The Proclaimers, Dougie MacLean and Sheena Wellington are all set to perform at this weekend's memorial service for Alex Salmond.
Mourners will gather at St Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburgh on Saturday to remember the former first minister who died suddenly last month.
The service will be conducted by the Reverend Dr George J Whyte, a former principal clerk to the general assembly of the Church of Scotland and chaplain to the King.
It is understood First Minister John Swinney will be among the guests.
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As well as the musicians, there will be readings from David Davis, the Tory MP and close personal friend of Mr Salmond.
Alba’s acting leader Kenny MacAskill, Mr Salmond’s niece, Christina Hendry and the former SNP MSP Duncan Hamilton KC will all pay personal tribute during the hour-long service.
Fergus Ewing will read Scots poem, The Wild Geese by Violet Jacob, while Josh Robertson, an Alba activist will deliver a reading in Gaelic.
The Proclaimers will sing their pro-independence anthem Cap in Hand.
The song, which includes the lyric, “But I can't understand why we let someone else rule our land” rose to number six in the Scottish charts in the week before the 2014 referendum, some 26 years after its release.
At the time, the Scottish band, who donated £10,000 to the Yes campaign, said they would stop performing the track if Scotland voted for independence.
Ms Wellington will sing A Man’s A Man For A That, a song she performed at the opening of the Scottish Parliament in 1999.
Meanwhile, Mr Maclean will sing his 1977 classic hit Caledonia.
At the conclusion of the service, a piper will lead the congregation from the cathedral, playing Farewell to the Creeks and Jacobite song Bonnie Dundee.
The service will be streamed live on both the BBC Scotland News website and on the BBC iPlayer.
While Mr Swinney and his deputy, Kate Forbes, are expected to attend, Nicola Sturgeon and Humza Yousaf are likely to stay away.
The 69-year-old Alba leader died suddenly in North Macedonia on October 12. He had been speaking at a conference in the country when he suffered a heart attack.
A funeral was held last month in the Aberdeenshire village of Strichen, where Mr Salmond lived with his wife Moira.
A number of political figures were among the mourners, including former Commons speaker John Bercow and Alba Party chairwoman Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh.
Former SNP MPs Jim Sillars and Joanna Cherry also attended.
At the funeral, Mr Ewing delivered the eulogy and promised to “seek justice for Alex." The veteran MSP said he would be “devoted” to the task.
Before his death, Mr Salmond alleged that there was a conspiracy among senior SNP figures, including Nicola Sturgeon, to imprison him.
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