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Nancy Kerr
Nancy Kerr
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Key Information

Nancy Kerr (/kɜːr/;[1] born 1975)[2] is an English folk musician and songwriter, specialising in the fiddle and singing. She is a Principal Lecturer in Folk Music at Newcastle University. She was the 2015 BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards "Folk Singer of the Year".[3][4]

Born in London, she now lives in Sheffield.[5]

Early life

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Kerr is the daughter of London-born singer-songwriter Sandra Kerr[6] and Northumbrian piper Ron Elliott.[7][8]

Career

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Kerr came to prominence in the early 1990s via a musical partnership with fellow fiddle player Eliza Carthy. The duo produced two albums – Eliza Carthy & Nancy Kerr (1993) and Shape of Scrape (1995) – before ceasing to work together.[9][10] A retrospective collection of their work (plus three previously unreleased tracks) – On Reflection – was released in 2002.[11][10]

Kerr and her mother released an album together – Neat and Complete – in 1996.[12]

Since 1995, Kerr has worked extensively with Australian bouzouki player and singer James Fagan, whom she married in 2007.[13][14] The duo won the Horizon Award at the inaugural BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards in 2000, and Best Duo at the same awards in both 2003 and 2011.[15] Between 1997 and 2008 they released six albums on the Fellside label – Starry Gazy Pie, Scalene (with Sandra Kerr), Steely Water, Between The Dark and Light, Strands of Gold and Station House (with Robert Harbron).[12] The album Station House was the result of a collaboration with concertina player Robert Harbron to form the trio Kerr Fagan Harbron. In 2010 Kerr and Fagan produced their first completely original collection of songs – Twice Reflected Sun. The first track of the album, Queen of Waters, was nominated for the "Best Original Song" category at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards in 2011.[15]

Kerr has also worked with a number of groups, including folk/pop group Epona, Australian folk family band The Fagans and the Tim van Eyken band.[16] In 2010 she joined James Fagan, Richard Arrowsmith and Jess Arrowsmith to form Melrose Quartet in her new home city of Sheffield.[17] They released a live EP in 2011 called Live at Cheltenham and two studio albums: Fifty Verses in 2013 and Dominion in 2017.[18] She has also performed in the trio Simpson Cutting Kerr, with Martin Simpson and Andy Cutting, whose debut CD Murmurs was released on Topic Records on 8 June 2015.[19]

Kerr has been involved in several commissioned works. In 2013 she was part of Fay Hield's The Full English band to promote the on-line publication of the folk collections of the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library in Cecil Sharp House. The collective won "Best Group" at the 2014 BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards and their CD The Full English won "Best Album" at the same ceremony.[20] In 2014 Kerr was a key songwriter in The Elizabethan Session, a concert, CD and film commissioned by Folk by the Oak and The English Folk Dance and Song Society creating new music about the Elizabethan era.[21] In November 2015, Kerr was one of four songwriters commissioned by Folk by the Oak and The English Folk Dance and Song Society to write and tour a production called Sweet Liberties looking at the history of British parliament and democracy. Their CD Sweet Liberties was released in 2016.[22] In 2017 and 2018 Kerr was one of five musicians who formed Shake the Chains, a project that explored "the role songs have played in social change, resistance and protest".[23] The project was commissioned by Folk by the Oak and supported by Arts Council England, Help Musicians and Folk Alliance. The group toured in 2017 and 2018, and made a live album in 2017.[24][23]

In 2014, Kerr released Sweet Visitor, her first CD of original songs under her own name, on her own label Little Dish Records. The album's release on 21 July 2014 was followed by a UK tour with The Sweet Visitor Band (James Fagan, Rowan Rheingans, Tom Wright and Tim Yates) in November. James Fagan now shares his role in the band with Greg Russell. 2016 saw the production of Kerr's second album of original songs with The Sweet Visitor Band on Little Dish Records. The album, entitled Instar, was produced by Tom Wright and was released on 16 September 2016.[25]

In 2017 and 2018, Kerr played the Mother in a production of Peter Bellamy's folk opera The Transports.[26]

Having previously taught on the Newcastle University Folk Degree, Kerr is now a Principal Lecturer and Voice & Fiddle Tutor at Leeds Conservatoire.

In May 2020, Nancy Kerr recorded 31 new arrangements of songs by Leon Rosselson as a series of videos published on her YouTube channel Nancy Kerr Music.

Awards

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  • 2000: "Horizon Award" at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards.[27]
  • 2003: "Best Duo" (with James Fagan) at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards.[27]
  • 2011: "Best Duo" (with James Fagan) at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards.[27]
  • 2011: "Best Album" (with James Fagan) in the Spiral Awards[28]
  • 2014: "Best Group" and "Best Album" (with the Full English) at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards.[29]
  • 2015: "Folk Singer of the Year" at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards.[3][4]

Selected discography

[edit]
  • 1993: Eliza Carthy and Nancy Kerr (with Eliza Carthy) (Mrs Casey Records MCRCD3991)[30]
  • 1994: Waterson:Carthy (with Waterson–Carthy) (Topic Records TSCD475)[31]
  • 1995: Shape of Scrape (with Eliza Carthy) (Mrs Casey Records MCRCD5992)[32]
  • 1995: Evolving Tradition 1 (with Kings of Calicut)
  • 1996: Neat and Complete (with Sandra Kerr) (Fellside Recordings FECD107)
  • 1996: Shine Again (with Epona) (Impstone Records IMP468CD)[33]
  • 1996: Evolving Tradition 2 (with Kings of Calicut)
  • 1997: Starry Gazy Pie (with James Fagan) (Fellside Recordings FECD127)
  • 1998: Scalene (with Sandra Kerr) (Fellside Recordings FECD137)
  • 1999: Steely Water (with James Fagan) (Fellside Recordings FECD145)
  • 2000: Five Little Frogs (with Sandra Kerr, Leon Rosselson, and Kevin Graal) (Playsongs Publications PP06)[34]
  • 2000: Five Little Owls (with Sandra Kerr, Leon Rosselson, and Kevin Graal) (Playsongs Publications PP08)[35]
  • 2002: Between The Dark and Light (with James Fagan) (Fellside Recordings FECD167)
  • 2002: On Reflection (with Eliza Carthy) (Mrs Casey Records MCRCD1003)[36]
  • 2004: Evolving Tradition 4: Generations (with Sandra Kerr)
  • 2004: Turning Fine (with The Fagans)
  • 2005: Kind Letters (with Martin Simpson)
  • 2006: Strands of Gold (with James Fagan) (Fellside Recordings FECD199)
  • 2006: Stiffs, Lovers, Holymen, Thieves (with Tim van Eyken band)
  • 2008: Station House (with James Fagan and Robert Harbron) (Fellside Recordings FECD211)
  • 2009: Milk and Honey Land (with The Fagans)
  • 2010: Twice Reflected Sun (with James Fagan) (Navigator Records, NAV0041)
  • 2011: Melrose Quartet Live at Cheltenham (with Melrose Quartet: Nancy Kerr, James Fagan, Richard and Jess Arrowsmith)
  • 2013: Fifty Verses (with Melrose Quartet) (MQCD02)
  • 2014: The Elizabethan Session (with Martin Simpson, Jim Moray, Bella Hardy, John Smith, Hannah James, Rachel Newton, Emily Askew)
  • 2014: The Full English (with Fay Hield, Martin Simpson, Seth Lakeman, Rob Harbron, Sam Sweeney and Ben Nicholls)
  • 2014: Sweet Visitor (LiDiCD001)[25] (Nancy Kerr solo, with The Sweet Visitor Band)
  • 2015: It Was Red/Gingerbread (Vinyl EP, LiDiEP002)
  • 2015: Murmurs (with Martin Simpson and Andy Cutting)
  • 2016: Instar (LiDiCD002) (Nancy Kerr solo, with The Sweet Visitor Band)
  • 2016: Sweet Liberties (with Martyn Joseph, Sam Carter and Maz O'Connor)
  • 2017: Dominion (with Melrose Quartet) (MQCD03)
  • 2017: Shake the Chains (with Findlay Napier, Hannah Martin, Greg Russell and Tim Yates)
  • 2018: The Transports (with the cast of The Transports)[37]
  • 2019: An Evening With Nancy Kerr & James Fagan (LiDiCD003)

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
''Nancy Kerr'' is an English folk musician, singer, songwriter, and fiddle player known for her distinctive voice and innovative approach to both traditional and contemporary folk music. She was awarded Best Singer at the 2015 BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, recognizing her as a leading figure in the British folk scene. Kerr has built a notable career through solo work and collaborations, including her long-standing duo with James Fagan, as well as projects with ensembles such as Nancy Kerr & The Sweet Visitor Band, Melrose Quartet, and others. Her compositions often draw on social commentary and traditional roots, establishing her reputation as one of the UK's foremost modern folk songwriters. Based in Sheffield, Kerr continues to perform, record, and contribute to the folk music community through her artistry and performances.

Early life

Family background

Nancy Kerr was born in London, England. She is the daughter of singer-songwriter and folk performer Sandra Kerr and Northumbrian piper Ron Elliott. Kerr grew up in a deeply musical household where both parents were active in folk traditions, exposing her from an early age to traditional English songs through her mother and Northumbrian piping and instrumental music through her father. Her mother, a professional singer, songwriter, and instrumentalist, provided a strong foundation in song-based folk material, while her father's expertise as a Northumbrian piper contributed an instrumental dimension to the home environment. This immersion in traditional English and Northumbrian music shaped her early familiarity with the genres, with both parents serving as key influences in her formative years. Kerr occasionally collaborated with her mother on early recordings, reflecting the familial integration of their musical lives.

Early musical development

Kerr specialized in the fiddle and singing from a very early age, having been singing old folk songs and playing the fiddle since she was very young. She initially took classical violin lessons, as her parents advised that formal training would support her development in traditional music—a view later validated by her encounters with experienced players. By the age of seven or eight, she was already playing fiddle, though she described herself at that time as "fairly awful" and in need of direction, prompting visits to influential figures like Northumbrian fiddler Willy Taylor for guidance. Her formative years were marked by constant exposure to live traditional music, including Irish sessions in London during her early childhood and, after the family moved to Northumberland when she was ten, participation in vibrant local sessions. These experiences reinforced her connection to regional English and Northumbrian folk traditions, with her parents' repertoires—her mother's shaped by earlier involvement in the English folk revival and her father's rooted in instrumental heritage—serving as a foundational influence that she carried forward.

Music career

Early collaborations and duo work

Nancy Kerr's early professional music career in the 1990s featured prominent duos that drew on her fiddle playing, singing, and deep roots in English traditional music. Influenced by her family background in folk, she collaborated with her mother, the singer Sandra Kerr, on the album Neat and Complete in 1996, a collection of traditional songs performed as a mother-daughter duo. Her most notable early partnership was the duo formed with Eliza Carthy, resulting in the self-titled debut album Eliza Carthy & Nancy Kerr in 1993, which combined traditional material with their distinctive vocal and instrumental interplay. The pair followed this with Shape of Scrape in 1995, an album that further showcased their innovative approach to folk arrangements and earned attention in the British folk scene. Their collaborative output from this period was later compiled in the retrospective On Reflection in 2002. These early duos marked Kerr's entry into recorded music and live performance, establishing her reputation as a versatile young artist before her career evolved toward other partnerships.

Partnership with James Fagan

Nancy Kerr formed her long-term musical partnership with Australian singer and bouzouki player James Fagan in 1997. The duo released their debut album Starry Gazy Pie that same year, establishing their distinctive blend of traditional English folk with contemporary arrangements. Their subsequent releases included Steely Water in 1999 and Between The Dark and Light in 2002, which further developed their reputation for thoughtful interpretations of folk material and original compositions. Their final studio album as a duo, Twice Reflected Sun, appeared in 2010. The partnership earned significant recognition at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, beginning with the inaugural Horizon Award in 2000. They received the Best Duo award in 2003 and again in 2011. Additionally, Twice Reflected Sun won Best Album at the Spiral Awards in 2011. Kerr and Fagan married in 2007, combining their personal and professional lives while continuing to perform and record together.

Solo career and later projects

Following her long-standing partnership with James Fagan, Nancy Kerr launched her independent solo career with the debut album Sweet Visitor, released in 2014. The album marked her emergence as a distinctive voice in contemporary folk, earning widespread acclaim and securing her the BBC Folk Awards title of Folk Singer of the Year in 2015. She followed with her second solo album Instar in 2016, again featuring the Sweet Visitor Band and produced by Tom Wright. The record explored themes of transformation, transience, and rebirth alongside issues such as the natural world, gender identity, human rights, colonialism, and austerity, drawing inspiration from contemporary nature writing. Critics described Instar as vital and urgent, positioning Kerr at the cutting edge of modern folk music with extraordinary lyrical depth and compassion. In 2015 and 2016, Kerr contributed to the collective project Sweet Liberties, commissioned by the English Folk Dance and Song Society and Folk by the Oak to mark the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta. Alongside songwriters Martyn Joseph, Sam Carter, and Maz O’Connor, she created new material addressing historical and contemporary struggles for freedom, democracy, and social justice, including songs on the Tolpuddle Martyrs and sexual equality. The project encouraged her to adopt a more explicitly political approach in her songwriting and culminated in a touring show and album release. Kerr then participated in Shake the Chains from 2017 to 2018, another Folk by the Oak-commissioned initiative supported by Arts Council England and others that examined the role of songs in protest, resistance, and social change. Working with Hannah Martin, Findlay Napier, Greg Russell, and Tim Yates, she contributed vocals and instrumentation, including the original track “Through the Trees,” a tribute to the Greenham Common women’s protests against nuclear weapons. The project produced a live album in 2017 featuring both new compositions and refreshed protest classics.

Group memberships and ensembles

Nancy Kerr has been involved in a number of folk ensembles and collectives, contributing her skills as a singer, fiddler, and songwriter to collaborative efforts that extend beyond her duo and solo work. She has been a member of the Melrose Quartet since 2010, a Sheffield-based group comprising Nancy Kerr on voice and fiddle, Jess Arrowsmith on voice and fiddle, James Fagan on voice, bouzouki, and guitar, and Richard Arrowsmith on voice and melodeons. The quartet is recognized for its virtuosic four-part harmony singing, lively dance tunes, and a repertoire blending traditional material with original compositions addressing contemporary themes. Their 2017 album Dominion features a mix of traditional songs and new pieces by Kerr and Arrowsmith, emphasizing ideas of community, love, and loss. Between 2013 and 2014, Kerr was part of The Full English, a collective supergroup that included Fay Hield, Martin Simpson, Seth Lakeman, Sam Sweeney, Rob Harbron, and Ben Nicholls. The project drew on digitized early 20th-century British folksong collections to create new interpretations, resulting in their self-titled album released in 2013. The group received the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards for Best Group and Best Album. Kerr also collaborated in the trio Simpson Cutting Kerr with guitarists Martin Simpson and accordionist Andy Cutting, releasing the instrumental and vocal album Murmurs in 2015. In 2014, she participated in The Elizabethan Session, a temporary commissioning project organized by Folk by the Oak and the English Folk Dance and Song Society that brought together eight folk musicians—including Martin Simpson, Jim Moray, Bella Hardy, and others—to compose and perform new work inspired by Elizabethan history and legends during a week-long residency. The project culminated in live performances, a studio recording, and a festival appearance. Some of these ensemble contributions overlapped with broader collaborative initiatives in her career, such as the Sweet Liberties project.

Work in film and television

Acting credits

Nancy Kerr's acting credits consist primarily of roles in short films and one television appearance during the 2010s. She appeared in The Full English (2014, video) and the short Transmitting Musical Heritage: Part II (2014). The following year, she acted in the short film Gingerbread (2015). In 2016, Kerr played Guest #1 in the short Broken Doll: Part 1. That same year, she portrayed the Whitsun Singer in one episode of the ITV television series Jericho, a role that involved performing traditional song and aligned with her established work as a folk musician. In 2018, she provided voice acting as the Narrator in episodes 1 and 8 of the short Morning Interim.

Composing and other contributions

Nancy Kerr has contributed to film as a composer and producer on short projects closely tied to her music career. She composed the music for and served as producer on the short film Gingerbread (2015), a visual accompaniment created for her song of the same name from the album Instar. She also composed and produced the short Seven Notes (2016). Beyond these, Kerr has one credit in the music department and one soundtrack credit in other film projects. Her work occasionally overlaps with music heritage initiatives, such as Transmitting Musical Heritage, though her primary film-related contributions remain in composing and producing for shorts featuring her own material.

Academic career

Teaching positions and roles

Nancy Kerr has made substantial contributions to folk music education through her academic appointments at UK higher education institutions. She is Lecturer in Folk and Traditional Music at Newcastle University, where she teaches courses related to folk and traditional music. She holds the title of Professor of Composition & Performance at Leeds Conservatoire (awarded 2021), focusing on instruction in vocal technique and fiddle playing within folk contexts. Her roles emphasize training and mentoring emerging musicians in traditional repertoires, performance practices, and creative approaches to folk music. With over 25 years of experience in both formal and informal education settings, Kerr has delivered workshops, choir leadership, and individual tuition at festivals, residential courses, schools, and universities across the UK, Australia, Canada, Europe, and Asia. She has additionally supported youth development in folk music as a guest tutor for the National Youth Folk Ensemble and as a workshop leader and adjudicator for the BBC Radio 2 Young Folk Award.

Personal life

Marriage and collaborations

Nancy Kerr married Australian bouzouki player and singer James Fagan in 2007. The couple had already established a long-term musical partnership by that time, having begun collaborating as a duo in 1995, and their marriage has coincided with continued professional work together. They have two children and maintain Sheffield as their home base, from where they continue to tour and perform despite family responsibilities. Kerr lives in the Pitsmoor area of Sheffield, which she has described as the friendliest place she has ever lived and a source of inspiration for her songwriting, including in her city garden. In a 2015 interview, Kerr referred to her husband James when sharing a personal memory of driving together in the countryside, highlighting the intersection of their personal and shared life.

Awards and recognition

Major honours and nominations

Nancy Kerr has received widespread recognition for her contributions to folk music, primarily through the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, widely regarded as the premier honours in British folk. She and James Fagan won the Horizon Award in 2000 for emerging talent. The duo earned Best Duo in 2003 and again in 2011. In 2014, as a member of The Full English, she secured Best Group and Best Album. Kerr was named Folk Singer of the Year in 2015. Beyond the BBC awards, she and James Fagan received the Best Album honour at the Spiral Awards in 2011. These accolades highlight her impact as a singer, fiddler, and collaborator in the contemporary folk scene.

References

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