KM: How difficult is it to play with other instruments in bands like Capercaillie or Clan Alba, or in your current duo with Jamie McMenemy?
FM: I think you have to look at chordal things a lot more – you have to be aware of what will work chordally and rhythmically with another instrument. Playing solo you can play anything you want, but if I am working with Jamie, for example, I have to think about what is going to work with him, so there are a lot more things to consider in that setting. It’s not just a matter of suiting the other instruments, you have to think about the other person as well, because people have different styles and approaches, and that is going to affect your decisions as well.
KM: Did you enjoy your time with Capercaillie?
FM: Oh yes, that was fantastic. I learned a lot playing with them in terms of working with sound and their professionalism and so on, and I think it did me a huge amount of good for playing with any other artists, and playing in that kind of amplified setting.
KM: Clan Alba was a project that promised a lot and never quite came to fruition.
FM: It was a real shame that they didn’t do a lot more, because the concept with the big arrangements was brilliant. I learned an awful lot from Dick Gaughan in that band. That was the first professional band I had really been part of, and Dick was amazing. He would spend all day explaining or working out a certain thing if he had to, and he was an amazing giver of help and musical knowledge.
KM: Is that a direction that interests you as a bandleader?
FM: I still think about having a bigger band from time to time, yes, especially when I’m writing, because you can always hear the material with bigger arrangements and bigger grooves and so on. It is something I might seriously consider at some point. Going out as duo is much easier, though, and starting a new band can be a very expensive business.
KM: Do you have a band of your own at the moment?
FM: I’m really just working with Jamie at the moment.
KM: What’s happening with Ceolas?
FM: It’s neither going nor not going, really The thing with Ceolas is that everybody was in another band – people had their first band and then were in Ceolas as well, and that was often a problem. I couldn’t record with them because of a recording contract I had, and then when I started to work with Jamie we seemed to be touring all year. It was really just a case of too many other things happening, but at the same time the band could easily be put together if anybody wanted to book us.
KM: The duo with Jamie seems to have been a big success – how did that come about?
FM: I would say so, without a doubt, and probably more than we thought. I think people realised that they were going to get a powerful show without too much hassle. We only started playing together at Celtic Connections in 2003. I had seen him many times in Brittany and with Kornog, and I always loved what he did, but I hadn’t worked with him at all before that.
KM: Had you played much together before you made the Up South album?
FM: No – I laid down my tracks and he came over and put his backings on, and it was only then that we really started to get out and play it all live. The album is fairly chilled-out, and we both love that, but there is more of the hard-driving stuff now in the live set, and it’s tighter as well.
KM: ‘Up South’ is a Uist saying, isn’t it?
FM: Yes, that’s what folk say in Uist when they are going down south. There are various stories about how that originated. Some folk say it is because of the hills at the south end giving the impression you are going up, but there is also a story that has something to do with the stars and navigation, which I am a bit vague on, but it sounds more likely.
KM: Do you do much teaching?
FM: Not much at the moment, although I would like to do more of that. Again, it’s mainly down to being so busy with Jamie – you can’t really take on students and then go away for two months on tour. Working in education is good for building your own awareness of the music as well.
KM: Finally, Fred what is coming up for you?
FM: What I really have to do is work on the music for the opening concert at Celtic Connections in January. I’m doing a piece that Mark Sheridan will be orchestrating, and we need to get our heads together and sort that out very soon. It’s a huge amount of work, but I’m really looking forward to it.
© Kenny Mathieson, 2004
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