AN exotic name, yes! But it’s a piano sextet coming to Biggar.

Having burst into life during Glasgow’s West End Festival in 2010, Daniel’s Beard have swiftly established themselves as one of Scotland’s busiest chamber ensembles.

And on Sunday, January 18, they will perform at 2.30pm in Biggar Municipal Hall.

Made up of players who are familiar faces in all of Scotland’s orchestras, the group have a close link to Cottier’s Theatre, where they are also the driving force behind The Cottier Chamber Project. Named after the impressive facial hair of Daniel Cottier, the pioneering 19th century designer responsible for the interior of the theatre, the group has built up a reputation for tackling the major works of the chamber music repertoire alongside pieces that are less frequently heard, encompassing music from the baroque period up to the present day.

Daniel’s Beard has a core instrumentation of violin, viola, clarinet, horn, cello and piano, based on the scoring for Ernö von Dohnányi’s epic Sextet, which was recorded on the Meridian label in 2011.

The line-up allows for great flexibility in programming, so Daniel’s Beard has appeared as a Trio: both horn, violin and piano and as a piano trio, a Quartet: piano and strings, a string quartet or violin, clarinet, cello and piano, a Quintet: wind quintet, horn and strings, clarinet and strings or violin, cello, clarinet, horn and piano, a Sextet, and has expanded to a Septet, for Beethoven’s Septet, and an Octet for Schubert’s Octet.

The starting point for any Daniel’s Beard concert is summed up by musicologist Alfred Einstein’s description of chamber music as 'the music of friends’.

As the host ensemble for The Cottier Chamber Project, Daniel’s Beard have taken a leading role in raising the profile of chamber music in Scotland.

Following the highly successful pilot series in 2010’s West End Festival, the series expanded the following year to include 16 other ensembles, becoming the UK’s biggest chamber music festival in the process. The series has continued to grow, with Daniel’s Beard giving six concerts and inviting 22 other groups to join them in 2012, and 28 other ensembles in 2013.

The programme in Biggar is as follows: Brahms Horn Trio in E flat and Dohnanyi Sextet in C- clarinet, horn, piano and string trio For further information see the sextet’s website at: www.danielsbeard.org.uk/ AN exotic name, yes! But it’s a piano sextet coming to Biggar.

Having burst into life during Glasgow’s West End Festival in 2010, Daniel’s Beard have swiftly established themselves as one of Scotland’s busiest chamber ensembles.

And on Sunday, January 18, they will perform at 2.30pm in Biggar Municipal Hall.

Made up of players who are familiar faces in all of Scotland’s orchestras, the group have a close link to Cottier’s Theatre, where they are also the driving force behind The Cottier Chamber Project. Named after the impressive facial hair of Daniel Cottier, the pioneering 19th century designer responsible for the interior of the theatre, the group has built up a reputation for tackling the major works of the chamber music repertoire alongside pieces that are less frequently heard, encompassing music from the baroque period up to the present day.

Daniel’s Beard has a core instrumentation of violin, viola, clarinet, horn, cello and piano, based on the scoring for Ernö von Dohnányi’s epic Sextet, which was recorded on the Meridian label in 2011.

The line-up allows for great flexibility in programming, so Daniel’s Beard has appeared as a Trio: both horn, violin and piano and as a piano trio, a Quartet: piano and strings, a string quartet or violin, clarinet, cello and piano, a Quintet: wind quintet, horn and strings, clarinet and strings or violin, cello, clarinet, horn and piano, a Sextet, and has expanded to a Septet, for Beethoven’s Septet, and an Octet for Schubert’s Octet.

The starting point for any Daniel’s Beard concert is summed up by musicologist Alfred Einstein’s description of chamber music as 'the music of friends’.

As the host ensemble for The Cottier Chamber Project, Daniel’s Beard have taken a leading role in raising the profile of chamber music in Scotland.

Following the highly successful pilot series in 2010’s West End Festival, the series expanded the following year to include 16 other ensembles, becoming the UK’s biggest chamber music festival in the process. The series has continued to grow, with Daniel’s Beard giving six concerts and inviting 22 other groups to join them in 2012, and 28 other ensembles in 2013.

The programme in Biggar is as follows: Brahms Horn Trio in E flat and Dohnanyi Sextet in C- clarinet, horn, piano and string trio For further information see the sextet’s website at: www.danielsbeard.org.uk/