Home News TV Listings Movies Music Video Photos Radio Extra Book Club RTÉ Guide

Music Feature

Classy Ferguson

Rebecca Ferguson was a runner up on The X Factor in 2010 but she may be the best thing to ever come out of the show. Alan Corr talks to her about success after years of struggle
1 of 1 Rebecca Ferguson
Rebecca Ferguson

When she walked out on to The X Factor stage in 2010, Rebecca Ferguson didn't quite look like a ready-made star. She was young, she was beautiful and she did have a very good back story - pregnant at 17, then again at 19, and left with no money and little hope. It was only when she sang her measured cover of Sam Cooke's A Change is Gonna Come that Cowell and co's jaws really dropped.

Ferguson made it to the final with ease and ended up second to Matt Cardle. However, it was to work in her favour: X Factor runners up often have longer careers than the actual winners and the 25-year-old from Liverpool begins 2012 with a critically-acclaimed album, the wistfully-titled Heaven, while Cardle may be wondering just where his career has gone.

Right now Ferguson is much in demand and when I finally catch up with her, she's on her mobile standing in a train station somewhere in London. In person (or at least on the phone) she's a bubbly twenty something with a ready laugh. Why anybody who is serious about a career in music would enter X Factor is a good question but Ferguson seems like the real deal and while Heaven features a lot of torch songs it also beats with a social conscience.

"Life can be very heavy at the moment, the state that we're in at the minute and how we're so consumed with money and all these things that we think are going to complete us make us happy," she says. "By chasing them we're forgetting about family and that people who you love is what's real. I didn't realise that until everything went really badly for me and my life changed. Then I realised that the things that made me happy were my kids and my family."

Ferguson grew up in a one-parent working class household with three brothers and two sisters. Music was her passion and at 14 she got a job in a clothes shop to pay for singing lessons. Performing Arts College followed, but then at 17, everything changed when she became pregnant with her first child Lillie, followed by Karl two years later.

"People would say to me, 'Well your life's ruined now!' For a while I started to believe it, but you don't have to get rid of your dreams just because you have kids. They've just pushed me to succeed, to want to do better for them. And for me."

So she began the rounds of tv talent shows. There were failed attempts in 2005 and 2006 on X Factor, a rejection from Britain's Got Talent in 2009 and she was turned away from P Diddy's Starmaker in 2007. What kept her going? "I think it was just something that wouldn't go away," she says. "It was a dream I'd had since I was really young. Every time I tried to ignore it and preoccupy myself with other things it just coming back and it was just something in me and I just knew that it was what I was meant to be doing."

After those struggles, it's no wonder she's poured her heart into the songs on Heaven. The soaring Shoulder is Shoulder is an honest portrayal of the realities of love containing the rather perverse lines "I get a kick when you worry that you're just no good for me, I get weak watching you plea."

So just how autobiographical are her lyrics? "I'd say very, yeah, to be honest. It's very true to what I've been through," she says. "Some of the songs aren't completely me and I've been inspired by people around me. That lyric you mentioned was one that I was scared to put down. I thought should we really put that in? But I thought for a while and it is an honest lyric. I find people connecting with that song because it's honest.

"The song for me is about a dysfunctional relationship and it's two people who are madly in love with each other but haven't got a clue how to love and are hurting each other rather than loving each other. It's a song based on things I've watched going on around me."

She did have a short relationship with Zayn Malik of fellow X Factor contestants One Direction but right now she's single. "I'm not in love but I'm enjoying meeting people but I haven't found the one yet. I'm just looking and if the right person comes along, great!"

Heaven, produced by Eg White, a man who seems to specialise in bespoke retro soul, is a strange thing from an X Factor wannabe - an album of quality and passion and one that has won Ferguson some very important fans indeed.

Adele is among them. "I haven't met her yet but she sent me a nice note when I was on X Factor but I'd love to meet her and thank her because she's been really lovely and supportive," Ferguson says. "She's said such lovely things about me. She even admitted she voted for me 80 times when I was on the show! She means every word she sings, which I love. That's something I hope people will think with me too."

Heaven is out now

add your own comment
User contributions and/or comments do not, unless specifically stated, represent the views of RTÉ.ie or RTÉ.
Click here for Terms of use

Must Watch TV

  • - The Real Mr & Mrs Assad: Channel 4 Dispatches

    Channel 4, 8.00pm

    Channel 4 Dispatches reveals a portrait of a golden couple who have become global hate figures. The programme shows intimate footage of President Bashar al-Assad and his wife Asma as they've never been seen on British television before, and images that help explain why the West bought the idea they were true modernisers. When Bashar took the reins of power after his father's death in 2000, the West was drawn into a hope and belief that Syria would be a new force for change in the Middle East. The Assads were seen as a glamorous couple with modern Western morals and values; he was hailed a reformer, she was the 'Rose of the Desert'. Key leaders and figures in the West welcomed the young couple, convinced that the softly spoken London-trained ophthalmologist and his beautiful British-born former investment banker wife would bring reform and modernisation to a country that had been run by an iron-fisted dictator for nearly 30 years. But it seems the West was duped. Instead of a transparent and progressive leadership, what has emerged during a year-long bloody uprising is evidence of the regime's gross systematic human rights abuses, including widespread killings and torture, while the Assads look on. Channel 4 Dispatches investigates the extent of the Assad family's culpability and the chains of command that link the President and select inner circle to the brutal crackdown.

  • - Afghanistan: The Great Game - A Personal View By Rory Stewart

    BBC Two

    Afghanistan: one of the most isolated and barren landscapes on earth is a strange place for an empire or superpower to invade. But for three of the greatest powers the world has seen, it became an unlikely target and an enduring obsession. The 19th century British invasions into Afghanistan, immortalised by Rudyard Kipling as "The Great Game", ended in huge loss of life and British retreat, and set a template for the perils of incursion in this mountainous country. In this two-part series, author, journalist and former Deputy Governor during the coalition's occupation of Iraq, Rory Stewart MP travels to Afghanistan to uncover the fears, the paranoia and perceived threats that led three very different Ssperpowers: Britain, Russia and the United States into Afghanistan from the 19th century to the present day.

  • - 56 Up

    ITV, 9.00pm

    Michael Apted's landmark documentary series following the lives of ordinary British people from childhoiod to adulthood and old age continues. Over the past six decades, the series has documented the group as they have become adults and entered middle-age, dealing with everything life has thrown at them in between. The series is back to discover what has happened to the group over the last seven years. And one of the original characters has decided to re-join the series after leaving almost 30 years ago.