Stephen McCafferty is an Edinburgh-based indie songwriter whose work blends existential themes with anthemic choruses. Stephen began writing songs aged ten, shaped by Bowie, The Beatles, and Dylan records that filled the house. Those early influences still echo in a sound that balances introspection with expansive choruses, rooted in classic songwriting but animated by contemporary ideas about meaning, culture, and the human condition.
Before going solo, Stephen fronted Return To The Sun, earning three XFM Breakout Tracks of the Week, BBC Introducing support, and appearances at festivals including the Isle of Wight and The Great Escape. After a few years away from music, he returned in 2024 with a renewed focus and a string of consistently praised singles. Since then, he has performed at Camper Calling Festival and MoFest, with support from Fresh On The Net, SNACK Magazine, Louder Than War, Postcards From The Underground, and The Skinny. His music has also been played on BBC Radio Scotland by Iain Anderson, and Grammy-, Brit Award-, and Ivor Novello-winning producer James Sanger has described him as having “a fantastic voice and great lyrics.” In 2026, he was selected as one of six artists for Scotland Trending, Perth Festival of the Arts’ curated emerging artist showcase.
Stephen’s songs often explore memory, purpose, time, and the quiet absurdities of everyday life. These aren’t abstract ideas: he writes from lived experience. After spending his late teens moving between sofas, he spent a year living in a homeless shelter in Edinburgh in his early twenties, a period that deeply shaped his worldview and writing. Years later, he returned to that world from the other side, working as a support worker for homeless men, an experience that continues to inform the empathy and emotional clarity in his music.
Tony Michaelides (former publicist for David Bowie, U2, and The Stone Roses) recently described his music as “an infectious sound that hits home on the very first play.” Several reviewers have commented that while the singles work individually, the full album reveals a coherent artistic voice. Heard in sequence, the songs illuminate each other; lyrical threads, recurring imagery, and tonal contrasts become clearer, giving a sense of perspective and identity that isn’t always obvious when the tracks are heard in isolation. That reception culminated in Real Gone naming Monsters and Lullabies their Album of the Year, praising its clear storytelling and “big hooks that just won’t let go.”
Now, with ten singles and his debut album Monsters and Lullabies released, gathering together the songs he unveiled over a 20-month period and culminating in the anthemic I Am The Buffalo, Stephen continues to build momentum with regular releases and live shows. In January 2026, he returns to the studio to begin work on his second and third albums, continuing the steady run of releases that has defined his return to music, connecting with audiences one room at a time.