Derek Warfield
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Derek Warfield is an Irish singer, songwriter, historian, and a founding member of the musical group, Wolfe Tones.
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[edit] Personal life
Warfield was born the eldest of four in Inchicore, Dublin in 1943 and he was educated at Synge Street C.B.S. He was apprenticed as a tailor until becoming a folk musician He lives in Kilcock, Co. Kildare home. In 2006, Warfield's wife Nuala died, followed by the death of his eldest daughter in 2007.
[edit] Career
Derek Warfield is a singer, songwriter, mandolin player and a founding member of the Wolfe Tones, performing with the band for over 37 years. He has written and recorded over 60 songs and ballads. “The Foggy Dew” was the first of 16 albums recorded by the Wolfe Tones (1964) while the popular “Sing Out For Ireland”(1987) was the last studio album that all four members were present on.
A solo album, “Legacy” was released in 1995 and followed with “Liberte’ ‘98”, “Sons of Erin”, “Take Me Home To Mayo” and “Clear The Way”. Derek also has a video “Legacy” and two books, “The Songs and Ballads of 1798” and “The Irish Songster of the American Civil War”.
Warfield has performed his music and songs at American Civil War events and commemorations at such sites as Gettysburg, Sharpsburg and Harrisburg with his band “The Sons of Erin”. Warfield’s 2002 release, “Clear the Way” is the second in his Irish Songs in the Civil War series.
The ballad “Take Me Home To Mayo”, written by Belfastman Seamus Robinson as a tribute to Michael Gaughan, was recorded as a duet with Irish American Andy Cooney and is the title track of another 2002 Warfield release.
In March 2006, Warfield released his 9th solo album, a 36 song double CD of Irish songs.
[edit] Controversy
In 2003 after a complaint from a Ulster Unionist politician, Roy Beggs Jnr, a radio channel dedicated to the music of Derek Warfield was removed from the in-flight entertainment of Aer Lingus.
Beggs complained of the "Blatant promotion of militant, armed republicanism" by the playing of this music, saying it was the same as "the speeches of Osama Bin Laden being played on a trans-Atlantic Arabian airline [1]."
Aer Lingus removed the material from their flights stating: "It is something that should not have been on board and we removed it immediately we became aware of it [2]."