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DANIEL DOCHERTY

singer/songwriter

 

Many incredible singer-songwriters come from the streets. Multi-talented Daniel Docherty (25) from Glasgow is one of those. We’re not talking about being streetwise  but about growing up in public, mastering your skills while busking in the streets, parks and shopping arcades. Docherty has ‘seen it all’ and has earned his stripes. If it would still be the sixties now, you would have encountered him in the coffee houses at MacDougal Street in New York, where Dylan and his peers learned their craft. But he’s no longer a rough diamond. He’s ready to take the next step. Docherty is clearly experienced performing live to crowds of all sizes. He is equally happy to play for a small crowd or a packed Carré Theatre in Amsterdam, where he is signed to the [PIAS] label. [PIAS] discovered him at the annual Eurosonic international showcase festival in the Netherlands and instantly recognized his enormous potential. The lowlands have quite a reputation as a test market. It has served as launching platform for singersongwriters like Gavin James and Ben Howard before.

‘I do still love to busk, but haven't busked much at all this year,’ Docherty says. ‘For me, it's one of the most comfortable and enjoyable places to perform! I always want to busk in every new city I play in. For me, it's a great way to write songs and immediately try them out in public. I get an idea and start improvising. Having the freedom to be so creative and spontaneous is something I love. Meeting people like this, is one of the most rewarding experiences.’ Hold Me , the first single from the EP Life Is What We Make Of It  is a prime example of this method. ‘It began as an idea I had while busking, and developed from there,' he confirms enthusiastically.

And it’s certainly not the only track with that history of origin … Garden In The Snow  which was featured on his 2015 self-released 4 track EP This Holy Fire  is another example. As a full-blooded storyteller Docherty shares the history of that particular track: ‘It was written about a woman I met busking, who had lost her husband. She had come over to thank me for playing the song Tears In Heaven  by Eric Clapton, and explained that the song meant something to her and her late husband.’ Music as consolation, isn’t that wonderful? Well, isn’t that what artists are for, to give us a little bit of hope and inspiration in our lives?

Docherty likes to talk us through his new EP Life Is What We Make Of It , track by track. Relationships are the main topic. He kicks off with Hold Me , the lead-off single. ‘The protagonist of the song doesn’t want the other person to leave. So, he holds her. It’s not a sad song, it’s still upbeat.’ What about the title track? ‘It started off with the idea of an old man who suffered from dementia, who was waiting for his wife to return. However, it gradually became about a difficult, but necessary break-up. At that time, coincidentally, my best friend and his girlfriend who is also a close friend, where breaking up and this gave me a new understanding in ways of how difficult this can be.’

‘The Weather  is about a somewhat messy part,’ he continues. ‘It’s about a drastic change in the relationship. One moment everything is fine, the next there’s an argument like a heavy storm.’ The final track Imagining Love he wrote when he was twenty. ‘It was the first time I had given lyrics this amount of thought and consideration of the impact of words,’ he remembers. ‘I thought about every word and its impact. I was wondering, what it would be like to meet someone and spend your whole life with them? It’s a story about two people. It was more like a fear then. I never intended to put it on the EP, but it fit so well with the mood of the other tracks.’ His style is not unlike fellow Brit Passenger’s. The two know each other well, of course from their days on the streets.

Apart from his songs and his great vocal delivery, Docherty also deserves credit as a great instrumentalist. He has one extra ‘weapon’, his guitar. He is not just a singer-songwriter, he’s also a mean fingerpicker, a true virtuoso on his guitar. By his songwriting and guitar playing, it is obvious he’s a big fan of the late John Martyn and Australia’s Tommy Emmanuel. His breathtaking percussive guitar style is reminiscent of US guitarist Andy McKee.

In the Netherlands, the profile of Docherty is quickly rising. Having supported popular local bands like Racoon and HAEVN he has now his own tour in February and March 2018. His Ian Grimble-produced EP should further enhance his status. Chris Maas (Mumford and Sons) played drums. Tommy Heap (Matthew and The Atlas) played double bass, piano and harmonium. The strings were arranged by Paul Frith and performed by the Iskra String Quartet. Docherty and Christy O’Donnell sang backing vocals. The EP, released in February 2018, was mastered by Christian Wright at the legendary Abbey Road Studios. If this stellar cast of collaborators is anything to go by, then his future looks bright, he’s got to wear shades.