The Exchange in partnership with TwickFolk presents NANCY KERR & The Sweet Visitor Band

Date/Time Thu 09 Nov 2017 8:00 PM

Price Online - £10 - £15 + booking fee; On The Door - £10 - £15

Website: http://www.exchangetwickenham.co.uk/


The Exchange

The Exchange is the new Twickenham Community Centre.
This concert is presented at The Exchange, in partnership with TwickFolk

A writer of rare style Kerr’s music has drawn comparisons to William Blake in her reawakening of a radical folk mythology as a backdrop for contemporary narratives and has inspired some to call her “Folk’s Poet Laureate”.

Nominated ‘Best Original Track’ with ‘Fragile Water’ – BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards 2017.

BBC Radio 2 Folk Singer of the Year 2015.

Since her debut solo album, Sweet Visitor, arrived in late 2014, Nancy Kerr has emerged as one of the foremost composers of modern folk and social commentary songs in the British Isles.

Finding herself increasingly fascinated by the role of the environment as a character in music, literature, art and film, the compositions that make up her second release, Instar, explore the themes of human/ecological interaction that lie just beneath the surface of so many traditional folk songs.

The lore and language of nature provide a repertoire of raw, universal images with which to address subjects such as gender identity and sexuality, struggles for human rights, love and consent, colonialism and the effects of austerity on our culture and ourselves.

Nancy Kerr’s Second Instar is just that. The second incarnation of the ever-evolving Instar album. A live performance that draws mainly from that album but also features songs from Sweet Visitor, the show promises to challenge and inspire, confront and sympathise. At times jovial and boisterous and at times a dulcet call to arms.

With her Sweet Visitor Band now an established unit, Nancy is joined on stage by bandmates:

Tim Yates: Double Bass, Melodeon & Voice.
Greg Russell: Guitars & Voice.
Tom Wright: Drums, Guitars & Voice.

“Stunning – Five Stars”. R2

“A songwriter steeped in the tradition, but casting it anew.” Songlines

“Quite breathtakingly beautiful.” Mark Radcliffe, BBC Radio 2.