of year, mostly without long-lasting ill effects or fisticuffs. But when folk ‘fall by’ or fall out, when it’s ambulances at midnight or broken Bacardi Breezer bottles at dawn, things can get very messy.
Celebrations, in other words, can get out of hand.
That’s why, when I say I want this magazine to celebrate life in Shetland, I do not mean that it will all be nostalgia and sunsets. Though there will be both. The past is crucial to understanding the present and the future. I love Douglas Sinclair’s delving into the past in pictures and words. I’m fascinated by Shetland’s hugely important role in two world wars and in naval activity worldwide. And this is a beautiful place where beautiful things happen, and beautiful things are made. We need to celebrate all of these.
The ultimate celebration for me is a wedding. As long, I’d like to add quickly, and for the benefit of my various offspring, as I’m not paying for it. Matrimonials are a time for rejoicing in the past and looking to the future; for meeting old friends and making new ones; for drinking and eating too much, for putting the world to rights, arguing and occasionally fighting, hopefully in a good-natured kind of way. Although I always remember the story about a wedding in the area of Inverness known as The Ferry, where various uncles of the bride became involved in a difference of opinion with uncles of the groom. First the police were called, then the ambulances, and finally (after an incident with a fire alarm) the fire brigade. Someone who was there  told me afterwards, with some delight: “All three emergency services! Now that’s what I call a wedding!”
What you tend not to get at weddings is toxic, anonymous muttering. Sure, long-held grievances can erupt, people can have their say. But you know that bit in the ceremony about objections and speaking now or forever holding your peace (at least until the reception)? It’s about priorities. It’s saying, we’re here because we love these people and we want them to be happy. Because we recognise the good in them. Let’s celebrate.
So let’s celebrate Shetland.  Let’s not ignore our differences, be they between country and town, councillor and constituent, executive and employee, windfarm supporter and opponent. But we’re all in Shetland because we want to be, because we love this place and this community, or at least we like it more than any of the alternatives. And as Christmas - or Yule if you prefer - looms, let’s be proud of  Shetland’s history, it’s present, and its future.
Because, despite what may seem like  doom and gloom being bandied about by the council- necessarily so; there are budgets to meet and southern governments and their agencies to appease - Shetland does have a future. Unlike many other parts of the UK, it has a present, too. It has industry, it has a thriving culture, it has a wonderful environment, with or without windylights.  And - here’s an unpalatable truth - even if the proposed council cuts bite deeper than we dare imagine, this will still be a better place to live than anywhere else in Scotland. It will look after its elderly and its young better. It will be better equipped, more comfortable. A great place to be. If, that is, you don’t try and imagine it’s something different to what it is: an island community, roughly halfway between Scotland and Scandinavia.  We’re not in Kansas. We’re not even in Caithness. Or Orkney.
Thank goodness.

***   ***   ***
This special ready-for-Christmas edition of Shetland Life contains nearly all of your favourites, I hope, and some new, albeit weel-kent, regular contributors. These include Rosa Steppanova, who writes this month about Christmas cards, but from January will provide us once more with her legendary and brilliant insights into gardening in the isles. Clive Munro has been music mentor to generations of Shetland folk through his sadly missed record shop. Now he’ll be sharing his personal take on music and more in these pages. Motoring will feature each month, along with a new cartoon starring Sigurd the Tentative - Bohemian viking, and tales from Canada’s far north. Wir Shop starts in Hillswick, naturally, but will give retail outlets throughout the isles a chance to tell their stories in the future. Dave Donaldson’s picture essay on postboxes is a brilliant reminder to get those cards off early.
We have new photo-quizzes, the much-loved crossword is now in the hands of Shetland ForWirds and means business, and there are some intriguing, exclusive stories this time around: Christmas is approached from several angles. The council convener’s argument for more Shetland autonomy as part of any independent Scotland is fascinating and timely, and Jonathan Magnus Ledgard’s life as a specialist reporter on Jihadist terror movements gives more than pause for thought. As for Alistair Buchan’s breakfasting advice, well...
Check out my editor’s notebook at shetlandlife.blogspot.com. We’re on Facebook and Twitter too.
In the future, I’m hoping for more about boats, the sea and shipping, more from the schools, and more from you.  I’d like to know what you think of the magazine, and what’s being said in it. I’d like to start a letters page from next month, so please, email or write, for publication, with your real name and your real address. Remember that this is a monthly that people tend to keep, reread and send all over the world. It’s a platform for considered thought, argument, memories. 
And celebration. Happy Christmas,  or maybe…  Yule guid an Yule gaer, be wi wis aa year.

Tom Morton
shetlandlifeeditor@gmail.com
http://www.shetlandlife.blogspot.com
Leave a message on 07506 104721

Clive Munro: Off the Record

 "So, Clive, what's your Top 10 albums of all time ?" 
No-one's asked me that in a long time but when Tom asked me about doing a music column for Shetland Life I remembered that he had run a feature in The Shetland Times back in the late 80s in which (relatively) well known Shetlanders were asked to name their favourite 10 albums. I can't remember who else apart from myself contributed other than Stephen Gordon and possibly Drew Ratter. The reason I remember Stephen doing it is that while most people chose 10 different artists, I seem to recall that about half his albums were by Tom Waits and three or four more were by one other artist whose name eludes me!                            
  Anyway, having had my memory jogged I thought it would be interesting to look at which albums I'd chosen back then and see how many would still make the cut if I updated my personal Top 10. Not having that particular 24 year old copy of  "Da Times" to hand, I had to delve into the somewhat unreliable back pages of my mind for my original choices, but I think they were, in no particular order: The Rolling Stones "Exile On Main Street”, Gram Parsons “Grievous Angel”, Creedence Clearwater Revival’s “Willy And The Poor Boys”, Bob Dylan “Blonde On Blonde”, Richard and Linda Thompson “Pour Down Like Silver”, Van Morrison “Astral Weeks”, Ry Cooder “Paradise And Lunch”, The Band “Music From Big Pink”, Elvis Costello “King Of America” and T-Bone Burnett “Eponymous”. 
A good friend once accused me of having a very narrow taste in music, and indeed of only liking “gravelly voiced male singers”, as if I ought to be ashamed of myself. As you can see from this list he was, ahem, not too wide of the mark, although I can state categorically that Linda Thompson is neither gravelly voiced or male. Neither is Mick Jagger. Gravelly voiced that is.
  Fast forward to today and the last two on the list now by and large gather dust on my shelves, having been revealed as the sort of temporary fixations from which we all suffer now and then. Not bad albums but not great either. Average, in a word. In order to make it into my new, improved Top 10, albums will need to have gained my affection and kept it over a prolonged period of time. No more fleeting musical dalliances for me!
  Of the original 10 albums, 4 retain their positions effortlessly. “Exile” remains for me The Stones best album, although “Let It Bleed” and “Sticky Fingers” run it close. It’s “essence of Stones”, their sound distilled down to the basics, all (musical if not personal) excess removed. Roughly the same could be said for “Willie And The Poor Boys”, with only “Green River” among their other albums coming close, although in some ways Creedence were as much a singles band as a serious albums band.  
    “Astral Weeks” strolls in of course, indisputably Van The Man’s masterpiece, despite the astonishing consistency of his subsequent  recorded output.
  “Pour Down Like Silver” also remains for me the high point of Richard Thompson’s career. There’s not a bad song in sight and he remains one of the few guitarists I can stomach a lengthy solo from, the live version of “Night Comes In” now included as a bonus track being a perfect example. There’s a Shetland connection too, with Aly Bain playing fiddle on some tracks and the lovely “Dimming Of The Day” probably familiar to many of you from Sheila Henderson and Jenny Napier’s gorgeous version. 
   Of the others who’ve dropped out it was a toss-up back then whether to include “Music From Big Pink” or it’s successor “The Band”. The latter now seems to me much the better album, although “Big Pink” remains a great favourite. Similarly, It was a close call between “Blonde On Blonde” and “Blood On The Tracks” as to which Dylan album to pick. Again, I now listen far more to the latter and in fact “Blood On The Tracks” is possibly the most played album in my collection, a giant poke in the eye with a sharp stick to all those who insist that the greatest songwriter of the twentieth century was never the same after “the motorbike accident”. No, I don’t keep a detailed playlist, but...maybe I should. Just kiddin’ of course, surely no-one’s that obsessed.                                                                                                                      
   “Grievous Angel”  has lost it’s place simply because the number of times I’ve listened to it over the years has gently decreased at roughly the same pace as my intake of alcohol.  Listening to country music should probably carry a health warning-it certainly didn’t do Gram Parsons much good. “Paradise And Lunch” is still a great album, but again I just don’t listen to it that often anymore although I’ve decided that’s mainly because Warner Bros. made such a poor job of transferring it to CD. Along with several other of his early albums and most of Little Feat’s best stuff (all 1970s Warner’s) it just sounds a bit flat and lifeless to me. Maybe someday they’ll be properly re-mastered to re-capture that analogue sound again!
   Okay then, what to replace these with?

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