Matthew Stephen "M." Ward (born October 4, 1973) is an American singer-songwriter, Grammy nominated producer and guitarist from Glendale, California. Ward's solo work is a mixture of folk and blues-inspired Americana analog recordings. He has released 12 studio albums since 1999, primarily through the independent label Merge Records. In addition to his solo work, he is a member of indie pop duo She & Him and folk-rock supergroup Monsters of Folk, and also participates in recording, producing, and playing with multiple other artists.

Early life

Ward was born on October 4, 1973, in Glendale, California, a suburb of Los Angeles. He later moved to Ventura County, and attended Newbury Park High School. He went to college at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, and later moved to Portland, Oregon, to pursue his music career. Growing up, Ward taught himself songs by the Beatles on his brother's guitar, and began recording demos on a four-track analog tape recorder when he was about fifteen. Ward continues to record only analog, and starts all of his songs as demos on the same recorder he has had since his teens. Described by Joshua Klein of Pitchfork as "ragged and lo-fi ... recorded on a shoestring and not necessarily worse for it", Duet for Guitars #2 soon went out of print for a second time, before being reissued by Merge in 2007. Sparklehorse had released It's a Wonderful Life to critical acclaim earlier in the year.

A collection of live recordings, Live Music & The Voice of Strangers, was a self-released disc that was sold at his shows in 2001.

Transfiguration of Vincent and Transistor Radio (2003–05)

Ward released his third album, Transfiguration of Vincent, on Merge Records in 2003 to critical success. Transfiguration of Vincent received a weighted average score of 82 out of 100 by review aggregator website Metacritic, based on 13 critical reviews, indicating "universal acclaim". The title alludes to the 1965 album The Transfiguration of Blind Joe Death by John Fahey, and refers to the life and death of Vincent O'Brien, a close friend to Ward. Fahey's pre-war style of folk music and production techniques, using basic equipment and simple arrangements, greatly influenced Ward's own sound and recording practices. The album consists of Ward's own compositions as well as three covers, The Beach Boys' "You Still Believe in Me", Carmen Lombardo's pop standard "Sweethearts on Parade", and Bach's "Well-Tempered Clavier". Transistor Radio received a score of 78 out of 100 on Metacritic, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Josh Terry of Consequence of Sound, writing of Transistor Radio in 2014, described the album as "one of the finer examples of ramshackle and intimate mid-aughts folk." A writer for Alternative Press, however, said that "Most of Ward's quiet, contemporary folk songs are mere sketches, mediocre if not unmemorable." Transistor Radio was reissued by Merge in December 2014 with four previously unreleased tracks. and reached No. 146 on Billboard's Top 200. Hold Time received an aggregated 79 out of 100 on Metacritic, for "generally favorable reviews" and reached No. 31 on Billboard's Top 200. Will Hermes of Rolling Stone gave the album 3.5 of 5 stars, reflective of the aggregated score, and commented that "[A Wasteland Companion] is his most vivid and varied yet, full of exquisite guitar work,...gem-like songcraft...and inspired covers." Matthew McFarland of Prefix offered the criticism, "What's missing, though, is the familiar sense of deft control over the album's arc, the lyrical intrigues, and the instrumental detail that make his other work so indispensable [sic] to the indie folk canon of last decade."

After another multi-year break from solo recording, M. Ward released his eighth album, More Rain, on March 4, 2016, via Merge and Bella Union. Ward began working on More Rain in 2012, initially experimenting with layering his own vocals to create a doo-wop record. After collaborating with other artists on the record such as R.E.M.'s Peter Buck, k.d. lang, Neko Case, and others, the sound of the album went in a different direction, described as a "true gotta-stay-indoors, rainy-season record that looks upwards through the weather while reflecting on his past." right|thumb|Ward (right) and [[Zooey Deschanel performing as She & Him at the Newport Folk Festival (August 2, 2008)]]

What a Wonderful Industry, Migration Stories, Think of Spring and Supernatural Thing (2017–present)

On June 8, 2018, Ward self-released What a Wonderful Industry, his ninth studio album. Using a variety of anecdotes and metaphors, the album examines the complex challenges of working within the cutthroat music industry. As Ward stated in an interview with NPR, "You quickly learn there's a perfectly imperfect balance of cold-blooded and warm-blooded animals in the zoo....This record visits the most memorable characters. There's a lot of very inspirational people I've had the pleasure to work with but there are also a few I wish I'd never met."

Ward's tenth studio album, Migration Stories, was released on April 3, 2020, on Anti Records.

On December 11, 2020 Ward also released Think of Spring which is a tribute to the live album Lady in Satin by Billie Holiday. The album features solo acoustic versions most of the songs from Lady in Satin (excluding Glad to Be Unhappy and The End of a Love Affair and including All The Way, which was recorded by Holiday and released on her 1959 album Last Recording). Ward recorded the album from home during the COVID-19 pandemic on a Tascam Portastudio four-track cassette recorder.

In June 2023, Anti Records released Ward's twelfth solo album Supernatural Thing.

With other musicians

She and Him

In 2006, Ward was working on the soundtrack for the film The Go-Getter, co-starring actress Zooey Deschanel, when Director Martin Hynes suggested Ward and Deschanel record a duet for the movie. Ward later referred to the collaboration as "a fruitful, creative experience." Deschanel soon sent Ward demos of songs she had written, and the two formed the pop duo She & Him to record together, with Deschanel writing the songs. and Metacritic has the critical album reviews aggregated to 76 out of 100, or "generally favorable reviews".

She & Him's second album, Volume Two, was released on Merge in 2010. Volume Two peaked at No. 6 on Billboard's Top 200, outperforming their first release. A Very She & Him Christmas was released October 25, 2011, on Merge Records, peaking at No. 12. The result, the eponymous Monsters of Folk, was released in September 2009. Monsters of Folk received "generally favorable reviews" with an aggregate score of 80 out of 100 on Metacritic. Prefixs Dave Clark said of the supergroup that "The players on Monsters of Folk complement each other extremely well. There is definitely something to be said for group chemistry. These songs don't always shine the way they could, but the album is a great effort." Monsters of Folk was a commercial success, peaking at No. 15 on Billboard's Top 200.

Geckøs

An impromptu performance at the wedding of a mutual friend lead to a long-distance collaboration under the name Geckøs with Howe Gelb of Giant Sand and McKowski of The Lost Brothers. The group released its first eponymous album in September 2025.

Other artists

M. Ward has produced all his solo work and every album by She & Him. In addition he has produced albums for Jenny Lewis, Mavis Staples and most recently Valerie June.

He has performed on recordings by Brian Wilson, Kim Deal, Giant Sand, Cat Power, Neko Case, Beth Orton (with whom he co-wrote the title track to her album Comfort of Strangers), The Court & Spark, Bright Eyes (with whom he toured on the 2004 Vote for Change tour with R.E.M. and Bruce Springsteen), Jenny Lewis (whose debut solo album Rabbit Fur Coat he co-produced), and My Morning Jacket.

In 2005, Ward was – along with Aaron Burtch, Jason Lytle and Jim Fairchild from Grandaddy, Scout Niblett, Marie Frank or Jeremy Gara – involved in Howe Gelb's project called Arizona Amp and Alternator, which had officially no band members but a lot of guest musicians (M. Ward's voice can be recognized on the track "Aaaa(3)").

In 2006, he helped produce and contributed a song to the John Fahey tribute album I Am the Resurrection. He also appears on Norah Jones' album Not Too Late, performing backing vocals and guitar on "Sinkin' Soon", and toured as the opener and a member of her "Handsome Band" for the album in the spring of 2007. Also his cover of David Bowie's song "Let's Dance" is featured on the soundtrack of the 2007 New Zealand film Eagle vs Shark. Ward was previously a member of the band Rodriguez with Kyle Field of Little Wings and Mike Funk of Echodrone. Their album Swing Like a Metronome was released in 2000 and produced by Jason Lytle of Grandaddy.

Songs or compositions written by M. Ward have been recorded or performed by: Bright Eyes ("Seashell Tale"), Feist ("Post War"), Cat Power ("Sad Sad Song"), Carrie Rodriguez ("Eyes on the Prize"), Grandaddy ("Fishing Boat Song"), Lloyd Cole ("Chinese Translation"), Gillian Welch and Dave Rawlings ("One Life Away" "Fuel for Fire"), Norah Jones ("Lullaby + Exile"), and She and Him ("Magic Trick").

In 2013, Ward contributed guitar work to the Neko Case album The Worse Things Get, The Harder I Fight, The Harder I Fight, The More I Love You.

Selected discography

Solo albums

  • Duet for Guitars #2 (1999)
  • End of Amnesia (2001) (reissued 2013)
  • Transfiguration of Vincent (2003)
  • Transistor Radio (2005)
  • Post-War (2006) (No. 146 U.S.)
  • Hold Time (2009) (No. 31 U.S.)
  • More Rain (2016)
  • What a Wonderful Industry (2018)
  • Migration Stories (April 2020)
  • Think of Spring (December 2020)
  • Supernatural Thing (June 2023)
  • For Beginners: The Best of M. Ward (September 2024)

EPs

  • Scene from No. 12 (I Ain't Sleeping) (2000)
  • To Go Home (2007)

She and Him

  • Volume One (2008) (No. 71 U.S.)
  • Volume Two (2010) (No. 6 U.S.)
  • A Very She & Him Christmas (October 25, 2011)
  • Volume Three (May 7, 2013) (No. 15 U.S.)
  • Classics (December 2, 2014)
  • Christmas Party (October 28, 2016)
  • Melt Away: A Tribute to Brian Wilson (July 22, 2022)

References

  • M. Ward's homepage
  • Matador Records infopage
  • Merge Records infopage
  • ANTI Records infopage