Shirley Collins: Star who couldn't sing for 30 years is nominated for two awards
- Published
Folk star Shirley Collins, who was robbed of her voice for 30 years by an emotional crisis, has been nominated for two Radio 2 Folk Awards.
The 81-year-old is up for singer of the year, while Lodestar, her first record since 1978, is up for best album.
Collins was an immensely important figure in Britain's folk-rock scene in the 1960s, thanks to her pared-down singing style and strong storytelling.
But her career was cut short by the end of her marriage in the late 1970s.
The star's second husband, Ashley Hutchings, left her for a young actress who took to showing up at Collins' performances.
One night, during a performance of Lark Rise at London's National Theatre, she froze on-stage and found herself unable to sing.
"It was humiliating," she told BBC Radio 4's Mastertapes last year. "Some nights when I opened my mouth nothing would come out, or just a few croaks would come out.
"It went on night after night after night, for far too long. I was trying to sing through tears. I was just in a state."
"I never lost the desire to sing," she added. "It was really heartbreaking for me not to be able to. [But] I couldn't even sing indoors. I couldn't sing to myself."
Collins developed a form of dysphonia, a condition often associated with psychological trauma.
In the years that followed, she wrote books while working in charity shops and a job centre "for five ghastly years" to support herself.
But her music was discovered by a younger generation of fans - including Blur's Graham Coxon and the Decemberists' Colin Meloy - and, eventually, she was coaxed back onto the stage, releasing her new album to wide acclaim last year.
Going Gaga?
Collins is nominated for singer of the year alongside Ireland's Daoiri Farrell, Scottish musician Kris Drever, and five-time Folk Award winner Jim Causley.
Farrell has the most nominations, three in all, while Songs of Separation - a project inspired by the Scottish referendum, featuring Eliza Carthy, Karine Polwart and Jenny Hill - has two.
US folk icon Woody Guthrie will be inducted to the Folk Awards Hall of Fame on the 50th anniversary of his death.
The author of classics such as I Ain't Got No Home, Pretty Boy Floyd and This Train Is Bound For Glory, his songs were a major influence on popular music, and have been covered by the likes of Van Morrison, Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan.
Just this week, Lady Gaga sang a portion of his civil rights anthem This Land Is Your Land in a thinly-veiled attack on Donald Trump at the Super Bowl.
Billy Bragg, who made a Grammy award-winning album with Wilco based on unused Woody Guthrie lyrics, will pay tribute to the star with a headline performance at the awards.
Scottish singer-songwriter Al Stewart, best known for the hit single Year Of The Cat, will also perform, after being honoured with the lifetime achievement award.
Mark Radcliffe and Julie Fowlis will present the awards at London's Royal Albert Hall on Wednesday, 5 April. The ceremony will be broadcast live on BBC Radio 2.
Full list of nominations
FOLK SINGER OF THE YEAR
Daoiri Farrell
Jim Causley
Kris Drever
Shirley Collins
BEST DUO
Josienne Clarke & Ben Walker
Megson
O'Hooley & Tidow
Ross Ainslie & Ali Hutton
BEST GROUP
9Bach
Breabach
The Furrow Collective
The Gloaming
BEST ALBUM
Jarlath Henderson - Hearts Broken, Heads Turned
Jim Moray - Upcetera
Martin Green - Flit
Shirley Collins - Lodestar
Songs of Separation - Songs of Separation
HORIZON AWARD
Daoiri Farrell
Fara
Ninebarrow
Talisk
MUSICIAN OF THE YEAR
John McCusker
John McSherry
Mohsen Amini
Rachel Newton
BEST ORIGINAL TRACK
Fragile Water by Nancy Kerr
If Wishes Were Horses by Kris Drever
Roll Away by Martin Green feat. Adam Holmes
Sounds of Earth by Jim Moray
BEST TRADITIONAL TRACK
Courting Is a Pleasure by Jarlath Henderson
Echo Mocks The Corncrake by Songs of Separation
Van Diemen's Land by Daoiri Farrell
Willie Taylor by Julie Murphy
BBC RADIO 2 YOUNG FOLK AWARD
Amelia Coburn
Charlie Grey & Joseph Peach
Eryn Rae
Josie Duncan & Pablo Lafuente
Follow us on Facebook, external, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, external, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents, external. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk, external.
- Published27 April 2016