As a musician I’ve had the good fortune to work with National Theatre Wales previously on the immersive theatrical concerts Praxis Makes Perfect and The Insatiable Inflatable Candylion. This year, they approached me to write a song for their NHS70 festival, which launches today, on the 70th anniversary of the institution’s birth.



A lot of my songs deal in lyrical abstraction, but as the NHS has had such a profound effect on every aspect of my life since birth, this was a commission that I felt duty-bound to throw myself into. The title, No Profit in Pain, is an attempt to counter the mentality of platitudes like “no pain no gain” and “tough love” that are peddled by zealous free-marketeers.

The NHS is something that we can too easily take for granted. I’ve twice toured with musicians in America when they’ve had broken limbs and not been able to afford treatment. Each time, they had to continue touring in pain in cramped vans, using homemade splints and slings. It’s a precarious way to live if you don’t have insurance.

The NHS has been there for me throughout my life and has saved many of my family members’ lives. It means more than anything I could ever hope to convey in a melodramatic synth-pop power ballad. For the song (recorded with Kliph Scurlock on drums and Llion Robertson producing), I focused on the battle to keep the NHS as a free service in public ownership. There’s loads of swearing in it. Privatisation is creeping in and it will be a death knell for the NHS if we are not vigilant. As a devolved issue in Wales, and as an idea that was born here, the idea of a free health service for all serves as a beacon of what we can achieve as a nation and is something we must pass on intact to future generations.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest The artwork for No Profit in Pain. Photograph: Gruff Rhys

To promote the song’s message, I decided to hire and decorate a van. I researched hiring a Brexit-style red bus and putting the lyrics on the side but it was too expensive so, in the end, I went for a repurposed bog-standard Home Office-style “Go Home” scare vehicle. Designer Mark James shot a video yesterday as we plastered the lyrics up and he went off and edited it immediately afterwards.

The performance of the song today in Cardiff will act as a kind a theme tune for the theatrical works proper that are happening all over the country (more details can be found on NTW’s website).

I namecheck a trio of Welsh healthcare pioneers in the song – Aneurin Bevan, William Price and Betsi Cadwaladr – but I’m just scratching the surface. I can’t ever hope to contribute to society what NHS staff do on a daily basis. But I do write songs, and while I don’t expect it to be to everybody’s taste, this is my heartfelt if feeble attempt to pay them some respect.