Thanks!! We are now all grown up.

Hello, thanks to all the people who came down to see our 15th Anniversary event on Sunday night at the Celtic Connections Festival in Glasgow. We had a great gig at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall and then somehow managed to just about fit the whole band on the stage of the festival club at the Glasgow Art School for a late night set. Thanks to all the guest musicians who joined us, we hope you are home safely now, and thanks to Donald Shaw and the Celtic Connections staff for all the help in putting the show together. We had great time and a few drinks after to celebrate. It was all a nice way to, as said below, come of age!
5 star review of the concert below, photos of the concert by Louis De Carlo.
Hope to see you soon, all the best Salsa Celtica.

Salsa Celtica at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall

The Scotsman Newspaper
Published Date: 26 January 2010
By Sue Wilson

SALSA CELTICA 15TH ANNIVERSARY / MAYRA ANDRADE *****
_GLASGOW ROYAL CONCERT HALL_

FORGING the Celtic Connection between Cuba and Cape Verde, Salsa Celtica were preceded on stage by the latter island’s fastest-rising star, the enchanting young singer Mayra Andrade, who greeted the near-capacity crowd at her debut Scottish gig by saying she hoped to come back soon and often.

Blending her homeland’s post-colonial African, Portuguese and Brazilian influences with shades of jazz, pop, funk, reggae and ska, her seductively cool yet lambent voice floated, flirted and yearned over rootsy, slinky backing from her five-piece band, winning a roomful of new fans in an all-too short 40 minutes.

Salsa Celtica themselves triumphantly pulled out all the stops to celebrate their first 15 years, augmenting their core 11-piece with a guest list that swelled the total cast to around 25, extending the connections to link in the Bronx, Ireland and Spain, taking in Hothouse Flowers frontman Liam Maonlai, Altan accordionist Dermot Byrne, Asturian piper Jose Manuel Tejedor and New York trombonist/flautist Joey de Jesus.

In terms of the folk elements welded so seamlessly into the band’s unique musical alloy, there was a virtual contemporary-trad supergroup among the throng, with the guest stars joined by regular collaborators like pipers Ross Ainslie and Jarlath Henderson, fiddlers Chris Stout and Mathieu Watson, Gaelic singer Kathleen MacInnes, harpist Catriona McKay and banjo demon Eamonn Coyne.

With the Latin contingent including a four-strong brass section, three percussionists, and the potently paired voices of Lino Rocha and Ricardo Fernandez Pompa, this thoroughly-rehearsed performance magnificently showcased a group of musicians who have truly come of age