David Ferrard

Socialist Worker Article & Review

I am delighted by the following article and review in this week's Socialist Worker:


'Singing for change and standing up against war'


Edinburgh-based singer-songwriter David Ferrard’s first album Broken Sky is winning rave reviews from the music press.

Scotland’s Sunday Herald newspaper and BBC Scotland both named it as the album of the week when it was released in March.

Many of David’s songs deal with the issues arising from the “war on terror”, and he sees his music as part of the resurgence of political and protest songs over the last few years.

“There is a real appetite for protest songs at the moment,” David told Socialist Worker. “The Iraq war has disturbed people, and they are looking for material with a political and social nature.

“Although it never went away, there is a bit of a revival in political songwriting. I put together an album called Not In Our Name last year about the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. It included songs by Leon Rosselson, Roy Bailey, Amy Martin and David Rovics.

“The intention was to create a historical document from an anti-war perspective that reflects the artistic community’s engagement with the issues around the ‘war on terror’.

“I have also set up the Songs For Change website, which collects grassroots songs mostly to do with the war, but also other issues.

“The idea is to put them up so people can download them for free from the internet. It’s a very good resource for musicians and music lovers. Most of the people whose songs are on the website are not professional musicians, but people who are inspired by what’s happening in the world to produce songs.”

David’s sensitive and intelligent lyrics about war, love, asylum and other issues help him to connect with people on a number of levels.

“Nobody wants to be preached at,” said David, “So it’s often better to approach issues through a story, which I have done in the songs ‘Dmitri’s Pocket Radio’, about an asylum seeker in Britain, and ‘Hills of Virginia’, about an American who signs up for the US army and the Iraq war.

“Using these artistic devices can help you reach out to an audience.

“But with some audiences you have to be careful. You can be easily

pigeonholed as a political songwriter. Some people might think you’re too political and others not radical enough. So you’re treading a fine line.

“To be effective you have to appeal to people who are on different levels.”

Many of David’s songs have been inspired by his active involvement in the anti-war movement in Scotland, which in turn has meant that many people see his music as an authentic expression of the movement.

“The song ‘Visions of Our Youth’ came out of the anti-Trident nuclear weapons Long Walk for Peace march in Scotland, which I took part in,” said David. “I was inspired by the march to write this song.

“If you present a song as coming from an experience, as something you’re involved in, then audiences relate better to you even if they don’t agree with you.

“It helps prove you’re not just an armchair songwriter, and I do like to talk about the origins of the material and what inspired it, which is not always political.”

Folk was the ideal form of music for David to take up. “Folk music has a history of being an expression of the people’s voices,” said David. “It is deeply rooted in England, Scotland and the US.

“It was the music that most attracted me because of its ability to express social and political issues within the lyrics. It’s a music that can appeal across the spectrum.

“Folk music has a bit of a reputation for being for older people, but I feel that’s a little unfair. At festivals you find that a lot of younger people are drawn to the music.

“It’s not seen as being as rebellious as something like punk, but as a more sit down and listen to it form of music.”

David is now busy promoting the album and working on other projects.

“I’m now preparing for a show at the Edinburgh Festival with the singer Roy Bailey called Songs for Peace and Justice. It will be two generations of folk singers playing together that will explore the traditions of peace and protest music. That takes place at the Acoustic Music Centre from 13 to 17 August.

“I have also spent some time in the Woody Guthrie archive in the US reading his journals. He wrote about the social and class system when he was in Scotland in 1944 and I’m hoping to get that published.”


Socialist Worker Review by Pat Stark

The first thing that strikes you when listening to David Ferrard is the beauty of his voice—clear and strong, tough and sweet all at the same time.  It is slightly difficult to categorised his music, a sort of mixture of country and folk with a cutting edge.  He struck me as a cross between James Taylor and Nanci Griffiths with a little bit of Sufjan Stevens throw in for edge.  The album is an interesting mixture of touching love songs, wistful nostalgia, and comments on our times—all tracks bar one written by Ferrard.

With songs like “Broken Sky” (the title track), “Rain” and “This Heart”, Ferrard displays his talent as a writer/singer of love songs.  He has a voice that naturally lends itself to these tender songs.  The same voice though catches the mood of some of the issues of our day.  “Dimitri’s Pocket Radio” is a wonderful tale of the triumph of love over adversity, bureaucracy and racism.  Similarly “Hills of Virginia” captures the pointlessness and futility of “protecting our nation” in the Iraq war, and “The Hour of Plenty” picks away at the horrors of global capitalism. The album closes with “Never Let Go”, a song of the tragedy of the AIDS-torn 1980s.

However there is also a fun feeling to the album. “One Hell of A Ride” has the feeling of a country romp and “Take Me Out Waltzing Tonight” a celebration of enduring love. A very interesting mixture and a very good listen.

Busy April

April's been a busy month, promoting the new album in Scotland, and preparing for a UK/Europe release in May. 
Shortly after my album launch I appeared at the Festival of Non-Violence's closing concert in London, run by the Gandhi Foundation in Kingsley Hall.  This featured an electic mix of artists from around the world and heralds the international Ghandi Tour, at which I may be participating. 
 
Broken Sky continues to receive positive reviews in the press, and to be played on new radio programmes throughout the UK and USA.  Here are a couple recent reviews:

The Friend
by Jez Smith
Each time I listen to Broken Sky, David Ferrard’s debut album, I come away oved by emotions, sometimes inspired to fight for justice, at other times I feel deeply tranquil.
David is subtle, with his anti-war song Hills of Virginia hitting home more accurately than any Brittush-issue weapon ever could: ‘My weapons were no longer toys’.  In Dmitri’s Pocket Radio, a true story of a refugee brought a tear to my eye the first few times that I heard it.  Later, in The Hour Of Plenty, David and his backing singer’s voices haunt me as he subtly exposes global inequalities.
David’s voice, combined with well-chosen lyrics, means that he will find his own niche in the world of folk music.  His well crafted songs and beautiful melodies are entwined to produce a timeless compilation that will be remembered for years to come.’

The Scotsman
by Norman Chalmers
Back in the 1960s this tousled-haired lad with the acoustic guitar would have been labelled a 'protest' singer, and though much of this first album by the Edinburgh-based Scots/American songwriter does rail at the current war(s) and the iniquities of power, he also gives us songs about affairs of the heart, personal and universal. So it's peace and love with a contemporary feel – and a strong band line-up that includes the likes of Karine Polwart. And there are lighthearted songs such as 'Take Me Out Waltzing Tonight', and a happy ending to the picaresque 'Dmitri's Pocket Radio'.

Album Launch Concert & Reviews

Thanks to everyone who came and supported me last night at my Broken Sky album launch.  It was a great night.  I was truly honoured that so many friends joined me on stage and that nearly a couple hundred folk turned up.  Here are a couple reviews of the evening:

The Scotsman
by David Pollock

It doesn't feel like back-slapping to describe David Ferrard as a generous guy. The Scots-American singer-songwriter organises benefit CDs and songwriting projects in aid of the Stop the War Coalition, and at this launch party for his album Broken Sky he was almost more concerned with giving his friends a turn in the spotlight. In the best traditions of folk club jamming, there was an air of informality in the way everyone mucked in and threw their differing styles and talents together.

Ferrard, a native of North Carolina now settled in Edinburgh, has a crisp, tuning-fork voice which might see him credibly compared to James Taylor, strong but soothing all at once. Across the bluegrass rag of Handsome Molly and the murder ballad/train song One Hell of a Ride his vocal was not overpowered by ever-more-complex arrangements. Nor did it fail to do justice to a finale of Woody Guthrie's Peace Call alongside local elder statesman Roy Bailey.

Ferrard's politics are apparent on (the sadly absent) Karine Polwart's co-composition The Hour of Plenty. The show was sweetened further by the gorgeous Irish tones of Michelle Burke, the Scots balladry of Edinburgh duo The Cast, and Kim Edgar, whose nostalgic The House on the Hill was written with Emma Pollock.

Comment: I am very pleased with the above review, but I am not from North Carolina, and The Hour Of Plenty is not a co-write with Karine Polwart.  She sings backing vocals on the album recording.  I wanted to make that clear in case anyone thinks I am spreading misinformation!  

Graeme Scott
DJ @ Leith FM & Writer @ Blues Matters Magazine

This concert was to effectively launch the new and rather excellent album "Broken Sky". However David had invited along many of the top class musicians who played on the recording and they joined him on stage in variable combinations. This augmented the sound for sure and David also gave those artists space to showcase a song or two from their own repertoire. So we, the audience, were treated to feast of Roots, Folk, Americana and contemporary singer/songwriters and some very classy music. Just to get some of the names out of the way there were Josh Goforth, Laura Boosinger, Roy Bailey, Kim Edgar, Yvonne Lyon, James Ross, Karen Dietz, The Cast and Sandy Butler. So you can see that the company was very high quality.

Let us leave aside those artists and concentrate on the reason we were all there. David Ferrard may well be a new name to you but that will not last long. He is a very accomplished writer with a clutch of songs ranging from lovely traditional ballads, biting protest anti war and globalisation anthems on through to heartbreaking paeans and musings of loves and friendships lost. It is often hard to think back the next day to which songs impressed you the most but not today. 'Dimitri's Pocket Radio' as fine a song about asylum seekers being overlooked as just simply human beings as you will ever hear. There can be few that were not reflecting on the futility of war to the strains of 'Hills Of Virginia'. Often couples fail to allow themselves time to concentrate on themselves and 'Take Me Out Waltzing Tonight' speaks volumes on those forgotten needs. Highlight of David's own songs was the powerful, sad and haunting 'Never Let Go'. Written with sensitive understanding it tells the story of a man who has lost so much to AIDS. I could go on but will simply end by saying seek out this artist and album.

BBC Album Of The Week

Broken Sky has been made Album Of The Week by BBC Scotland's Iain Anderson Show, which is the most popular show on BBC Radio Scotland.  Every night this week Iain will play one of my songs from 22.30-00.30.  You can  tune in to BBC Radio Scotland on 92.4 - 94.7 FM and 810 MW or listen on-line at: www.bbc.co.uk/scotland/radioscotland/programmes/iainanderson.  If you miss the show you can listen on playback for up to a week after the show has been broadcast. 

CD Of The Week

Broken Sky was made CD Of The Week by The Sunday Herald on Easter Sunday with the following review.  It's my first for the album.   I hope it bodes well! 


Hills of Virginia ****
DAVID FERRARD: Broken Sky (Flamingo West)
By Alan Morrison

BILLY BRAGG recently said that he didn't mind being labelled a political songwriter, "what I object to is being dismissed as a political songwriter". Politics are also a major element of David Ferrard's debut album, but again it would be wrong to pigeonhole this committed anti-war campaigner entirely by his protest output. The 29-year-old half-Scottish, half-American musician (a one-man transatlantic session) has an uncanny ability to fuse meaningful words with gorgeous melodies, winning the Burnsong 2007 competition for the timelessly catchy One Hell Of A Ride.

Given the content of certain songs here, it's no accident that the album first appeared (for download or CD order from www.davidferrard.com) the same week as the fifth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq. Ferrard, however, wasn't in his home town when his album was released; he was researching in the Woody Guthrie archives in New York City. How appropriate, given the kindred spirit that has passed from Guthrie, through decades of the protest movement, down into almost every track on Broken Sky.

Set in the midst of the album's crystal-clear production, Ferrard's voice is closer to Joan Baez than Bob Dylan, and certainly not in the bar-room troubadour style of, say, Dick Gaughan. His vocal delivery is sincere but never over-earnest, while his music draws from both sides of his mixed roots, placing American country fiddles alongside gentle acoustic guitar.

The album's standout track, Hills Of Virginia, gets into the head of a soldier in Iraq. "A buddy of mine/Stepped on a mine/His body just disappeared/He never returned/ To the hills of Virginia/All they buried were tears," Ferrard sings as the song's melodic shifts between major and minor become a thing of beauty. The protest tradition has many iconic songs, and who's to say that one day Ferrard's Hills Of Virginia won't be mentioned in the same breath as Eric Bogle's And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda.

March 15: A Day Of International Significance

March 15 is the release date for my new debut album, Broken Sky.  I cannot believe that we're finally there. I am very excited about the album and hope it is well received.  I have certainly enjoyed making it.  Please do buy a copy of the CD through my website or come to one of my gigs where I shall be selling them with great enthusiam!

As well as being a day to celebrate (for me), March 15 is also a day of action throughout the world.  As we approach the 5th anniversary of the war in Iraq people are taking to the streets all over the world to say 'no more war', 'bring the troops home', and 'do not bomb Iran'.  Check out www.stopwar.org.uk or www.theworldagainstwar.org for more details about UK and international demos. There are two large ones in the UK: London and Glasgow. 

There is also a very important conference taking place this weekend near Washington DC.  It's called Winter Solider and is an event at which veterans from Iraq will be giving first hand testimonies about the atrocities carried out against the people of Iraq.  It's based on the Winter Solider Investigation of 1971 for Vietnam Vets and will prove to be an important milestone in this struggle to bring peace and justice to Iraq and to the coalition soldiers who have also become victims of the occupation. www.ivaw.org/wintersoldier 

Woody Guthrie Archives/A Week In Nashville!

I've been doing research at the Woody Guthrie archives this last week in New York City. It's been amazing to look through his journals and lyrics and to touch the very pages Woody wrote on. I'm looking particularly at his writings on peace, war, and racism. Tomorrow I get to look at a journal he kept in Glasgow during the war. It will be interesting to see what he's got to say about Scotland! Woody's daughter, Nora, and the archivist, Tiffany, have very kindly let me spend a few days with his work. I'm so grateful to them and the foundation. Before coming to New York I had the most marvelous time in Nashville, where I got to play a few nights in a row! I'm now seriously considering moving there. It seems like the perfect place to be based as a songwriter and performer. I was lucky to be shown round and looked after by some great musician friends: Mary Gauthier, Diana Jones, Maura O'Connell, and my Folk Alliance buddy Van Preston. Thanks everyone for such a memorable week in Music City!

Folk Alliance Success

I had a wonderful time at Folk Alliance in Memphis, showcasing about 14 times and getting very little sleep. I feel like I've made great inroads into the US/Canadian folk scene, meeting labels, festival organizers and agents from all around the continent. I was told that the folk DJs who attend the conference write a list of acts to recommend to the other DJs. Out of about 1500 artists at the conference 31 names were listed and mine was the only one to appear twice! Thanks to the conference organizers for putting on a great event. I look forward to returning in 2009!!!

January/February Update

I'm about to fly to Memphis to showcase at Folk Alliance - very much looking forward to this!  Sandy Butler is flying over from Scotland to accompany me.  Fellow Edinburgh singer-songwriter Kim Edgar is co-running a private showcase room with me where we'll be performing several times a night.  After Memphis I'm off to Nashville for a week and then to New York City.  

January was a busy month for me, making last minute preparations for the release of my debut album, Broken Sky, on March 15 when I return to Edinburgh.  I had a very successful pre-launch at Celtic Connections, making contact with promoters from all over the world.  More details about the album to follow!!!    

Burnsong House/Gig

I'm having a wonderful time down in Dumfries & Galloway at the Burnsong house, collaborating with eleven other songwriters. We've all been working really hard and have come up with some great new songs. The residential ends tomorrow, Friday November 30, with a gig at 7:30 pm at BBC Scotland, Pacific Quay. Directly following this I'll be making a live appearance on Iain Anderson’s BBC Radio Scotland Show (10.30pm-12.30pm) on 92-95 FM and 810 MW. I should be on just after 11pm.  For tickets contact info@burnsong.com or phone: 01387 253383. www.burnsong.com

Raise Your Banners/ The Scotsman Article

I'm down in Bradford at the moment at the world's only festival dedicated to political song: Raise Your Banners.  Last night we had Dick Gaughan, Chumbawamba, Tracey Curtis and the Oysterband.  Tonight I'm playing with Roy Bailey, Alistair Hulett, Claire Mooney and Scarlet Heights.  The festival has quite an amazing line-up and the atmosphere is electric.  I am launching the Not In Our Name CD at this festival too.  Yesterday I sold about 45 copies, so it's doing really well.  There was a fantastic article in The Scotsman about the album and protest music in general.  Check out www.living.scotsman.com/music.cfm?id=1777562007 .

Not In Our Name CD Available

The Not In Our Name CD is now available!  It sounds and looks fantastic.  I've been working on it for over a year, so I'm very pleased to be releasing it finally.  The launch will be on Tuesday 6th November at 8pm in the Netherbow Theatre, Edinburgh, with Roy Bailey, Jez Lowe and several local artists present.  You can now buy it from www.songsforchange.com .  I'll also be launching it at the Raise Your Banners festival in Bradford later this week.    
I sold 30 copies of the CD at the People and Parliament Against Trident march on Saturday.  It was a very successful rally with about 3000 participants.  We ended up at the Ross Bandstand in Princes Street Gardens where I sang Visions of Our Youth with Karine Polwart, a wonderful Scottish singer-songwriter who features on my own debut album (soon to be released).       

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