A Life on Stage: Why Performance Still Matters

For as long as I can remember, performance has been the thread running quietly — and sometimes loudly — through everything I do. Long before academic titles, professional roles, or even military service, there was music. A microphone. A crowd. And that unmistakable rush that only comes from stepping into the light and giving a piece of yourself away.

Over the years, I’ve performed as a solo singer, played in more bands than I can reasonably count, acted in productions big and small, and spoken on stages where the only certainty was that anything could happen. Different settings, different audiences, different expectations — but at the heart of it all, it’s the same challenge: communicate something real.

Music taught me how to listen.
Acting taught me how to observe.
Public speaking taught me how to connect.
And performing with others taught me how to trust — in the moment, in the room, and in the people beside you.

Those lessons have never left me.

Whether I’m standing in front of a lecture hall, delivering a talk, or tuning up for another show, I still feel that same familiar electricity. Performance, at its best, is a conversation — even when you’re the only one with a microphone. You offer the audience your energy, your experience, your honesty, and they give something back: attention, emotion, belonging. It’s a quiet exchange, but a powerful one.

This part of the website will become a space where I explore that world in more detail: the craft of performing, the discipline behind the art, the stories from decades of stages and soundchecks, as well as the moments that shaped me into the performer I am now. Some posts will be reflective, some practical, and some simply memories worth preserving before they fade into the noise.

If the first blog post introduced the journey, this one introduces the heartbeat. Performance has always been my constant — and I’m looking forward to sharing more of it with you.

David

 
 

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I just want to talk about stuff.

It has always been my intention to ‘do a blog’ at some stage of my life journey. Of course the first thing I did was in that modern 2026 Gen Z way was ask AI. It is funny because as a baby boomer I tend to have  a polite chat with this new tool.

‘Good morning and how are you today? Can you tell me what makes a successful blog? Thanks.

The first point my oppo, Co Pikot, came back to me with was.

Have a clear purpose & niche. Define your target audience and focus on a specific topic or niche. Blogs that try to cover everything often struggle to build loyal readers.

Oh dear, I thought. Not a great start because that was not the plan. In fact my plan has always been a million miles from this. However it is not like me to go against the grain. As I scrolled down the useful and not so useful tips ands I came across one ‘Obi-Wan Kenobi’ piece of advice. It was

Authenticity. Share your unique perspective. 

So, in my written blogs and video blogs I am going to just talk about stuff. 

David

 

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