Results for David McWilliams
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Artist:

David McWilliams

Born:
1945 07 in Belfast

Died:
Jan 09, 2002

Representative Songs:

"The Days of Pearly Spencer," "Marlena for a Little Girl," "For a Little Girl"

Representative Albums:

The Days of David McWilliams, The Reflections of David McWilliams, Singing Songs by David McWilliams

Similar Artists:

  • Genre: Rock
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s
  • Instruments: Vocals, Guitar

Biography

From Belfast, Ireland, folk-rock/pop singer/songwriter David McWilliams recorded several albums in the late '60s in a style similar to Donovan. Here, too, was a youthful but slightly ragged-looking troubadour, obviously influenced by Bob Dylan, whose songs were also dressed up with Baroque orchestration. McWilliams' songs and singing, however, were milder than those of his Scottish counterpart, and as a vocalist and composer he didn't have nearly as much originality or personality. Problematically, the similarities to Donovan made unfavorable comparisons unavoidable. The records aren't bad, but are rather derivative and forgettable, though his best-known single, "Days of Pearly Spencer," was his best song, with a dark edge, swirling violins, and an effective dab of psychedelia in the megaphone-distorted vocals on the song's chorus.

McWilliams made his first single in 1966, and was lifted to a higher profile throughout the U.K. 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 wasn't a star -- which tickled the lower regions of the British album charts, with the second, Vol. 2, almost making the Top 20. These albums were produced and arranged by Mike Leander, who had already proven his facility for mixing pop/rock with classical-influenced orchestration on records by Marianne Faithfull. "Days of Pearly Spencer" got a lot of airplay on British radio when it was released at the end of 1967, and is well remembered by listeners of the time, but somehow did not make it onto the U.K. charts, although it was a big hit in several European countries.

McWilliams continued to record through the 1970s, without breaking through to wide success. A compilation drawn from his first three albums, The Days of David McWilliams, was issued by RPM in 2001. It's his earliest work that's most remembered (if at all), particularly "The Days of Pearly Spencer," which was covered for a British hit by Marc Almond in the early '90s. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
 
 
Wikipedia: David McWilliams

David McWilliams (born 1968[1]) is an Irish economist and broadcaster. He was educated at Blackrock College, then Trinity College Dublin and the College of Europe Bruges, Belgium. Between 1990 and 1993 he was an economist at the Central Bank of Ireland. He helped draft the Irish submission to the Maastricht Treaty and also advised the authorities during the exchange rate crisis in the early 1990s.

Between 1993 and 1996 he was a director in the European Economics Department for UBS analysing, advising and investing in all major European economies and markets. At the age of 27 he became the youngest Director at UBS. McWilliams is credited with being the first economist to predict the 1990s boom in Ireland's economy. It is commonly reported that he coined the phrase "Celtic Tiger", but this is untrue. It was first used in a Morgan Stanley report of August 1994.

From 1996 until 1998 he became the head of Emerging Markets Research for Banque Nationale de Paris. In 1999 he became the global strategist with a New York-based hedge fund Rockwest Capital.

McWilliams has also had a career as a broadcaster in Ireland. In the mid-1990s he made regular appearances as an economist on CNN, CNBC and the BBC. He presented a current affairs programme called Agenda on TV3 and has also presented that station's coverage of the Irish General Election in 2002. He hosted the breakfast show on NewsTalk 106, a Dublin radio station, from the station's beginning in 2002 until he was replaced by Eamon Dunphy in September 2004. Soon after, McWilliams started presenting The Big Bite, a topical afternoon discussion programme on the television station RTÉ One. He is also a regular columnist in The Sunday Business Post and Irish Independent newspapers. Past articles from the paper are available from his website, as well as his monthly subscription newsletter, The David McWilliams Agenda.

In November 2006 RTÉ One broadcast In Search of the Pope's Children, a three-part series examining the economic and social landscape of modern Ireland. It was presented by David McWilliams and based on his book The Pope's Children.

McWilliams' style and accent, and reputation from Trinity College student days [2] have led many commentators to believe he is the archetypal role model for Paul Howard's Ross O'Carroll-Kelly series of books. Indeed, in O'Carroll-Kelly's "Guide to South Dublin" he is described as "the Father of Modern Southsiders: he's not only Ireland's cleverest man, but its poshest, too." Others have commentated on his capacity for shameless self-publicity, describing him as the David Beckham of Irish media.[3]. In addition McWilliams has been 'twined' with David Caruso by some elements of the Irish media, mostly in reference to Caruso's CSI:Miami character[4]. In 2007, McWilliams was named as a Global Young Leader by the World Economic Forum.[5]

McWilliams' latest book The Generation Game was launched in mid-September 2007. It focuses on the precarious nature of the predominance of property in the economy of the Republic of Ireland. The book is accompanied by a television series of the same name. The series began at 9:30pm on RTÉ One on September 17th 2007. McWilliams makes use of images such as a drunken man eating a kebab or two young ladies in a nightclub trying to chat up men to illustrate points about the general socio-economic nature of Irish society.

McWilliams also regularly hosts Leviathan: Political Cabaret, a live discussion and satire event which has featured at the Electric Picnic festival in 2006 and 2007.

Further reading

  • David McWilliams (2007). The Generation Game. ISBN 0-7171-4224-8.
  • David McWilliams (2005). The Pope's Children. ISBN 0-7171-4172-1.
  • David Brooks (2000). Bobos in Paradise – The New Upper Class And How They Got There. ISBN 0-684-85377-9.

External links

References

  1. ^ According to Who's Who. The Sunday Independent newspaper gives a year of 1966 in an article McWilliams is a real self-made man - he invented himself published on 13 November 2006
  2. ^ See Sunday Tribune profile by Anne-Marie Hourihane, www.tribune.ie: HiCo silver, away!, published 5 November 2006
  3. ^ Phoenix Magazine Vol 25, No 2 January 25-Feb 8, 2007, www.phoenix-magazine.com.
  4. ^ Phoenix Magazine Vol 24, No 3-5
  5. ^ See: http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2007/01/17/world-economic-forum-young-global-leader

 
 

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Artist. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "David McWilliams" Read more

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