Martyn Bennett,
Musician and Composer
Born: 17 February, 1971, in St John’s, Newfoundland.
Died: 30 January, 2005, in Edinburgh, aged 33.
SCOTLAND’S musical landscape is a sadder, less colourful and vastly poorer
place following the death on Sunday night of Martyn Bennett, the formidably
inventive piper, violinist, composer and producer. Steeped in traditional piping
yet conservatory-educated, he was gifted with a musical vision which knew no
bounds but remained potently thirled to his roots in Gaelic and Scots traveller
culture.
Bennett, who died three weeks before his 34th birthday, following a long
battle with the cancer Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, became known as "the techno piper"
for his flamboyant merging of fiery piping and fiddling with electronic beats
which many regarded as the first truly Scottish hardcore dance music.
However, he not only powered up the obligatory jigs ‘n’ reels but created
colourful soundscapes in which he set the poetry of Hamish Henderson and Sorley
MacLean. Even the patron saint of tartanalia, Sir Harry Lauder, wasn’t immune
from irreverently raunchy Bennett treatment. Less well-known was other work for
instrumental combinations such as strings and small pipes.
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He was born Martyn Bennett-Knight in St John’s, Newfoundland, and his
earliest memories were of the Gaelic-speaking farming communities of
Newfoundland’s Codroy Valley as well as in Quebec. At the age of six he moved to
Scotland with his mother, the Skye-born Gaelic singer and folklorist Margaret
Bennett. It was while growing up in Kingussie that he became acquainted with his
first instrument, and the one with which he is most widely identified, the great
Highland bagpipe. By the time he was 12, he was winning junior piping
competitions, although he was more inclined towards the less formalised folk
scene (this writer’s earliest memory of him is of a diminutive figure at
Newcastleton Folk Festival, playing terrifyingly dexterous music on a set of
pipes which seemed several sizes too large).
After moving to Edinburgh, at 15 he became the first traditional musician to
enter the hitherto classically orientated City of Edinburgh Music School, based
at Broughton High School, to spend what he later described as the most important
three years of his life, learning to read and write music, as well as taking on
board violin and piano.
He went on to further his studies at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and
Drama in Glasgow, where he met Kirsten Thomson, later to join him as fellow
band-member and, ultimately, to become his wife. At the RSAMD he thrived on
violin tuition with Miles Baster, first violinist of the Edinburgh Quartet -
while sneaking out for extra-curricular pub music sessions.
After graduating in 1993, Bennett "relearned" traditional fiddle, purchased a
keyboard sequencer and, fortified by his classical training, got to grips with
the burgeoning club scene. "I think for the classically trained composer, the
dance world is such an attractive place as it encapsulates the same musical
ethos." he later wrote. "It is principally about sound and scale, tension and
release, power and detail - much like the classical canvas."
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In 1996, after immuring himself with his home studio, he went into Castle
Sound in Pencaitland and emerged with his first, eponymous album. Martyn Bennett
was an immediate success and as his reputation spread (prompting an appearance
before Mel Gibson at the Stirling Castle premiere of Braveheart), the albums Bothy Culture and Hardland followed.
The slight, dreadlocked figure’s barnstorming approach didn’t always go down
well with dyed-in-the-wool folkies. "No-one has ever sounded like this before.
Half the audience fled in fear of their lives." wrote one reviewer, following
Bennett’s high-energy set at the 2000 Cambridge Folk Festival.
Yet amid the electronic fireworks, Bennett was functioning, quite
consciously, within a powerful stream of tradition. "I do see myself as a
tradition bearer, I guess, someone who can pass things on." he told me in an
interview. "There are maybe not so many people like myself who have been in the
fortunate position to have grown up in a strong tradition."
That was three years ago, by which time Bennett, living on Mull with Kirsten,
was engaged in a serious struggle with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma and had to pull out of
all engagements as he endured chemo and radiotherapy as well as major surgery.
Perhaps prompted by his enforced confinement, his next two recordings suggested
a preoccupation with ancestral voices. In 2002, Glen Lyon was, in effect, a
cycle of traditional Gaelic songs, sung by his mother and accompanied by minimal
beats and instrumentation - and featuring briefly the singing of his
great-great-grandfather, recorded on a wax cylinder in 1910.
Then came Grit - its title an expression of cultural resilience which could
have been applied just as equally to his ongoing battle with illness. Unable to
play and driven to field recordings, he spliced unadorned traditional singing by
the likes of Calum Ruadh of Skye, and traveller singers Sheila Stewart and Davie
"the Galoot" Stewart in uncompromisingly muscular electronic settings. He
remarked that it might appeal to "connoisseurs of the more obscure drum and bass
stuff", but also stressed that he saw it in terms of what the folk music
collector Alan Lomax called "cultural equity". He was determined to put his
tradition on a wider, global stage. In the event, The Scotsman’s review
commented that Bennett’s beats and textures "reveal the old songs in a new
light, but without losing their integral feeling and authenticity".
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This inspired musical innovator died in the Marie Curie Hospice, Edinburgh,
with his father, Iain Knight, mother and wife around him. Ironically, the next
morning, pupils from the City of Edinburgh Music School were in a Glasgow
studio, recording MacKay’s Memoirs, a stirring piece for chamber orchestra,
Highland pipes and harp which Bennett, as a former pupil, wrote for the school’s
centenary in 1999. It was given a jubilant reprise in Princes Street Gardens
during the celebrations marking the opening of the Scottish Parliament that
summer.
As the late poet and folklorist Hamish Henderson said when Bennett played him
an early copy of Grit: "What brave new music."
http://news.scotsman.com/obituaries.cfm?id=118752005
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Postal donations to the Martyn Bennett Trust can be sent to:
The Martyn Bennett Trust
BJ Stewart c/o
64 Newbattle Terrace
Edinburgh EH10 4RX
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