All of the World is a Song…

Durban 1995

“There you stood, eight hundred years,

While ages passed away

Kings and Queens, young lovers’ dreams

Fal-de-rah-the-day

Beside the Priory standing tall,

Standing strong and surely

How can it be that we have lost

The old Wych Elm in Beauly?”

“Oh, hush, my soul, she’s painting daydreams,

Yellows, reds and gold and lilac moonbeams;

She speaks to me, so innocent and so carefree,

How can it be, I close my eyes yet I can see

her fantasies?”

“Sunrise, it’s another day, 

My Queen is dead, what can I say, uh-huh?

So I wash my face and grab a cup 

Of something meant to wake me up, uh-huh

This work’s a drag, it doesn’t pay; 

The mortgage, bills won’t go away

The taxman tries his best to rob me blind

While, I’m here searching for my peace of mind.”

For almost four decades now, Dave has written and performed his songs – telling stories of places he has lived and visited, venues where he has sung, people he has met and people he has lost, love and hate, hope and sorrow, the seasons, life and death. Every song a journey he’d love to share with you …

My younger brother, Mark December 1981

“Soldier Boy, why did you go when battle’s bugle called you?

If you’d stayed the price you’d have paid would be less than what they made you;

You went away, one fine day, a young man to be proud of

To country far and to a war in places never heard of…”

Pubs, bars, restaurants, steakhouses, coffee shops, farmers’ markets and festivals… Busking in the streets of Glasgow and Newcastle, travelling around the UK and the world singing and playing bagpipes…”Sings for free but will stop for payment!”

Cape Town 1995

“The heavens are on fire,

A raging, livid hue 

Of tempered steel or twilight shades

Of black and blue

The air roars like a freight train

Or the crashing of the seas,

I feel it – hot and heavy,

With foreboding and unease

UMvelinqangi!”

“When a man loses all that he owns,

When his loved ones are gone

In a storm tossed and blown,

When he’s old and alone

Wishing he could go home

How Can A Man?”

“I walk these winter streets beneath the frosty lights 

as cars go rushing by

The rain has turned to sleet, the trees are silhouettes 

against a threatening sky

As I pass the cemetery 

I hear the headstones beckon me

Every story etched in words of stone 

like buried memories…”

The times, Mr. Dylan, certainly have changed and nowadays we find ourselves as much in “virtual” folk clubs as we do in real, live ones. Today, it’s possible to visit the US, Canada, Germany, Australia – all without leaving your home…

Underberg 1995
Cape Town 1995
Bruno’s Il Forno, Port Elizabeth 1990

“When the warmth of each day like a dream slips away 

When the north wind brings an early twilight

When breezes that moan chill you right to the bone

When snowflakes dance for the lonely street light

Winter has come, with nights dark and long.”

How come “The Hedgehog”?”, I hear you ask.

Well it all began with a song I wrote in the 1980’s called “Hedgehogs…and other animals of the night”. No longer considered politically correct (was it EVER?) I very rarely sing it nowadays unless I’m singing to a group of drunken South Africans my age or older…

The great Sixto Rodrigues at Ludlow Garage, Cincinnati 2019
Jeremy Taylor, anti apartheid activist at Readifolk, 1997

Finally, back in the UK for good (?) and hoping to get his face and his music out and about so, if you like what you hear, Dave would love your continued support…

“Online, it’s song time

got to get some rhythm in my day

‘Cause, sometimes, when words rhyme

a melody can take me far away

Far from all those things that try to break me

Far from everything that brings me down

When life itself seems somehow to forsake me

On music’s wings I’m high above the ground…”.

“I took a walk up Calton Hill,

To see the city far below

In clear blue skies the sun did glow

Yet tempered not the autumn’s chill …”

“A cold wind blow…

Through the streets of Washington DC

A tyrant gloats for a world

Watching on TV

The martyr stirs in his grave,

She’s turning in her grave

Rancor burns with a flame of the way we all behave

In this free land of the brave….”

Dave’s music can be purchased and listened to at https://davemasonmusic.bandcamp.com

Dave is also a skilled highland piper and has composed three books of music for the Highland Bagpipes https://tummelyerwilkies.com