Emily is performing at the annual Co-Production Festival in London next week alongside Britain’s Got Talent winner Lost Voice Guy (aka Lee Ridley), as featured in The Guardian.  Organised by the Social Care Institute for Excellence, the festival is part of the third Co-production Week celebrating the benefits of co-production, sharing good practice and highlighting the contribution of people who use services and carers to developing better social care and health public services.

Thanks to the folks at Crack Magazine for publishing this glowing preview about Emily’s show at The Cluny in Newcastle (21 July).

MAGUIRE ON FIRE

And when I say “on fire” I mean “knocking out the kind of singer/songwriterly guitar-based indie-folk that arrows directly in to your heart”.  She’s playing Cluny 2 this July.

Emily Maguire spent four years living in a recycled wood and tin shack out in the Australian bush a few years back, and while there she made her first two albums, Stranger Place and Keep Walking.  They flagged-up the fact that here was a real talent, her lyrical acoustic folk featuring original and quite startling imagery.  Much in demand, she returned to the UK and toured with some of the world’s great singer/songwriters including Don McLean, Eric Bibb and Aztec Camera’s Roddy Frame.  Her third album, Believer, brought wider acclaim, but it was last year’s A Bit Of Blue that really had punters and critics hoisting her onto their shoulders with a quite stunning release which was beautifully arranged, supremely melodic and featured plenty of heart-in-the-mouth moments where her lyrical concerns and gorgeous tunes came together perfectly.  A real talent, catch her live for plenty of those shiver-down-the-spine moments.

Emily Maguire, Saturday 21 July, Cluny 2, Ouseburn, Newcastle, 8pm, £12
cluny.com

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A new lyric video for Emily’s beautiful song ‘The Borderline’, which she describes as “the most Buddhist song I’ve ever written”, has been posted on YouTube.  You can see the video here.  The song is from her first album ‘Stranger Place’, which is still available to order from Amazon or direct from Shaktu Records.

Emily was interviewed by Paul Franks on BBC WM to promote her charity gig on Sunday 24 June at the Avoncroft Museum of Historic Buildings in Bromsgrove.  You can listen again to the interview here (scroll to 02:19:00 to hear Emily).  Ticket holders for the gig are invited to come early and picnic in the beautiful grounds of the museum.  Tickets are £15 and can be booked here.  All proceeds will go towards funding the work of this very special place, where over 30 historic buildings have been rescued and rebuilt in the grounds.  More information about the museum can be found at http://www.avoncroft.org.uk.

Emily was interviewed yesterday on BBC Radio Cambridgeshire, BBC Radio Suffolk and BBC Essex ahead of her gig at Cambridge Junction this Saturday (12 May).  DJ Sue Marchant played the title track of Emily’s latest album ‘A Bit Of Blue’ and the last track, Emily’s cover of Sandy Denny’s ‘Who Knows Where The Time Goes’.  You can listen again to the interview here (scroll to 01:07:30).

Emily was on Radio 4 today interviewed by Coronation Street actress Cherylee Houston as part of a programme called ‘The Agony and the Ecstasy’ looking at the link between pain and creativity.  The programme was originally broadcast in March 2017.  You can listen again here.