David McWilliams (4 July 1945 — 8 January 2002) was a
Northern Irish singer, songwriter, and guitarist. He landed three albums in the
UK Albums Chart in the mid 1960s.
Born in the Cregagh area of Belfast in 1945, David
McWilliams moved to Ballymena when he was three. He grew up with seven brothers
and sisters and as a teenager developed an early interest in the rock'n'roll
music of Buddy Holly and learned to play the guitar. He also developed a
rebellious streak and in 1960 was expelled from Ballymena Technical School for
drinking between lessons. Even when he returned, McWilliams played truant
constantly, spending days thinking up songs.
In 1963, he followed his father and became an apprentice
fitter in a torpedo factory in Co Antrim. However, he was always looking for a
way out. Six foot tall with blue eyes and unruly black hair, he cut a
distinctive figure on the football pitch; he excelled as a goalkeeper but an
ankle injury kept him out of the local Linfield football team.
He preferred music anyway and joined the Coral Showband. Not
content with performing covers, he began writing his own compositions such as
"Redundancy Blues" and "Time of Trouble", inspired by his
surroundings. "I listen with my eyes and I sing what I see," he later
told journalists.
McWilliams recorded his first single in 1966, and was lifted
to a higher profile throughout the UK by Phil Solomon, an influential Irish
manager who had worked with Them and The Bachelors. In 1967 McWilliams managed
to record three albums — quite a prolific rate for an artist who was not a star
— all of which reached the lower regions of the UK Albums Chart, with the
second, David McWilliams Volume 2, almost making the Top 20. These albums were
produced and arranged by Mike Leander, who had already proven his facility for
mixing pop music and rock with classical influenced orchestration, on records
by Marianne Faithfull.
He was best known for his 1967 song, "Days of Pearly
Spencer". The lyrics were inspired by the fate of a homeless friend of
his. The song was covered in 1968 by Caterina Caselli ("Il Volto Della
Vita"), later in 1988 by the French psychedelic band the Vietnam Veterans,
and in 1992 by Marc Almond (with an additional verse written by Almond, giving
the song a more optimistic tone). The latter became a British No. 4 hit single.
"The single that will blow your mind, the album that
will change the course of music" trumpeted full-page adverts in the New
Musical Express alongside enthusiastic quotes from journalists and other pop
impresarios comparing the 22-year-old McWilliams to Donovan and Bob Dylan.
Unfortunately, back in 1967, Radio 1, the BBC's new pop network, didn't add
"The Days of Pearly Spencer" to its playlist, maybe because Solomon
was also a director of Radio Caroline, the pirate station just outlawed by the
Marine Broadcasting Offences Acts passed by Harold Wilson's government.
Nevertheless, the single was played incessantly and
defiantly on Caroline while stations in continental Europe picked up on its
strange "phoned-in" chorus and pastoral arrangement. The following
year, the track charted all over Europe and impinged itself on the continental
consciousness as the soundtrack to Swinging London alongside the likes of
"Nights in White Satin" by the Moody Blues and Procol Harum's "A
Whiter Shade Of Pale".
Although McWilliams never had a hit single in the United
Kingdom, he was popular on continental Europe (Germany, Italy, France, Belgium,
the Netherlands) and Japan. McWilliams song, "Can I Get There By
Candlelight?", first released in 1968, and was used for the theme of a
Dutch radio programme, Candlelight, with Jan van Veen.
McWilliams continued to record through the 1970s & 80’s,
without breaking through to wide success. A reluctant stage performer,
McWilliams nevertheless recorded more than ten solo albums, but his career was
mismanaged to such an extent by the likes of the notorious London landlord
Peter Rachman that he lost an estimated £2m in royalties.
In 1982, McWilliams moved back to Northern Ireland. He
remained an elusive performer, only making the odd appearance in support of
striking miners. McWilliams's work deserves re-appraisal.
McWilliams died of a heart attack at his home in
Ballycastle, County Antrim in 2002, at the age of 56.(info edited from The
Independent & Wikipedia)
For David McWilliams - The Days of David McWilliams (1967-1969 recordings) go here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www2.zippyshare.com/v/EKlI3BFv/file.html
01. Days Of Pearly Spencer
02. For Josephine
03. Brown Eyed Girl
04. Marlena
05. For A Little Girl
06. Lady Helen Of The Laughing Eyes
07. What's The Matter With Me
08. There's No Lock Upon My Door
09. Tomorrows Like Today
10. Mister Satisfied
11. I Love Susie In The Summer
12. Harlem Lady
13. Letter To My Love
14. City Blues
15. Three O'clock Flamingo Street
16. Redundancy Blues
17. Hiroshima
18. Question Of Identity
19. Time Of Trouble
20. And I'm Free
21. In The Early Hours Of The Morning
22. Born To Ramble