This website uses cookies. Read more about our cookie/privacy policy.

Accept and Close

The Sheffield culture guide written by in-the-know locals

Nancy Kerr

Photo by James Fagan

Songwriter and "fiddlesinger" Nancy Kerr is one of English folk music’s A-listers. Winner of half a dozen Radio 2 Folk Awards, Nancy is not only a deft lyricist and conjurer of melodies, but also a champion for social change. With a traditional folk sound but contemporary lyrical content, most recent album Instar probes a variety of struggles – from austerity (Gingerbread) to gender identity (Fragile Water) – all through a nature-inspired lens.

Nancy is part of the Shake the Chains project, focussing on British – and Yorkshire – history, taking in the industrial revolution, universal suffrage, the slave trade, Rock against Racism and the miners’ strikes. The project encompasses existing protest songs as well as brand new ones, including songs from Nancy on Alan Turing’s posthumous pardon and on nuclear disarmament.

We had a chat with Nancy to find out more about her work.

How would you describe your work?
I've been singing old folk songs and playing the fiddle since I was very young, and these days what I mostly do is write and perform my own songs, which have their own particular flavour I think. I get to play and sing a lot, with lots of different people as well as my own band, and so I'm very lucky.

What inspires you?
The natural world, especially the places where it intersects with the city. The political past and present and the different ways artists have historically responded to and filtered world events. Personal moments and different diverse experiences of love, sexuality, empowerment, struggle. Sheffield.

What's your workspace like?
If it's not too cold I write a lot of songs in my city garden in Pitsmoor. I practice learning new songs or editing lyrics in my head when I'm walking to my kids' school to pick them up. Many of my songs begin life in a Travelodge or dressing room while I'm on tour.

What do you love about Sheffield?
The trees, now sadly far less abundant and more threatened. It's wonderfully multicultural and honestly the friendliest place I've ever lived. The many musical and artistic communities.

What would you do to improve the city?
The gap between rich and poor is staggeringly stark; we should get rid of prejudices we have about "bad" parts of the city and get involved alongside those people who are doing great things, because many people are.

You might also like...

Higher Fields Festival

Sat. 27 June 2026

S2

An outdoor grassroots music festival, new for summer 2026. Bringing together DIY musicians, crews and communities from South Yorks and beyond – including Gut Level, Hatch, Groundwork and Grub Records and more. Followed by an afterparty at Steamworks.

Resistanz

Fri. 3 April 2026 — Sun. 5 April 2026

Corporation

A festival of industrial, electro and alternative music. Taking over Corporation – Sheffield's iconic home of rock – for Easter bank holiday weekend.

Peter and the Wolf & Other Stories - Claire Booth & Ensemble 360

Wed. 20 May 2026

Playhouse

Prokofiev’s beloved symphonic tale delights audiences of all ages, with its story of the fearless Peter and his encounter with a ferocious wolf. Narrated by storyteller and author Nicholas Jubber.

Yusuf Yellow

A lyricist reflecting on authenticity, masculinity, existential angst and the power of creativity, especially as expressed through rap.