John Ward – Songs Like An Old Friend: Album Review

Suffolk singer-songwriter John Ward tackles an impressively wide range of subjects โ€“ from working to wandering and leaving to leadership โ€“ on Songs Like An Old Friend, his 10th album.

Release Date:  11th July 2025

Label: ION Music

Formats: CD


JOHN WARD

Multi-instrumentalist; poet; singer; songwriter; author; folklorist; teacher; polemicist.ย  Lowestoft-based John Ward is all of these โ€“ and, probably, more.ย  Songs Like An Old Friend is Johnโ€™s 10th album and it follows his 2023 album (and book), Congress.

John Wardโ€™s songwriting influences are as diverse as his job description and include The Beatles, Bob Dylan, Dick Gaughan, Tom Lehrer, The Waterboys, Pete Seeger, The Who and Ry Cooder.  And thatโ€™s just his musical influences.  His writing is equally influenced by literary heroes such as Charles Dickens, Richard Dawkins and Spike Milligan.  And theyโ€™re all evident on Songs Like an Old Friend.


A WIDE RANGE OF SUBJECTS

Whilst John began his musical career as a solo artist, nowadays youโ€™re likely to find him in the company of his trio.ย  Wife Lynne (vocal harmonies, accordion and recorder) and long-time associate Les Wooley (vocal harmonies, double bass and mandolin) add weight and substance to Johnโ€™s vocals, guitars, bass guitar, percussion, drums, bodhran, harmonica, ukulele and cello.ย  And thatโ€™s the way it is on Songs Like An Old Friend โ€“ with additional help (where needed) from Ian Sainsbury on piano.

Songs Like An Old Friend is almost entirely acoustic and features 12 of Johnโ€™s own songs, plus one well-known and highly relevant cover (which Iโ€™ll come to in due courseโ€ฆ)ย  Johnโ€™s songs span a wide range of subjects, including migration, yearning for home, work and industry and political leadership.ย  Thereโ€™s even space for him to contemplate what Lowestoftโ€™s young trawlermen of the early 1960s used to get up to during their time ashore.ย  The messages are sometimes optimistic, often intense and invariably thought-provoking.



OUTSTANDING VOCAL HARMONIES

Written during a long walk in the hills of Spain, opening track, The Wind That Blows Me Home sets the template for the album.  Johnโ€™s lyrics express the emotion of longing for home and his voice is suitably plaintive and wistful.  Lynne and Les add harmonies that enhance the melancholy mood; Lesโ€™s bass is deep and lush, whilst Johnโ€™s slide guitar gives the song a country feel.

The trioโ€™s tight, 3-part harmonies are a recurring feature of the album and theyโ€™re outstanding on the optimistic Sometimes Youโ€™ve Got To Look Back.ย  The band are in full flow, with accordion, Mandolin and harmonica all getting a look-in and Johnโ€™s lyrics remind us that looking back is, quite often, the only way to appreciate the extent of progress that weโ€™ve made.


DOCKSIDE DANDIES

John takes the time to revisit 1960s Lowestoft for the entertaining Dockside Dandy.  The lyrics recall how the young, off-duty, trawlermen would dress in their teddy boy finery and cruise the town on their Triumph Bonneville motorcycles when they were ashore โ€“ much to the delight of some of the local ladies.  Itโ€™s evocative, and itโ€™s a laugh-a-line.

The frustration and futility of working every day, just so that the bills can be paid, is the subject matter for Beasts Of Burden โ€“ another wistful song.ย  The band are on top form as John urges us to hop off the treadmill and take the time to savour some of the opportunities that the world has to offer.


SONGS OF INTENSITY

The lyrics to the intense I Instead of Us will resonate particularly with anyone who, like me, has experienced the decline of industry and the resulting disintegration of the communities that serviced those industries.  With lyrics like: โ€œWe do not mourn dirty industry, young folks trapped and bound to a foregone destiny,โ€ John considers both sides of the equation โ€“ the loss of skills and community and the health, safety and environmental benefits associated with the changes.

And thereโ€™s no relief to the intensity as, with Cathedrals, John goes on to consider how the actions we take today can have a lasting impact upon the generations of the future.  Itโ€™s a deeply contemplative song; John plays some nice fingerpicked guitar, Lynneโ€™s recorder parts are the perfect fit and, once again, the vocal harmonies are stunning.


A CLOWN IN CHARGE?

Many songs have been written about the adventures and experiences of those who, in past centuries, decided to cross the ocean to the New World.  Less attention has, however, been given to the emotional impact of that migration on the loved ones left behind.  The finality of departure is captured soundly by lyrics like โ€œIโ€™m going west, where you cannot follow.  Iโ€™m going west, beyond the setting sun,โ€ and the sadness in the lyrics is mirrored by Johnโ€™s mournful tune.

I suspect that there will be few amongst Johnโ€™s target audience who will disagree with his suggestion that, in recent years, we seem to have lost the plot, as far as our ability to elect a competent, credible, leader is concerned.ย  This is a subject that registers so highly on Johnโ€™s list of concerns that heโ€™s dedicated two songs to it -The Clownโ€™s The King At Last and Flim Flam Man.ย  With the former, John uses lyrics like: โ€œWeโ€™re living in a satire that weโ€™d have laughed at in the pastโ€ to revisit the Johnson years with a clarity thatโ€™s almost scary.ย  And, for the latter, he compares the skills and motives of our leaders to those of a Snake Oil salesman.ย  Theyโ€™re both jolly tunes, reminding us, perhaps, that, when the chips are down, the best way out is laughter.


OPTIMISM AND INSPIRATION

Optimism makes a welcome return for The River Is Rising. Another song that was inspired during Johnโ€™s recent Spanish sojourn and thatโ€™s a spirit thatโ€™s retained for the heartwarming Itโ€™s Not Dark.ย  Written several years ago, with Johnโ€™s and Lynneโ€™s infant daughter in mind, itโ€™s a song reminiscent of Crosby, Stills and Nash. Johnโ€™s key message โ€“ โ€œItโ€™s not dark, youโ€™ve just got your eyes closedโ€ โ€“ is a takeaway that we can all use.

Under normal circumstances, the albumโ€™s anthemic, calming, reassuring title track would, surely, be the closing number.ย  Of course, todayโ€™s circumstances are anything but โ€˜normal.โ€™ย  Nevertheless, Songs Like An Old Friend is an inspiring song. The band are in full flow as John recites a list of his own, and his friendsโ€™ and familyโ€™s favourite songs.ย  And I was so pleased to hear, within that list, a good few of my own personal favourites, including Fairportโ€™s Meet On The Ledge and Who Knows Where the Time Goes?


A POIGNANT ENDING

But, as has been noted, todayโ€™s circumstances are not โ€˜normal.โ€™ย  Woody Guthrieโ€™s Deportees, a song that commemorates the tragic 1948 plane crash at Los Gatos Canyon has been recalled by many in recent months. Populist politicians attempt to justify their harebrained, inhuman, schemes to deport innocent humans to places like Rwanda and El Salvador.ย  John concludes this excellent album with a chilling version of the song. One that retains the original Hispanic feel and adds a final shot of those signature vocal harmonies.ย  Itโ€™s just sad that a song such as this should be as poignant today as it ever was.


Watch The John Ward Trio perform Dockside Dandy – a track from the album – below:


John Ward online: Official Website / Facebook / YouTube / Bandcamp

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