User:Lewis.graeme/sandbox/Dave Hadfield

David (“Dave”) Hadfield (born July 1957 in Galt, Ontario) is a Canadian singer/songwriter, author, wilderness adventurer, historic aircraft pilot, and classic-boat sailor. He shares writing credits on the album “Songs From a Tin Can”, recorded by his brother Commander Chris Hadfield, which is the first album of music recorded off the planet Earth.

Music
Dave is known for his wilderness songs. These are largely story-songs, many focusing on historical themes. Some are humorous or satiric (eg.“Riley’s Bait”, “Victor’s Cabin”). In 2012 Dave’s song “Jewel in the Night”, a “space-carol” was adapted and recorded by his brother Chris Hadfield while on board the ISS (International Space Station), and released on Christmas Eve. This was the first of Chris’ recordings from Space, and is the first song deliberately recorded and distributed from space for the purposes of an album. In 2014 Dave’s song “In Canada”, performed and filmed with Chris at the family cottage, was released on Canada Day (July 01), and gained 1M hits in 3 days on YouTube. It has since received over 2M views. Dave is also front man for the Barrie ON-based band “The Purveyors”, which is known for mixing Dave’s original songs with modern and traditional Celtic music. Canadian author and filmmaker Kevin Callan often uses Dave’s music for film scores, including “Learning to Laugh at Yourself in Algoma” (2008), which won Best Humorous Short at the Waterwalker Film Festival that year, and “The Haunted Coburg Jail”. So does historian/presenter James Raffan, and Rolf Kraiker.

Discography
“Northern Breeze”, 1997; an 8-song collection on wilderness subjects “Wilderness Waltz”, 2000; a 12-song collection on wilderness subjects “The Skin I’m In”, 2007; a 14-song album on a wide variety of subjects In production: "Flights of Song", an album of songs on aviation themes

Shared Projects
“Space Sessions: Songs From a Tin Can”, 2015; by Chris Hadfield.

Wilderness
Dave travelled widely in the Canadian Shield of NE Manitoba as a young man. He is a noted winter Bush traveller as well as a canoeist, and has publicized his methods and gear in print articles and internet sites. Dave has used modern materials to re-create many items of traditional bush gear, such as prospector tents, portable wood-burning cook stoves, hand-hauled sleds of various kinds, wannigans, etc. These have been published in how-to articles. Wilderness trips have formed the subject material for many of his songs.

Pilot
In addition to being a B-777 Captain for a major Canadian airline, Dave is a Senior Pilot with Vintage Wings of Canada, Gatineau QC., and flies many Warbird types such as the Hawker Hurricane, Westland Lysander, and P-51 Mustang. He performs aerobatic airshow displays in the P-40 Kittyhawk fighter, and owns several aircraft. He comes from a flying family, six of which are pilots, including Commander Chris Hadfield. His wife Robin Hadfield is a noted Air Race and Rally pilot.

Author
Dave authored a "how-to" column in an outdoor magazine ("Bushwhacker") from 1997-2001, which encouraged wilderness enthusiasts how to make and use old-fashioned camping gear for winter and summer. These articles are being put together in book format, with a projected publication date of 2017. He has also published articles in mainstream aviation, and sailing, magazines, as well in internet special-interest forums.

Sailor
Dave has restored and sails a classic 46 ft LOD wooden (1947) ketch sailboat in the Great Lakes. Voyages on these lakes have formed the basis of his sailing articles, and some of his songs. He is also a designer and builder of canoes and dinghies, primarily working with plywood and epoxy.

Family
Married to Robin Hadfield, Dave has 2 children, Austin Hadfield (an airline pilot in Canada) and Kelly Hadfield, founder and Executive Director of Ghana Medical Help, an NGO charity providing medical supplies and training to remote hospitals in Ghana, Africa.