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10 June 2026 - The board of NASC have developed guidance on hosting song circles. You can download the pdf here.
22 April 2026
Board members Brian and Ceara hosted a North Atlantic Song Circle at the Nordic Folk Alliance in early April 2026 and were delighted with the turnout of over 60 people singing in languages including Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic, Irish Gaelic, English, Scottish Gaelic, Flemish, and Scots.
There was also a panel discussion on the workings of NASC and many singers and organisations were very interested in partnering for future NASC events.
We hope that these inclusive and diverse singing events start happening at many other festivals and conferences over time.
From a blog on the Traditional Music Forum of Scotland website. 6 April 2026.
Photo: ABCassidy Photography
Last month I attended my third North Atlantic Song Convention (NASC) – a formal title for what’s a lively and often informal gathering. The event has been running since 2020 and it’s a weekend packed with singers, songs and discussions about unaccompanied traditional singing. This year’s participants came from Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Isle of Man, Shetland, England, Sweden, Norway, Lithuania, Canada and the United States (Maine). I met a couple of young Scottish singers who hadn’t been before and were revelling in the mix of folk and the chance to listen to and participate in such a variety of singing. The venue, the Scottish Storytelling Centre in Edinburgh, really lends itself to this kind of event: people flow round the building between panel discussions in the auditorium to workshops in the library and singing circles in the large space by the café, sometimes breaking off to have a quiet chat in a corner. There’s a real sense of community as folk interact across the weekend, former connections are renewed and new ones begun.
This year’s keynote talk was given by English singer Angeline Morrison. She spoke of growing up with English folksongs while being aware of her Black identity, giving as an example the powerful ballad ‘The Brown Girl’ (Roud 180, Child 292). This had been a ‘talisman’ for Angeline since she was a teenage folkie, imagining herself as the main character rejected by her lover ‘because I was so brown’. We also heard moving stories of her recent project involving extensive research in archives as she searched for evidence of the history of Black culture in England, and its musical expressions. This resulted in her album The Sorrow Songs: Folk Songs of Black British Experience. Angeline’s talk made me think more deeply about the demands traditional songs make on us, not just as stories but also in the emotional connection they evoke in the singer and the listener.
Panel sessions with various themes ran throughout the weekend covering diverse topics such as learning and passing on songs, practical strategies for encouraging participatory singing, and the opportunities offered by UNESCO’s ‘Living Heritage’ Framework in preserving and promoting traditional singing practices. For me, a highlight was the panel on the Irish language sean-nós (‘old style’) solo singing tradition, with Órla Ní Fhinneadha, Ellen de Búrca and Cathal Ó Curráin. All three performed beautiful examples of the repertoire. They also gave us an insight into the learning and teaching of sean-nós, including in schools, the genealogy of transmission, and the competition environment. We learned about the primary role of storytelling in the songs. The intimate nature of the idiom was illustrated by Ellen’s singing from behind a chair as she held on to the back – apparently a common stance for sean-nós singers – as a means of support. The focused nature of the topic and the thoughtful way that the singers shared their experience and contributions from the audience made this a rich session.
There was a menu of workshops including Maine worksongs, Swedish, Norwegian and Scottish Gaelic songs. I joined Steve Byrne’s on Scots song. Making no concessions for a group of participants with a variety of languages and experience, Steve taught 5 songs dense with Scots language: ‘Moss o Burreldale’, ‘Ballad of the Speaking Heart’, ‘Brisk Young Lad’, ‘We’re aa Noddin’ and ‘Hey ca’ thro’. We all jumped in and learned, I suppose, by immersion! I love singing in Scots – and in songs like these tunes and lyrics feel tightly fused and really rewarding to sing. The item I knew of but had not sung before was the humorous ‘We’re aa Noddin’. Steve gave us the version which came via Robert Burns, pointing out the theme (drunkenness) and the dangers of the chorus in becoming a likely ‘earworm’. When I came home, I did some research and went down some interesting rabbit holes! The ‘nodding song’ seems to have had extraordinary success during the 18th-19th century in many versions including beyond Scotland, the rhythmic repetitive chorus lending itself to parodies of all sorts. ‘We’re all nodding’ even became the title of a lithograph of 1861 depicting a sleepy soldiers on horseback. It’s a reminder of how traditional songs can be a rewarding portal through which to explore the past, and how malleable they can be as they’re adapted for different contexts.
While larger singing sessions were also going on, at the intimate song circle I went to there was encouragement but no pressure to sing, and no ‘policing’ of song choices. This was a good opportunity for younger participants, including some Swedish students unused to singing in public, to try out their voices and their songs. I used it as a chance to sing a couple of songs I’d not done in a while to see if I could remember the words. I was reminded that the song circle format is a rich resource not only for ‘performance’ but also learning, practising and sharing stories in a supportive setting. And not least that listening is as important as singing.
I couldn’t make the Friday evening pub session but heard next day that it had been a great night. One of the highlights was an hour-long impromptu flow of mouth-music (puirt-à-beul) and dancing songs from different singing cultures, which Brian Ó hEadhra dubbed a ‘puirt-off’. I wouldn’t be surprised if it is reprised next year! A Saturday night concert offered guests an opportunity for a more formal presentation of their songs, but this, too, demonstrated the collective ethos of the weekend, with participation across the performances and including the audience.
I came away reflecting once more on the lives of songs and their power to bring the past into the present and connect us across cultures. In June I’m heading to Aberdeen to take part in NASC’s big sister, the North Atlantic Fiddle Convention, to play, learn and talk about tunes and dancing. The format of both festivals is a rich mix of activities and opportunities to experience the traditional music of our North Atlantic neighbours and form musical friendships between these countries. Meeting and sharing music face-to-face in this way highlights contrasts and commonalities which only deepen our understanding of the factors that shape and sustain traditions. NASC is now run in partnership with the Traditional Music Forum of Scotland, and I found myself thinking of what it takes to organise events like this, and the crucial part played by organisations and institutions in – literally – keeping the show on the road. There’s an inclusivity and a democratic ethos to NASC which bodes well for its own longevity, and which I’m sure is the key to our individual and collective efforts to cultivating our traditional arts well into the future.
From a blog on the Bagaduce Music website. 26 March 2026.
Photo: ABCassidy Photography
NASC is a weekend of sharing folk songs from all across the North Atlantic. There are multicultural singers coming together in the city of Edinburgh on a weekend: Friday, Saturday, Sunday for song circles, supportive discussions, a keynote speech, a concert on Saturday, workshops, and pub sings. This year Bennett Konesni and I (Molly Gawler) hopped across the big pond and went to Scotland on March 6, 7, 8 2026 as representatives from Bagaduce Music, Blue Hill/Belfast, Maine USA.
I am on the board of NASC which is a real honor and I continually learn from my collaborators. Our keynote speaker this year was a woman named Angeline Morrison. She launched us into the weekend in a way that opened my eyes to subjects of race and culture within our folk songs. Her mother is from Jamaica and her father is from Scotland, and she grew up in Birmingham, England. She’s walking with black heritage within English ballads. Her voice has tremendous depth and the way she can tell a story through her song was profound to witness.
We come together once a year in Edinburgh at the Scottish Storytelling Center and sing Songs with the North Atlantic as our common thread. This year there were singers from Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Isle of Man, Shetland, England, Sweden, Norway,Lithuania, Canada, United States (Maine.) When we do this, all the borders and boundaries fade away. When you hear someone singing, you know their soul. It’s an amazing way to get to know somebody. Through song we celebrate the commonalities and honor the differences.
The experience was not like a box. It was like a membrane; a permeable sphere where songs enter in their natural beauty, are given breath and life, and then drift away back home in the oceans and winds. It wasn’t all about academia. It was about an organic human way of exchanging our folk art forms and specifically song. The conference was not held with rigidity. It was held in a watery fluid mode with such care, somewhat like a womb. Each of us brought ourselves into the circle as the human beings that we are. I sensed a lot of humility. There was not a hierarchy. Each person was treated with equal importance. We had folks of all generations there from the smallest little three year-old that was present all the way to a few beloved elders who brought the experience of a lifetime.
This is a unique time set aside for singing - unaccompanied singing. There was not a guitar in sight. The whole weekend was dedicated to the voice. The songs that we shared and heard were mostly from memory. There was an (almost) no cell phone policy, which was very refreshing. We experienced people bringing the best of their traditions from their lands and their place.
What I brought home lives inside me it does not exist in the realm of stuff. I did not bring home a bagpipe or a fiddle. I brought home my voice. I did not bring home too many captured videos or recordings. I did bring a few and I am happy I did. What I did bring home was the experience of singing in circle, lots of stories, and a memory of all the songs shared. There’s a term for this that I’ve learned from my friends across the sea: it’s called intangible cultural heritage. It’s something that we need to treat with the utmost care, because it is less flashy and a bit less seen than a product that is tangible.
After three days of this conference, it was almost as if a magic spell was put over the place, and everyone settled into a world of no hurry and no worry. I saw people taking their time, sing an entire ballad all by themselves and the whole group around them would lean in, lean back and listen...listen...listen.