Showing posts with label Dick Gaughan Life on the Edge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dick Gaughan Life on the Edge. Show all posts

Saturday, 28 February 2026

Dick Gaughan Life on the Edge, Voice of Humanity



Gaughan is a voice of deep humanity in our present dark world. 

Gaughan brought many of the traditional Irish and Scots Celtic songs to new life. I’d never heard Robert Burns Westlin Winds before Gaugan introduced this as one of the best songs ever written. He searched through the Scottish national archives for the best traditional ballads. Like Burns and Dylan before him Gaughan has been a genius song collector and remaker of the old songs. He drew on his Scots and Irish traditions to develop his song craft and performance. 

 

I first heard Dick Gaughan in the 70s at the Police folk club Edinburgh. A musician friend raved about how incredible and distinctive his guitar playing was. Many years later (after being in America for nearly ten years) I heard Gaughan again at Milngavie Folk club in 2007. This was an intimate gig where his chat and stories between songs while he tuned his guitar, was worth going for alone. In his own distinctive voice, Gaughan hammers and speaks with his acoustic guitar.

 

He is an interpreter of Scotland’s traditional folk ballads. Gaughan has become a legend on the Scottish and world folk circuits for more than 40 years. He is an interpreter of Scotland’s traditional folk ballads. Songs of social conscience and an evening of contrast, quality and sincerity

Gaughan is Scots/ Irish and has spent his life in Leith Edinburgh. He’s a social protester, a profound storyteller who crosses boundaries, forges alliances through the depth of his story telling, and song and open chord’ dramatic guitar playing. His songs don’t flow easily to the shore – and they also share the full range of emotions. 

Its about the emotion of the song and the storytelling. Gaughan drew on his Scots and Irish traditions to develop his song craft and performance. He draws from both Irish and Scottish folk traditions. He performs traditional folk tunes, Robert Burns, favourite cover songs and his own songs. He doesn't play the predictable smoothed-over sugar box 'tartan shortbread' songs.



So glad to hope the younger generations are carrying the stream. (More so in Ireland perhaps?). I have to admit the most emotional Celtic concert I’ve been to. So many memories….
You come away from his gigs questioning and renewed in the faith of our shared humanity.  

**SONGS – Erin Go Bragh, Workers Song, The Snows they Melt the Soonest, No Gods, Wages Day, Language of the Gaels, Song for Ireland, Westlin winds, Daughters and Sons, Craigie Hill, What you do with what you’ve got,  Both Sides the Tweed.

Gaughan is plain spoken and holds firmly held beliefs on the rights of everyman. Gaughan had a stroke in 2016, which means he can no longer play the guitar. He’s not been able to play for nearly ten years. Gaughan’s album Handful of Earth became an iconic folk album. 

·       (R/evolution: 1969–83) was released in January 2026 along with 

·       Live at the BBC: 1972–79 (vinyl).  

* The concert was recorded by BBC Radio Scotland. (Celtic concerts used to be recorded by the BBC Scotland tv.)

 


GUITAR  Earthy, real and powerful guitar playing, an incredible presence and depth. Gaughan says his guitars is an integral part of his singing. The Song has a tempo all of its own. The guitar has to follow the song. His distinctive style of guitar playing, with open chords and timing that he learnt from guitarist Davey Graham which was tuned differently. Gaughan plays with open chords and dramatic timing that he learnt from guitarist Davy Graham. 

SONG COLLECTOR - He took past folk stories and songs from the library archives and put new melodies to them. 

POLITICS  Gaughan is plain spoken and holds firmly held beliefs on the rights of everyman

BANDS - He played with Aly Bain’s Boys of the Lough and a punk band called Five Hand Reel.

 

Clan Alba, A folk supergroupfeatured Dick Gaughan. Mary Macmaster, Brian MacNeill, Fred Morrison, Patsy  distinctive collective harmonies. Their 1996 debut album - included ‘Bye Bye Big Blue’, a lament for the closure of the Ravenscraig Steel Works, and Gaughan’s evocative ‘Childhood’s End’.

 

SONGS    Niel Gow  Craigie Hill  who had sung with Dick in ‘Clan Alba’,  the folk songcraft and voice tradition of the folk songcraft and voice tradition 

 

Songs of social conscience and an evening of contrast, quality and sincerity.You come away from his gigs questioning and renewed in the faith of our shared humanity. Gaughan has become a legend on the Scottish and world folk circuits for more than 40 years. He is an interpreter of Scotland’s traditional folk ballads. Songs of social conscience and an evening of contrast, quality and sincerity

 

Dick Gaughan is a towering figure in folk music circles, a musician whose radical politics have always been to the fore. I did many benefit gigs with him in the 80s and was inspired to record 'The World Turned Upside Down' after hearing his version on the magnificent 'Handful of Earth' LP.

Sadly his career has suffered two major setbacks. Firstly, much of his material was issued on small labels which no longer exist, meaning it's not available physcally or via streaming services. Secondly, he has been unable to perform since 2016 due to the effects of a stroke he suffered.

A group of friends and comrades have come together to address these issues by compiling and releasing a seven CD and DVD boxed set from which Dick will benefit directly once the costs have been covered. To this end they have set up a Kickstarter page to raise funds for the project. 

Dick Gaughan's entire career has been about showing solidarity for people in need. Let's show some solidarity for him now and get this project funded and flying.

 

Awww the Dick Gaughan tribute concert was amazing!! So emotional, so many folk icons from Scotland, England and Ireland. Plus all those Black and white images of the 70s folk scene in Edinburgh. The Irish artist Seamie O’Dowd who performed Song for Ireland was so good, one of those hushed silence moments... And Dick Gaughan was actually there at the end and sang a bit. He’s the most iconic folk artist, song collector and awesome guitarist of the past century. The most emotional Celtic Connections concert I’ve been to (over the past twenty years)….

 

 A voice of deep humanity in our present dark world. I first heard Dick back at an Edinburgh folk club in the 70s! My son has seen Dick live several times and was also moved to tears at the tribute concert. He plays guitar and Westlin Winds was always a favourite to play ....I hope the younger generations are carrying the traditions. I have photos from the concert will post.

The Solid Oak Tree True and Bold: It’s the song that Matters

 Earthy and grounded on sure solid roots,

I will follow your lead where it takes me,

Sure footed and solid and deep where it matters, 

Your hearts true and open and bold.

You search where it matters staying honest and true,

When so much around us is fake falsehoods and cruel, 

Dishonesty and ignorance that ignore what really counts,

Make your voice a beacon of light and hope.

As your strength of character pounds out the rhythms

And angst on your guitar,

You stand true and bold in a world that’s lost its way,

Your like the solid oak tree.

 You sang of the bonny yew tree,

Tell me what do you see.

“When the poor hunt the poor across mountain and moor
The rich man can keep them in chains

“So I raise up my glass and drink deep of its flame

To those who have gone who were links in the chain
And I give my soul's promise, I give my heart's pledge
To outlaws and dreamers and life at the edge.”

Don’t let go of the harness

That keeps us together,

As you search for truth in the auld ballads and songs,

Stay true,

It’s the song that matters.

PK