Bellingen volunteer, Waveney sings away the blues on debut album

Waveney Ayscough, Bellingen Hospital volunteer, returned to music to overcome sadness and has now recorded her debut album, called GIve it to the Sea.

WAVENEY Ayscough, a volunteer with Bellingen Hospital Auxiliary, has just launched an album, Give it to the Sea, at waveney.bandcamp which is free to listen to.

“A few of the songs are about Bellingen and its characters,” Waveney told News Of The Area.

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At age 50, the Bellingen volunteering advocate is philosophical about her venture into the recording industry, a free-ing feeling she has experienced within herself since tackling cancer in 2021.

“I love to sing, don’t think I’m good enough but then I thought who cares.

“I’ve been through much worse than other people’s opinions and if I have to leave this earth early, I’ve left a piece of art behind,” she said.

Waveney’s mother was a music teacher who instilled in her whole family a love for music.

“I hear music in my mind all the time.

“I love how it makes me feel, how I can be transported, motivated, moved,” she said.

With a fascination for the human condition, writing stories, poems and singing, Waveney returned to her former childhood enjoyment of writing music only three years ago.

Having not touched a piano since childhood, she took up the guitar for its easy portability and found it tricky to begin with.

She was heavily medicated as she struggled with depression.

“I hate what those drugs did to me,” she said.

“The music disappeared from my mind.”

Her forays into singing saw her doing backing vocals in 1992 for her brother and sister-in-law’s 70’s and 80’s covers band ‘Yesterday’s Heroes’ and for their trio/quartet ‘Karizmah’.

“I also sang in their big band show ‘The Supergirls show’.

“I always wanted to sing in a band, it was my dream, but I’m quite shy so I Iiked being back-up; and I adore singing harmony,” said Waveney

Growing in confidence she started doing a few open mic nights at the local Federal hotel in Bellingen.

“It was terrifying but fun at the same time.

“Nothing bad happened, so I went back.”

A few years ago, she felt an energy come over herself and she began to write songs.

“I love to sing, and I love to tell stories.

“The songs I wrote really gave me something special for myself; a sense of self-worth, which had been annihilated over the years,” she said.

“Two years ago, I discovered I had breast cancer and I fell into a deep depression.

“The treatment and infection almost ended me.”

Writing the songs and singing her work has been a therapy of a kind.

The whole album is about a woman who is finally allowing herself to be who she really is; a woman who is finally letting herself feel.

“I think to myself, who would want to hear these songs? Do I have any talent? Am I being ridiculous?

“Cancer made me realise….’who cares, you love it, so do it anyway’.

Speaking about the album title, Give it to the Sea, Waveney said, “Whenever I feel so sad I just can’t make sense of existence, I go to the beach; give all your pain, your hope, your fears, your love to the sea, she will take it, and heal you.”

She recorded the album with her mentor, Marguerite Montes, at Happy Place Studios in Sydney.

“She is an amazing, magnificent artist herself.”

Waveney now jams with some of the older musos that she met at the open mic nights.

“We think we might get a covers band together with a few originals, if we can get our **** together,” she said, laughing.

By Andrea FERRARI

A journey with cancer and depression brought Bellingen local, Waveney Ayscough back to music and a free-ing from sadness. Photos: Joanne Cleland, of Created Image.

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