Emily Barker

Emily Barker
Background information
Also known as Emily Barker & The Red Clay Halo
Origin Bridgetown, Western Australia, Australia
Genres Folk, pop
Occupations Singer-songwriter
Years active 2003–present
Labels Everyone Sang
Associated acts Frank Turner, The Waifs, Jose Gonzalez, Mary Gauthier
Website Official site, Official MySpace

Emily Barker is a guitarist and singer-songwriter born in Bridgetown, Western Australia. With chamber-folk trio The Red Clay Halo, she has recorded three albums: Photos.Fires.Fables. (2006), Despite The Snow (2008) and Almanac (2011). The band is known for its rootsy ensemble playing, four-part harmony vocals and has been described as 'chamber-folk of the highest order'.[1]

Contents

Musical career

Emily travelled to the UK in 2002, and was first based in Cambridge where she collaborated with guitarist Rob Jackson. They formed a band called The Low Country which released two albums, Welcome To The Low Country (2003) and The Dark Road (2004), tracks from which enjoyed plays on John Peel’s BBC radio show.[2]

In October 2005 Emily won Country Song of the Year and Regional Song of the Year awards at the annual West Australian Music Songwriting Awards. Also in 2005, Emily started work on her debut solo album, the critically acclaimed Photos.Fires.Fables. The release of this album saw the birth of The Red Clay Halo, an all-female trio of Anna Jenkins, Jo Silverston and Gill Sandell who collectively provide backing harmony vocals and who respectively play violin, cello and musical saw, and accordion, piano and flute.

The band’s second studio album, Despite The Snow, was recorded in live sessions in a 16th century barn in Norfolk. Self-released in November 2008 on Emily’s own label Everyone Sang, the album again garnered much praise.

In late 2008, the album's opening track "Nostalgia" was discovered by composer Martin Phipps who re-recorded it with Emily for use as the theme tune for the hit television series Wallander on BBC1 starring British actor Kenneth Branagh. The first series, which attracted over 6 million viewers per episode, won a slew of awards, including several BAFTAs[3] and a Royal Television Society award for its theme tune.[4] In 2010, the song "Nostalgia" was selected for the first independent labels' Storm The Charts campaign.[5]

February 2011 saw the release of Almanac. The release of this album was accompanied by sessions for Cerys Matthews on 6 Music and Radio 4’s Loose Ends, while the single "Little Deaths" was record of the week on Nenome’s show on 6 Music.[1] Emily and the band again went on the road in the UK, culminating in a complete performance of Almanac at St Giles-in-the-Fields church in London. Almanac was jointly funded by spareroom.com, and a fan-funded campaign on pledgemusic.com.[1]  

The song "Pause" from Almanac was the theme tune for a major 2011 BBC2 drama serial, The Shadow Line, starring Chiwetel Ejiofor and Christopher Eccleston.[6] Martin Phipps again adapted the song for the title sequence.

Emily performs in London and has regularly toured the UK with the Red Clay Halo. She has supported artists such as The Waifs, Jose Gonzalez, Mary Gauthier and Frank Turner.

Emily has been played regularly on BBC regional radio stations throughout the UK, as well as receiving play on BBC 6 Music.[7]

Discography

The Low Country
Emily Barker and The Red Clay Halo

Roles of Emily Barker and The Red Clay Halo

Festivals and Live Shows

2008
2010

Press

Uncut magazine

Photos.Fires.Fables is ‘sharply observed, original songs …adventurously embellished by gypsy flourishes and haunting desert echoes that’d be at home on a Calexico album’.

Q

Gave Despite the Snow a four star review, saying it was ‘stripped free of studio frippery and all the better for its carefree simplicity’.[1]

The Times

Awarded her live performance five stars and compared her to Gillian Welch and Laura Cantrell'[15] A review of Despite the Snow said 'the hills have yet to be emptied of gold if you know where to look'.

BBC music website

Of Almanac said: 'This is a dream of a record. A new Marling, then? No, Barker offers something else...'[16]

Mojo magazine

Have also covered Emily Barker and her music.[9]

References

External links