EDINBURGH INTERNATONAL SCIENCE FESTIVAL

From drone orchestras to geek songs, every corner of this year’s Edinburgh International Science Festival has a little bit of art going on. We’ve picked out some culture in among all the molecules

EDINBURGH INTERNATIONAL

SCIENCE FESTIVAL

P H O T O © K U B A K O L N S K

I

COMEDY BOOKS

DANCE

CLUBS

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LAB NOTES The rather fusty notion that science

THE SCIENCE OF STORYTELLING

and comedy are not in any way natural From science i ction to speculative

bedfellows has been blown well out of the cosmos in recent years. At the forefront of this pioneering development

worlds, science has been the catalyst for great stories for centuries. In this event, three local writers all

in the i eld of entertainment is ‘geek songstress’ Helen Arney. With a degree

recipients of the Scottish Book Trust New Writer Award talk about how

in physics and having attained grade eight in both piano and oboe, Arney has clearly forged a career combining

science has sparked their imagination: Bridget Khursheed, Martin MacInnes and Lucy Ribchester.

two of her passions. Her big sister Poet Khursheed works in software

BORN TO DANCE FULL SPECTRUM

We’ve known for many years that dancing is good for us, both physically and mentally, but it’s still nice to have validation from an actual member of

the medical profession. Dr Peter Lovatt,

a psychologist from the University of Hertfordshire, may look like a bone- dry academic touting a really stuffy PowerPoint presentation, yet his

appearances at the Edinburgh Fringe and now at the Science Festival have

For the very i rst time, the Edinburgh International Science Festival adds its own club night to the programme. Presented with the help of Edinburgh

DJ and promoter Chris Knight aka Astrojazz (straight out of the city’s

Departure Lounge) and the Adventures in Light team of VJs and projected animation specialists, Full Spectrum puts an emphasis on the EISF’s Light

and Enlightenment strand.

also just so happens to be the eminent natural science bofi n, Dr Kate Arney. For this EISF show, she’ll be joined by fellow Ini nite Monkey Cage Radio 4 types Jonny Berliner and Andrew

Pontzen. Among the japes and silliness, they make but one serious promise: Lab Notes will provide an hour of scientii cally accurate songs.

and is the founder of website

proved otherwise. The Summerhall Dissection Room

poetandgeek.com; MacInnes is a i ction, travel and science writer, and the winner of the 2014 Manchester Fiction Prize. And Ribchester’s i rst

novel the Edwardian-set, suffragette thriller / romp The Hourglass Factory, published by Simon & Schuster was released to critical acclaim in January.

Prepare to move your body and feel helplessly joyous as Lovatt and former- dancer-now-neuroscientist Dr Emily Cross explore and explain why dancing is a natural human expression, how it impacts upon the brain, can improve memory and generally makes us feel rather good in both mind and body.

bar will be turned into an ostentatious feast for the eyes as well as for the ears, with late-night action from the soundsystem branch of Nottingham funk outi t Crazy P, a DJ set by David

Miller of recently revived Edinburgh electronicists Finitribe and a live set

from the sublimely named Yoko Pwno.

(Brian Donaldson) (Yasmin Sulaiman)

(Kelly Apter)

Summerhall, Sun 12 Apr. Summerhall, Wed 15 Apr.

Summerhall, Thu 16 Apr.

(David Pollock) Summerhall, Fri 17 Apr.

2 Apr–4 Jun 2015 THE LIST 39