WHERE YOU’RE MEANT TO BE: A Film by Paul Fegan, Starring Aidan Moffat and Sheila Stewart will be released in Cinemas June 17
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UK Theatrical Release will be accompanied by a live event cinema tour with Q&As and performances with former Arab Strap frontman Aidan Moffat and the film’s director / producer Paul Fegan
"A satirical folk comedy, and touching as hell. You must see it." - Antonia Quirke BBC Radio 4 Film Programme
“A funny and moving viewing experience that serves both Stewart and Moffat wonderfully well.” •••• The List
Paul Fegan’s first feature documentary follows Scottish cult-pop raconteur and former Arab Strap frontman Aidan Moffat as he tours Scotland in 2014, performing his modern re-interpretations of old folk songs.
It was meant to be a tour that celebrated communities and lore. But just before they hit the road, Fegan met Sheila Stewart: a 79-year-old force of nature, the last in a line of travelling folk royalty, and a balladeer whose life – and unexpected death, in 2014 – upturned Moffat's folk assumptions, and diverted the course of Fegan's film.
The ensuing film is a warm-hearted journey through music, mortality, landscape and time. It's also a moving, wry and enlightening depiction of two of Scotland's most distinct and vital voices, as they cross paths (and words): Moffat believes Scotland's oldest songs are ripe for re-working against a contemporary urban backdrop. Stewart does not.
The film includes the final interview and performance footage of Sheila Stewart, the last in line of a celebrated family of gypsy travellers, the Stewarts of Blair, who date back to the 12th Century. Says Paul Fegan of his initial encounter with Sheila Stewart “When I met Sheila, I was blown away. She was fierce, and passionate, and brilliant company – and I loved her stories about her life, and family, and songs. As soon as I introduced Sheila to Aidan, I realised that Aidan had met his match, and it quickly became apparent that their relationship, and their quiet humour – not to mention their conflicting beliefs as to how music should be treated – had to be at the very heart of the film.”
The cinema tour will kick off with a full band performance from Moffat and the musical stars of the film, including James Graham (The Twilight Sad), Jenny Reeves (Bdy_Prts), Stevie Jones (Sound of Yell), Michael John McCarthy, and traditional bothy ballad singers Joe Aitken, Geordie Murison & Danny Couper – at Sheffield Doc/Fest on 12th June.
The event tour that follows will take the film to 18 cities and towns throughout the UK where screenings will be followed by a Q&A with director and producer Paul Fegan and a solo performance by Aidan Moffat.
WHERE YOU’RE MEANT TO BE will be screening in 40 cinemas from 17 June, for full listings here. The film will be available on iTunes 1 July 2016.
Running length film: 75 mins
Credits:
A Better Days production is association with Creative Scotland and Scottish Documentary Institute.
Director / Producer: Paul Fegan
Written by: David Arthur & Paul Fegan
Executive Producers: Stewart Henderson, Sonja Henrici, Noe Mendelle and Mark Thomas
About Paul Fegan
Paul Fegan's debut short documentary, Pouters (2012), won countless awards including Best Documentary (Jury Award) at London Short Film Festival, Best Film (Audience Award) at Hamburg International Short Film Festival and Best Scottish Short Film (Jury Award) at the Glasgow Short Film Festival. He also directed Moffat and Wells' promo video for The Copper Top.
About Aidan Moffat
Aidan Moffat is one of Scotland's most distinctive musical and literary voices. A compelling performer, lyricist, author and storyteller, the former Arab Strap singer won 2012's Scottish Album of the Year Award for his collaboration with Bill Wells, Everything's Getting Older. His latest album with Bill Wells, The Most Important Place In The World, was released last year.
About Sheila Stewart
Sheila Stewart MBE (1935-2014) was Scotland's definitive ballad singer. A storyteller and traveller who was born in a stable in Blairgowrie, she honed her voice while berry picking in Perthshire, sang for the Pope and performed in the White House, and her tales and songs and lore found friends in the likes of Hamish Henderson, Peggy Seeger and Ewan MacColl. In the foreword to Stewart's 2011 autobiography, A Traveller's Life, storyteller Jess Smith called Stewart “the vibrant heart of Scotland's travelling folk”.
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