Scottish songwriter Malcolm MacWatt returns this month (26 November via Need To Know Music) with his new album Settler.
MacWatt weaves Scottish balladry with Appalachian string band influences to tell stories of loss, injustice and arduous journeys. The album features a stellar lineup, including renowned Americana artists Gretchen Peters, Laura Cantrell and Jaimee Harris, and British folk icons Eliza Carthy and Kris Drever; the album acknowledges that music travels from place to place, picking up new inflections and nuances wherever it puts down roots.
Settler builds on the success of last year’s Skail EP, which we reviewed here. Taken from the new album and featuring Jaimee Harris, watch the accompanying stop-animation video to Avalanche and Landslide created by Emma Swift. This protest song has an infectious rolling momentum and energy that underpins MacWatt’s call for unity. MacWatt and Harris deliver a sing-along chorus that’s impossible to resist. Swift’s video captures the force of all this change through tumbling small rocks that gradually grow in number and strength.
MacWatt says:
Individuals seldom have the power to influence change for the better, but history has shown a whole movement can. United we stand, divided we fall. Getting Jaimee Harris in to sing backing vocals was a great move. Jaimee has a big voice which added some raw urgency to what is basically a protest song.
Hailing from Morayshire with the Highlands and the North Sea as a constant backdrop, MacWatt was raised listening to the folklore and music of Scotland. His love for the outdoors saw him spending much of his life as a keen hillwalker, snowboarder and surfer, learning first-hand that the Highlands are beautiful and uplifting but unforgivingly harsh if taken for granted. Like many other young men from the area, he worked on the offshore oil rigs where the power of the North Sea was a constant reminder to remain humble in the face of nature. As such, there’s sensitivity, compassion and humanity in his songwriting with a rugged simplicity and directness in how they are delivered.
“When people are uprooted sometimes all they can carry with them are their stories and experiences. Throughout history the Scots have settled all over the world, my family included. I’m a mixed-race Scot with a keen interest in ideas surrounding heritage and identity. Nations were built by people seeking a better life and it is easy to forget our own ancestors were all settlers and immigrants at one time.”
With the exception of Phil Dearing, who plays bass on the album, and Kris Drever providing electric guitar on one track, MacWatt plays all other instruments.
“As a multi-instrumentalist, I apply a song-based approach to the arrangements in that I play only what is absolutely necessary. If it doesn’t add anything of value to the song, I leave it out. I think if I was working with virtuoso musicians I’d be tempted to let a love for the instruments take precedence. When it is just me I can be more parsimonious!”
Paying tribute to his stellar guests, MacWatt explains that every artist involved brought their unique personalities to the songs.
“For me, Eliza, Gretchen, Jaimee, Kris and Laura are a dream line-up and I feel truly honoured to have them contribute to Settler.”
More here: https://www.malcolmmacwatt.com/