Roberts is quoted as saying "Collaboration is extremely important to me. I reiterate – extremely". His collaborations have taken many forms.
Accompanying musicians A large number of musicians have played with Alasdair Roberts when recording or performing under his own name. These include: • Electric bass:
Gerard Love, Gareth Eggie, Bill Lowman,
Will Oldham, Paul Oldham • Stand-up bass: Stevie Jones • Fiddle: Rafe Fitzpatrick, Alastair Caplin, Elle Osborne,
John McCusker • Drums:
Alex Neilson, Shane Connolly, Rian Murphy, Tom Crossley • Guitar: Gordon Ferries, Gareth Eggie,
RM Hubbert • Cello:
Isobel Campbell, Christine Hanson • Piano: Tom Crossley,
Isobel Campbell, Emily MacLaren • Vocals:
Emily Portman,
Will Oldham, Tom Crossley, Niko-Matti Ahti, Debbie Armour •
Jouhikko:
Pekko Käppi • Viol: Alison McGillivray • Harpsichord, harmonium: David McGuiness • Harp: Kirsten Koppel, Bill Lowman • Pipes: Donald Lindsay
Group, ensemble and duo work • In 2001, Roberts collaborated with friends and label-mates Will Oldham and
Jason Molina, both playing on their albums and on the one-off album,
Amalgamated Sons of Rest. • With members of the Second Hand Marching Band, Roberts is part of The Robert Tannahill Project, dedicated to performing the songs of Scots poet
Robert Tannahill. • Roberts took part in a week-long residency in
Aldeburgh, titled "Revenge of the Folksingers" and led by Concerto Caledonia's David McGuinness, in December 2010. Other participants included the members of Concerto Caledonia,
Jim Moray and
Olivia Chaney. Roberts contributed an original song, as well as singing songs by
Ivor Cutler,
Benjamin Britten,
Hamish Henderson and from the traditional repertoire. An album with the same title and selection of songs was released in 2011. • In 2010, Roberts performed a suite of songs written by the Icelandic artist Benni Hemm Hemm as part of the Reykjavik Arts Festival • Roberts collaborated with
Karine Polwart on a series of performances in Stirling, London and
Sidmouth Folk Week in 2010 and 2011 (also joined by
Corrina Hewat in Stirling and London). The pair released a recording of the traditional song, ''Captain Wedderburn's Courtship'', as a 7" single in 2011. • Roberts collaborated with
Mairi Morrison, a Glasgow-based Gaelic singer from the Isle of Lewis, on an album of traditional songs,
Urstan, released in March 2012. •
The Fruit Tree Foundation is a mental health initiative featuring nine Scottish songwriters, writing mainly in pairs. Roberts contributed songs with
James Yorkston and Rod Jones to the resulting album,
First Edition. • Roberts contributed to
Pumajaw's
Curiosity Box album (2008), and, as writer and performer, to
Jackie Oates'
Hyperboreans album. • With Alex Neilson, Lavinia Blackwall and Michael Flower – under the group name Black Flowers – Roberts played on the album
I Grew From a Stone to a Statue. • Roberts sang the lead vocals on
Draughty Old Fortress on David Rotheray's album
The Life of Birds. • Roberts collaborated with
RM Hubbert on a version of The False Bride for Hubbert's 2012 album,
Thirteen Lost & Found (Chemikal Underground, CHEM166). • Roberts appeared on tracks of the 2013 album by
Lisa Knapp,
Hidden Seam. • Along with
Emily Portman,
Lucy Farrell and
Rachel Newton, Roberts is part of The Furrow Collective. They have released three albums:
At Our Next Meeting (2014),
Wild Hog (2016) and
Fathoms (2018).
Theatre, film and literary work • Roberts played
hurdy-gurdy on the soundtrack of the 2003 film
Young Adam. This was later released under the title
Lead Us Not into Temptation by
David Byrne. • Roberts contributed a newly written song,
Dighty Burn, as soundtrack to Edward Summerton and Michael Windle's 2011 short film
Dighty. • In early 2011, Roberts took part in a three-month residency at the
School of Scottish Studies, under the title "Archive Trails". He collaborated with puppet maker and puppeteer Shane Connolly on two short pieces of musical theatre:
The Secret Society of Horsemen and a reworking of the Scots
mummers play Galoshins for puppets. • Roberts has collaborated with the artist and filmmaker
Luke Fowler on a video for his song "Under No Enchantment (But My Own)" and by contributing music to the soundtrack of Fowler's 2011 film about
R.D. Laing,
All Divided Selves. • Roberts first worked with the Scots poet
Robin Robertson on a song for the 2007 album of musician-poet collaborations
Ballads of the Book. The two went on to collaborate on a song cycle based upon the archipelago of
St Kilda.
Testimonials and additional contributions Roberts has contributed to the following: •
Lal Waterson – performance at
Cecil Sharp House, London, in October 2007, as part of
BBC Electric Proms, plus a recording of Waterson's
The Bird for the tribute album
Migrating Bird, curated by
Charlotte Greig •
The Incredible String Band – performance at the
Barbican Centre, London, in July 2009, curated by
Joe Boyd and also featuring
Robyn Hitchcock,
Trembling Bells,
Dr Strangely Strange and others. •
Neil Young – performance at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre, Vancouver, in February 2010, curated by
Hal Wilner as part of the Cultural Olympiad. •
Alistair Hulett – Roberts recorded a version of Hulett's
The Dark Loch for the tribute album
Love, Loss and Liberty: The Songs of Alistair Hulett, released in 2011 after the latter's death. •
Jason Molina – Roberts recorded a version of Molina's
Being in Love for the benefit album
Do I Have to be Alright, All of the Time?, released for download in 2012 and performed at a benefit concert in London in September 2012. •
Alan Lomax – Roberts was asked by Nathan Salsburg of the Alan Lomax Archive to curate an album of the recordings of traditional Scottish songs that Alan Lomax collected, resulting in the compilation album
Whaur The Pig Gaed on the Spree (2011). ==Discography==