Music is never far away in Shetland and, on 19 May, one of the highlights is a visit by the Dunedin Consort, who’ll be performing Monteverdi’s beautiful madrigals in the last concert of Shetland Arts’ classical season. At the end of the month, after a hugely successful visit to the Shetland Folk Festival in 2016, Laura Cortese and the Dance Cards will be back, playing new material in a concert at Mareel on the 30th. Their blend of folk, rock and Cajun will set toes tapping. Local band, Kansa, will be in support.
On 9 June, the islands will host the only European performance by folk supergroup, the String Sisters, founded by Shetland’s own Catriona MacDonald and featuring six top fiddlers plus piano, guitar, bass and drums players hailing from Norway, Sweden, the USA, Ireland and Scotland. They’ll be in Shetland to record a new album using the facilities at Mareel.
Later in the month, the focus will be on country and soul sounds, with Yola Carter playing in Lerwick on the 23rd and in Sandwick on the 24th. Bristol-based, she went down well at Glastonbury and in Nashville and was described by the Times as ‘spectacular’.
There’s an opportunity to hear music of the traditional kind in a regular feature of the Shetland summer, the showcase of traditional music and crafts at Islesburgh Community Centre, which gets under way on 5 June and runs every Monday throughout the month.