City celebrates St Mungo in style

January 6, 2011 by · Leave a Comment 

Dancers Brian McIntyre and Nicola Gilmour will perform at St Enoch Centre this week for the St Mungo Festival.

Dancers Brian McIntyre and Nicola Gilmour will perform at St Enoch Centre this week for the St Mungo Festival.

A festival of events reflecting the vibrancy of  Glasgow’s medieval life, launches on Saturday 8 January in St Andrew’s in the Square with a multi cultural gala concert ‘St Mungo’s Bairns’.

Jeely Piece song writer Adam McNaughton,  Irish ceili band Four Provinces, West African Drummers AKAYA, Gaelic singer Maggie MacInnes, Neilston and District Pipe Band and the pan-African group Glasgow Highlife Band,  will all take part that evening.

Organised by Glasgow City Council and Historic Glasgow, the St Mungo’s Festival runs till Sunday 16 January and celebrates the life of Glasgow’s Patron Saint who is also known as St Kentigern. Full details are at www.stmungofestival.com

The saint’s  mother was St Thenew a name which has evolved into St Enoch so the St Enoch Shopping Centre has happily supported the Festival.  Said Susan Nicol, General Manager of the Centre: ‘The St Mungo Festival is a fantastic opportunity to celebrate Glasgow. We are delighted to be a part of this important event,  supporting the community and the city’s rich heritage.’ Dance company Visual Statement will perform a specially commissioned ballet ‘The Tree’ to tell another part of the story of Glasgow’s Coat of Arms which incorporates a tree, a bird, a bell and a gold ring. Their performances can be seen at St Enoch Centre on Friday 14 January at 12.30pm and Saturday 15 January at 12.30pm. The Centre and the Mitchell Library will also host an exhibition of some of the city’s medieval treasures.

Among other Festival highlights are an ecumenical service at Glasgow Cathedral, Mungo’s Nature Pilgrimage to visit places the Saint would have seen and, for the the first time, the Molendiner Awards. To be made annually from this year, the awards will support the work schools are doing to use history and recognition of the past to link with the local and wider community today.

Included in the Festival is the annual Jimmy McHugh Memorial Concert in Woodside Halls, St George’s Cross, G20 on Saturday 15 January.  The late Jimmy McHugh was a huge musical influence in the Irish communities and his memorial is this annual concert which is always a sell out.  For further information see website: www.jimmymchugh.com