Softley began singing in 'The Cock', a pub in
St Albans, which was a hang out for beatniks and hippies and attracted musicians up from London. Informal sessions were common. This was where he met a young
Donovan Leitch, to whom he taught cross-picking guitar techniques. (Leitch later cited Softley as a "major influence"). Donovan was soon snapped up by a record label and shot to stardom, but this enabled him to bring Softley to the attention of producers and record companies. His first release was the 1965 single "I'm So Confused", released by
Immediate Records. He went on to work with
Peter Eden and
Geoff Stephens, and his debut album
Songs For Swinging Survivors, which was a purely
folk record. The album featured only Softley and his acoustic guitar and includes the songs "The War Drags On" (covered by
Donovan on his
The Universal Soldier EP), and Softley's own interpretations of
Billie Holiday's "
Strange Fruit", and
Woody Guthrie's "The Plains of the Buffalo". In 1964 he opened a folk club, in the Spinning Wheel restaurant in Hemel Hempstead. It was shut down by the police after only a year, however, for "various reasons", mainly health and safety; a very small basement room, with only one way in (and out). Softley did not look back on this time favourably claiming during production he had gone "through a lot of hells and no heavens, a terrifying amount of personal pain" to the extent that he quit the music business for over four years. During this time he survived as a market trader in
Hemel Hempstead, fathered two children, in 1963 and 1964, and still played gigs frequently in folk clubs around the south east. He returned to life on the road in 1968. Due to contractual issues he never received any royalties in the later years. ==
Sunrise and
Street Singer==