Skip to main content
NEU Senior Industrial Organiser
Castle of Light, Edinburgh
Light and sound spectacle has its grittier moments
Stone-cold celebration: Castle of Light [Shutterstock]

AS PART of the ongoing transformation of the Scottish capital into a Christmas theme park for tourists, Edinburgh Castle is undergoing the dubious honour of digital illumination a la Buckingham Palace, Diamond Jubilee era.

The city is making a blatant spectacle of itself, shining lights in our eyes while it lifts £20 notes from our pockets. In consigning us to the role of infantilised spectator, I’d steeled myself for yet another exercise in socially disengaged pseudo-Scottish self-branding, calculated with the cold cynicism of an RBS advert. Not quite, though.

With no live element other than security, we are simply treated to lights on cold stone walls and a spectacle laced with self-parody. Walter Scott, the true muse of this kind of thing, was introduced wryly as the original spin doctor, responsible for the great 19th-century fake of Scottish ceremonial tradition — an admission surprising in its honesty.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
misrepresenting
BenchMarx / 22 May 2025
22 May 2025

ANGUS REID calls for artists and curators to play their part with political and historical responsibility

BBC EAT YOUR HEART OUT! The winner of the competition, Sam E
Culture / 7 April 2025
7 April 2025
'We’re a long way from Live At The Apollo and interchangeable telly panel shows here, and I mean that in the best possible way,' writes JAMES WALSH
CO-DEPENDENCY: Rex Ryan and Lauren Farrell in Men's Business
Theatre Review / 27 March 2025
27 March 2025
MAYER WAKEFIELD is chilled by the co-dependency of two lost souls as portrayed by German communist playwright Franz Xaver Kroetz
CONFRONTING HOMOPHOBIA: (L) FCB Cadell, The Boxer, c.1924; (
Exhibition review / 21 March 2025
21 March 2025
While the group known as the Colourists certainly reinvigorated Scottish painting, a new show is a welcome chance to reassess them, writes ANGUS REID