Hubbry Logo
Sandra KerrSandra KerrMain
Open search
Sandra Kerr
Community hub
Sandra Kerr
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Sandra Kerr
Sandra Kerr
from Wikipedia

Sandra Kerr (born 14 February 1942, Plaistow, Newham, Essex) is an English folk singer.

Key Information

Kerr sings and plays English concertina, guitar, Appalachian dulcimer and autoharp. She was a member of The Critics Group from 1963 to 1972. With John Faulkner, she wrote the music for the television series Bagpuss and voiced the character of Madeleine (the rag doll). Kerr has been involved in many programmes for BBC Radio including The Music Box and Listen with Mother.

She has sung with her daughter Nancy Kerr (whose father is Ron Elliott, a Northumbrian piper) and in the groups Sisters Unlimited and Voice Union. Her work has developed to include teaching and leading workshops and she is the director of two folk choirs, Wercasfolk and VoiceMale. [citation needed] She was on the staff of Newcastle University's music department for 17 years until 2017.[1]

Discography

[edit]
  • 'A Merry Progress to London' with the Critics Group (Argo ZFB 60 1966)
  • 'Sweet Thames Flow Softly' with the Critics Group (Argo ZDA 47 1966)
  • 'Waterloo-Peterloo' with the Critics Group (Argo ZFB 68 1968)
  • 'The Female Frolic' with the Critics Group (Argo ZDA 82 1968)
  • 'Bagpuss: the Songs & Music' with John Faulkner (Fellside – Smallfolk SMF1 1999)
  • 'Yellow Red and Gold' (Fellside FECD152)
  • 'My Song is My Own' with Frankie Armstrong, Alison McMorland and Kathy Henderson (Plane Label TPL 0001, 1980)
  • 'Nuclear Power No Thanks' with Frankie Armstrong, Roy Bailey, Martin Carthy, Ron Elliott, Howard Evans, Chris Foster, John Kirkpatrick, Alison McMorland, Brian Pearson, Geoff Pearson, Leon Rosselson & Roger Williams (Plane Label IMP2 LP, 1981)
  • 'Scalene' with Nancy Kerr & James Fagan (Fellside FECD137)
  • 'Supermum' children's songs by Sandra Kerr and friends (Pucca Records YOP 05 LP, UK, 1983)
  • 'We Were There' with the Oysterband (Pucca Records YOP 08 LP, UK, 1987)
  • 'No Limits' Sisters Unlimited with Janet Russell, Peta Webb and Rosie Davis (1991 Harbour Town)
  • 'No Bed of Roses' Sisters Unlimited with Janet Russell, Peta Webb and Rosie Davis (Fellside FECD104)
  • 'Neat and Complete' with Nancy Kerr (1996 Fellside FECD107)
  • 'Guess What They're Selling at the Happiness Counter' with Leon Rosselson (Fuse Records 1992)
  • 'Five Little Frogs' with Nancy Kerr, Leon Rosselson, and Kevin Graal
  • 'Five Little Owls' with Nancy Kerr, Leon Rosselson, and Kevin Graal
  • 'Voice Union' with Evelyne Girardon and Liliana Bertolo (Fellside FECD119)

Books

[edit]
  • Kathy Henderson, Frankie Armstrong and Sandra Kerr. My Song is My Own. London: Pluto Press, 1979 ISBN 0-86104-033-3 & ISBN 0-86104-032-5 / ISBN 9780861040322 (One hundred traditional and composed women's songs from the British Isles, with select bibliography and discography.)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
''Sandra Kerr'' is an English folk singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and actress known for her influential role in the British folk music revival and for composing, performing, and voicing characters in the iconic children's television series ''Bagpuss'' (1974). Born on 14 February 1942 in Plaistow, East London, to a working-class family where music was central, she grew up singing popular songs and playing instruments like concertina and piano. She discovered the folk scene in her teens, attending venues such as the Singers Club, and lived with Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger as a musical apprentice in the early 1960s, absorbing traditional styles and harmonic techniques that shaped her career. Kerr became a founder member of the Critics Group in 1963, performing and recording politically engaged folk material until 1972, before forming a long-term musical partnership with John Faulkner. Together they created and performed the soundtrack for ''Bagpuss'', voicing Madeleine the rag doll and the mice while playing multiple instruments across the 13 episodes, contributing to the series' enduring popularity as a landmark in British children's programming. Her work extended to other children's radio and television, including voice roles in programmes like ''Noggin the Nog'', and she has released albums featuring traditional and original songs, often with feminist and political themes. A dedicated educator, Kerr helped establish the folk and traditional music degree at Newcastle University, where she taught for many years, and she continues to lead community choirs such as Werca’s Folk and conduct workshops. She has collaborated with her daughter, folk musician Nancy Kerr, on performances and recordings, and remains active in performing ''Bagpuss'' material and advocating for traditional song in contemporary contexts. Her career reflects a commitment to folk music as a vehicle for social commentary, education, and intergenerational transmission.

Early life

Background and early influences

Sandra Kerr was born on 14 February 1942 in Plaistow, Essex, an area now part of the London Borough of Newham in East London. She grew up in a working-class family in London's East End during the post-war period, where music formed an integral part of daily home life. Her father worked in the docks, her mother in a local chocolate factory, and the household always featured a piano. Her mother was a talented singer of jazz and popular music from the 1930s and 1940s and had played the concertina in her youth, while her maternal grandmother played harmonica and her paternal grandfather concertina, making the concertina particularly resonant as her own instrument. Kerr's earliest significant exposure to folk music came through the radio, where she heard Peggy Seeger, whom she described as a wonderful inspiration, and Irish Traveller singer Margaret Barry, whose raw, unpolished style profoundly affected her after years of hearing more sophisticated music. As a schoolgirl, she participated in a skiffle group, an experience she later viewed as granting permission for anyone to create music rather than merely consume it. Around the age of 17, friends introduced her to the Singers Club, where performances by Ewan MacColl, Peggy Seeger, and Bert Lloyd, along with their use of harmony and guitar accompaniment, left her completely captivated by traditional songs. This inspired her to help establish an East London folk club at the Railway Tavern on Angel Lane, where she sang from the floor, initially focusing on American material. Folk journalist Karl Dallas challenged her to draw from her own English cultural heritage, providing field recordings of traditional singers that shifted her focus toward English folk traditions. In the early 1960s, she moved into association with The Critics Group.

Career

The Critics Group and early folk work

Sandra Kerr became a member of The Critics Group in 1964, a politically engaged folk collective led by Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger that emphasized rigorous study of traditional songs, incorporation of theatre techniques into performance, and creation of work with social and political purpose. As a founder member, she contributed vocals and played a variety of instruments including the English concertina, guitar, Appalachian dulcimer, and autoharp throughout her tenure. She remained with the group until 1972, participating in numerous performances worldwide and contributing to several themed albums that blended traditional material with contemporary commentary. Her early recordings with the ensemble included A Merry Progress to London and Sweet Thames Flow Softly, both released in 1966, where she provided vocals and instrumental accompaniment. These were followed in 1968 by contributions to The Female Frolic and Waterloo–Peterloo, further showcasing her vocal and instrumental versatility in the group's distinctive style. During her time in The Critics Group, Kerr began collaborating with fellow member John Faulkner, laying the foundation for their later musical partnership. The group disbanded in the early 1970s, after which Kerr shifted focus to independent projects.

Bagpuss and children's television contributions

Sandra Kerr, in collaboration with John Faulkner, composed and performed the music and songs for the BBC children's television series Bagpuss (1974), which consisted of thirteen 15-minute episodes created by Oliver Postgate and Peter Firmin. The soundtrack drew heavily on British and Irish traditional music, with Kerr and Faulkner arranging pieces that included adaptations of older material such as centuries-old rounds and Scottish tunes, while incorporating original melodies and a variety of instruments like autoharp, concertina, and dulcimer. Kerr voiced the character of Madeleine the Rag Doll, who sang and performed alongside Gabriel the Toad (voiced by Faulkner), and also provided the voices for the chorus of Mice who sang in shrill rounds during the stories. The music emphasized themes of repair, recycling, and anti-consumerism, with songs like “We Will Fix It” and “The Miller’s Song” becoming central to the episodes. Beyond Bagpuss, Kerr contributed to other children's programming in the 1970s and 1980s. She provided voice work for two episodes of the animated series Noggin the Nog in 1982. She also arranged music for two episodes of the television mini-series Gone for a Soldier (1980). On radio, Kerr supplied music and voices for BBC children's programmes including The Music Box (which she also wrote and presented) and Listening Corner, as well as appearing in Play School and other schools broadcasts.

Later music collaborations and recordings

In the 1980s and beyond, Sandra Kerr continued to record and perform, releasing solo albums that showcased her commitment to folk traditions and original material. She issued the album Supermum in 1983. This was followed by We Were There in 1987. These recordings reflected her ongoing engagement with songwriting and performance during a period when she also pursued other professional avenues. Her most prominent later collaborations came through working with her daughter Nancy Kerr. In 1996, the mother-daughter duo released Neat and Complete on Fellside Recordings, an album of traditional English folk songs performed with Sandra Kerr on vocals, English concertina, guitar, and Appalachian dulcimer, alongside Nancy Kerr on vocals, fiddle, and viola. The pair expanded their work in 1999 with the trio album Scalene, which included James Fagan on bouzouki, whistle, and vocals, with Kerr contributing vocals, English concertina, and guitar. Kerr also appeared as a guest on Nancy Kerr and James Fagan albums, contributing English concertina to Starry Gazy Pie (1997) and vocals and concertina to Between the Dark and Light (2002). Kerr has maintained long-term involvements with vocal groups emphasizing harmony and shared performance. She has been a member of Sisters Unlimited for over 25 years, collaborating with other established female singers and a dancer in a quartet noted for its musical effectiveness, warmth, wit, and vivacity. In 1996, she co-founded Voice Union with Italian singer Liliana Bertolo and French singer Evelyne Girardon. Kerr has continued occasional performances and recordings into the 21st century. She has toured in a live show revisiting Bagpuss songs and stories alongside Nancy Kerr, James Fagan, and John Faulkner, appearing at UK theatres and folk festivals including Cambridge, Sidmouth, and Whitby. Her later solo releases include Hi! Said The Elephant in 2009 and Rebel With Her Chords in 2019.

Teaching, choirs, and ongoing work

Sandra Kerr has contributed extensively to folk music education through her long-term teaching role, choir direction, and workshop leadership. She joined Newcastle University in 2002 as a tutor and lecturer on the Folk and Traditional Music degree course, serving as principal voice tutor and leading the module ‘Traditions of These Islands’ while teaching music skills, songs and struggle, and singing for learning. She earned praise for her skill in helping reluctant students discover their singing voice, drawing on her deep experience in traditional song. Although nominally retired in later years, she continued to guest lecture for the course. Kerr directs the award-winning women's folk choir Werca's Folk, which she helped create and has led for nearly three decades; the choir specializes in songs from Northumberland alongside contemporary pieces addressing women's experiences, planetary concerns, and peace, with many originals composed by Kerr. She has also directed the men's folk choir VoiceMale for a period. Her educational work includes leading workshops that develop singing skills through vocal warm-ups, breathing, projection, interpretation, and emulation of traditional styles from field recordings in England, Scotland, and Ireland. Additional workshops focus on English concertina technique with emphasis on North East England repertoire such as 3/2 hornpipes, song-writing processes, and the integration of gentle Hatha yoga with chants and meditational songs to enhance body-voice connection. In recent years Kerr has maintained online teaching, including weekly singing chair yoga classes and one-to-one concertina lessons, while sustaining choir activities through virtual and outdoor sessions during lockdowns. She has also engaged in late-career public presentations, such as a 2020 virtual lecture on the music of Bagpuss. Kerr continues to perform in select projects with her daughter Nancy Kerr.

Personal life

Relationships and family

Sandra Kerr was married to fellow folk musician John Faulkner, with whom she shared both a personal and professional partnership during their time together in The Critics Group and on projects such as Bagpuss. They collaborated closely for several years before separating in the mid-1970s. She later formed a relationship with Northumbrian bagpipe player Ron Elliott, who predeceased her. Kerr is the mother of folk singer Nancy Kerr, born in 1975 to Ron Elliott. The family connection has led to professional collaborations between Sandra and Nancy Kerr, including joint performances, duo appearances, and contributions to each other's recordings and projects.

Later years

In 2017, Sandra Kerr retired from her full-time teaching role at Newcastle University's music department after 17 years, during which she taught a course on the traditions of the British Isles. She continued guest lecturing on the folk and traditional music degree course she helped establish. Kerr turned 80 in February 2022, having been born in February 1942. She has remained active in music, leading her Northumbrian women's choir Werca’s Folk and participating in Bagpuss-related performances that celebrate its enduring legacy. In October 2024, as part of Bagpuss's 50th anniversary celebrations, she presented on the folk roots of the show's music and performed songs and stories alongside John Faulkner, Nancy Kerr, and James Fagan at a special event at Cecil Sharp House in London. In 2025, Newcastle University honored her contributions by naming a lecture theatre and performance space the Sandra Kerr Lecture Theatre, marking her 25 years of involvement with the institution either as a lecturer or visiting lecturer. She attended the opening celebration, where she expressed being "hugely honoured" and "a little overwhelmed," dedicating the space to her female colleagues, including her daughter Nancy Kerr Elliott, whom she described as among the most inspiring in the department. As of 2025, Kerr is 83 years old and continues her work in folk music and performance.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.