Women of Folk

Date/Time Sun 27 Sep 2026 7:45 PM

Price Online - £12 + 10% booking fee; On The Door - £15


Gathering together four exceptional voices, Women Of Folk pays homage to the songs and repertoires of the very best women folk singers and singer-songwriters past and present. A veritable folk supergroup, Women Of Folk is a collaboration between Linda Moylan (solo artist), Lizzy Hardingham (solo, Culverake), Louise Hatch (solo, Laurence O & The Blistered Mirrors) and Rebecca Mileham (solo, Liam Vincent & The Odd Foxes).

Each brings their own flavour to the mix, covering all bases from traditional to Irish to English folk to Greenwich Village to Laurel Canyon and others along the way, with songs by Sandy Denny, Joni Mitchell, Joan Baez, Melanie, Judy Collins, Carole King, some well-chosen traditional songs and more.

Linda has been described as “a stunning singer-songwriter, with a voice to die for”. Her latest album, The Fool, was included in At The Barrier’s list of best albums of 2024 and she was nominated for Best Female Artist of 2024 by Fatea.

According to Fatea, Lizzy’s voice “demands to be heard as words alone can’t do it justice”. She is a solo artist with a huge and still growing reputation and a member of the harmony vocal trio Culverake. She is also a Fatea nominee for Best Female Artist.

Louise released her debut solo album in September 2025. Her powerful voice and effortless harmonies bring a more West Coast American influence to proceedings.

Rebecca is a gifted multi-instrumentalist – equally adept accompanying her crystal-clear voice on piano on her solo material or fiddling like nobody’s business with folk-rock roustabouts Liam Vincent & The Odd Foxes.

Women of Folk’s first single, a version of the classic folk song “Wild Mountain Thyme”, was released by Talking Elephant in November 2025.

“A lovely, haunting version of an old and well-known folk song. Superbly sung, played and produced”- Phil Beer

“A veritable folk supergroup…this is a calling card that sets a high mark for what is to follow and clearly identifies the group/project as one to keep an eye on” – Neil King, Fatea

“No grandstanding but thoughtful, dignified lead vocals in turn interspersed with the sort of harmonies you’d imagine possible given the ingredients to hand” – Andy Holdcroft, Hot Music Live

www.lindamoylan.co.uk
www.lizzyhardingham.com
www.louisehatch.com
www.rebeccamileham.com