Skip to main content

Kayus Bankole and Amanda Rogers – Message from the Skies 2020

Kayus Bankole was never taught about Edinburgh’s role in the slave trade when he went to Boroughmuir High School, where he met Alloysious Massaquoi. The pair would go on to form Young Fathers with Graham ‘G’ Hastings, with the band going on to win both the Scottish Album of the Year and the Mercury Music Prize with a multi-cultural mash-up of righteous bombast on their albums, Tape Two and Dead, respectively. The trio followed up with White Men Are Black Men, Too and Cocoa Sugar, and featured extensively on the soundtrack for Danny Boyle’s Irvine Welsh adaptation, T2 Trainspotting.

Now, Bankole is seeing in the new year with his contribution to this year’s edition of Message from the Skies. Edinburgh’s Hogmanay’s city-wide series of site-specific installations combines newly commissioned texts by five writers with brand new visual projections and sound scores. The event is run in partnership by Edinburgh’s Hogmanay producers, Underbelly in association with Edinburgh UNESCO City of Literature Trust, with City of Edinburgh Council and Edinburgh International Book Festival.

It follows on from last year’s Love Letters to Europe-themed compendium of works, and opened yesterday to usher in Scotland’s Year of Coasts and Waters under the banner of Shorelines, with work that focus on Edinburgh’s maritime history in radically different ways.

Bankole’s piece, Sugar for Your Tea, takes place at the City Chambers on High Street, and sees its author reflect on the darker side of Scotland’s sea-faring past. Using video and projections, Bankole focuses on the seemingly respectable Scottish merchants and businessmen whose names remain familiar from streets and statues across the country, but who made their fortunes on the back of the slave trade.

Filmed by Rianne White, who has previously made videos for Young Fathers, The Proclaimers and Kate Tempest, Sugar for Your Tea also sees Bankole perform his text onscreen through a backdrop of light and water to reflect on his own identity as a Scot, as well as honouring his Nigerian ancestors. With the words themselves projected onto the City Chambers by high-tech projection mapping company, Double Take Projections, Bankole has also provided a new soundscape for the event. 

“I didn’t know about Scotland’s role in the slave trade,” says Bankole. “Things like that are always buried under the crypt, so this piece actually came from being a human making new discoveries. I’m not pointing the finger. I’m wanting to make people consider how we have appropriate discussions about identity and move forward.”

As those who have already trawled across the city yesterday will know, as well as Bankole’s work, the Shorelines edition of Message from the Skies will feature new writing by Kathleen Jamie, Robin Robertson, Charlotte Runcie and Irvine Welsh. These map the city from the Union Canal in Fountainbridge to the Malmaison hotel on the Shore in Leith, taking in the Northern Lighthouse Board on George Street and the Nelson Monument on Calton Hill en route.

Jamie’s piece, Seascape with WEC, is a poem that captures her experience of witnessing new wave energy converters being tested on the Orkney islands. Graphic designer and animator Thomas Moulson brings the poem to life using vibrant colours inspired by ideas of symmetry and kinetic energy. These are subsequently animated by Susanna Murphy and Cristina Spiteri, the duo behind Bright Side Studios, who worked on last year’s Message from the Skies alongside composer Pippa Murphy on Kapka Kassabova’s love letter to Europe projected onto the National Monument of Scotland on Calton Hill. This time out, Bright Side create a playful reflection of Moulson’s visual interpretation of Jamie’s words on the water above the Union Canal in Fountainbridge.

Bright Side also take part in Ten Thousand Miles of Edge, Robin Robertson’s personal reflection of the significance of Scotland’s seaside landscape in Scotland’s identity as an island nation, and takes the audience on a vast nationwide journey across the country’s coastal geography. With Robertson narrating, Ten Thousand Miles of Edge is augmented by a new musical score by neo-trad troubadour Alasdair Roberts, who looks to Hebridean psalmody and piobiareachd to create something both sacred and elegiac. This is illuminated by Bright Side to create an immersive fusion of elements beamed onto the Nelson Monument on Calton Hill.

As another Message from the Skies veteran, Pippa Murphy, provides a new score to accompany Lightkeepers, Charlotte Runcie’s meditation on lighthouses real and fictional, including those built by pioneering engineer Robert Stevenson, grand-father of fiction author extraordinaire, Robert Louise Stevenson. Utilising the Northern Lighthouse Board on George Street as a backdrop, the piece features animations by Kate Charter to shine fresh light on such iconic myth-making structures. There is input here too from singer Karine Polwart, who narrates and sings as part of the piece.

Finally, down by The Shore in Leith, local hero Irvine Welsh presents The Sea, which promises a mash-up of Welsh’s words, film cut-ups by Norman Harman and industrial beats by DJ Steve Mac to illustrate Welsh’s memoir of the influence of a sailor he met while growing up in Leith. Projections again come care of Double Take Projections, who take over the façade of the Malmaison hotel, formerly the site of a sailor’s mission.  

With a downloadable app developed by Odd Panda Design accompanying the event, Message from the Skies is an immersive experience in every way.

“Water is such a rich theme,” says Amanda Rogers, producer of this year’s Message from the Skies event, “and each piece sits in its own world, but if you walk to all five pieces, with the sound and visuals you get a full experience. It’s not just words on a wall.”

Beyond Sugar for Your Tea, Bankole is back in the studio with Massaquoi and Hastings working on new Young Fathers material.

“That’s where I’m happiest,’ says Bankole, “collaborating with my brothers, experimenting. Having two other individuals pushing me gives me a different perspective, and doesn’t feel like you’re in an echo chamber. It feels like my happy place.”

Message from the Skies runs as part of Edinburgh’s Hogmanay until January 25 from 5pm to 10pm each night.

The Herald, January 2nd 2020


ends

Comments

Unknown said…
Hi Neil, my name is Erica Min, a London and Seoul based emerging actress.
I'm worried if it's rude to leave a comment that's not related to your article.
I read your theatre reviews on the Herald, and I could feel how kind and affectionate towards theatre. There was so much love and warmth in the articles. I noticed that you mostly write about Scottish theatre, however, if you ever have a chance to travel to Korea in May, would you give me chance to invite you to this Shakespeare production that I appear? We are the only theatre company whose director is one of the few best Shakespeare directors in Korea. It'd be an honour for us to have your advice and feedback on the production, and we want to learn and become better actors.

I apologise again that I contact you here.
My email address is ericaminactor@gmail.com

Thank you,
Erica Min

Popular posts from this blog

Losing Touch With My Mind - Psychedelia in Britain 1986-1990

DISC 1 1. THE STONE ROSES   -  Don’t Stop 2. SPACEMEN 3   -  Losing Touch With My Mind (Demo) 3. THE MODERN ART   -  Mind Train 4. 14 ICED BEARS   -  Mother Sleep 5. RED CHAIR FADEAWAY  -  Myra 6. BIFF BANG POW!   -  Five Minutes In The Life Of Greenwood Goulding 7. THE STAIRS  -  I Remember A Day 8. THE PRISONERS  -  In From The Cold 9. THE TELESCOPES   -  Everso 10. THE SEERS   -  Psych Out 11. MAGIC MUSHROOM BAND  -  You Can Be My L-S-D 12. THE HONEY SMUGGLERS  - Smokey Ice-Cream 13. THE MOONFLOWERS  -  We Dig Your Earth 14. THE SUGAR BATTLE   -  Colliding Minds 15. GOL GAPPAS   -  Albert Parker 16. PAUL ROLAND  -  In The Opium Den 17. THE THANES  -  Days Go Slowly By 18. THEE HYPNOTICS   -  Justice In Freedom (12" Version) 1. THE STONE ROSES    Don’t Stop ( Silvertone   ORE   1989) The trip didn’t quite start here for what sounds like Waterfall played backwards on The Stone Roses’ era-defining eponymous debut album, but it sounds

Edinburgh Rocks – The Capital's Music Scene in the 1950s and Early 1960s

Edinburgh has always been a vintage city. Yet, for youngsters growing up in the shadow of World War Two as well as a pervading air of tight-lipped Calvinism, they were dreich times indeed. The founding of the Edinburgh International Festival in 1947 and the subsequent Fringe it spawned may have livened up the city for a couple of weeks in August as long as you were fans of theatre, opera and classical music, but the pubs still shut early, and on Sundays weren't open at all. But Edinburgh too has always had a flipside beyond such official channels, and, in a twitch-hipped expression of the sort of cultural duality Robert Louis Stevenson recognised in his novel, Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, a vibrant dance-hall scene grew up across the city. Audiences flocked to emporiums such as the Cavendish in Tollcross, the Eldorado in Leith, The Plaza in Morningside and, most glamorous of all due to its revolving stage, the Palais in Fountainbridge. Here the likes of Joe Loss and Ted Heath broug

Carla Lane – The Liver Birds, Mersey Beat and Counter Cultural Performance Poetry

Last week's sad passing of TV sit-com writer Carla Lane aged 87 marks another nail in the coffin of what many regard as a golden era of TV comedy. It was an era rooted in overly-bright living room sets where everyday plays for today were acted out in front of a live audience in a way that happens differently today. If Lane had been starting out now, chances are that the middlebrow melancholy of Butterflies, in which over four series between 1978 and 1983, Wendy Craig's suburban housewife Ria flirted with the idea of committing adultery with successful businessman Leonard, would have been filmed without a laughter track and billed as a dramady. Lane's finest half-hour highlighted a confused, quietly desperate and utterly British response to the new freedoms afforded women over the previous decade as they trickled down the class system in the most genteel of ways. This may have been drawn from Lane's own not-quite free-spirited quest for adventure as she moved through h