Julie Fowlis

Musician

Birthday June 20, 1978

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace North Uist, Outer Hebrides, Scotland

Age 45 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#33507 Most Popular

1979

Julie Fowlis (born 20 June 1979) is a Scottish folk singer and multi-instrumentalist who sings primarily in Scottish Gaelic.

Fowlis was born and grew up on North Uist, an island in the Outer Hebrides, in a Gaelic-speaking community.

Her mother was a Gaelic-speaking islander from a family of fishermen and crofters which originated on the remote island of Heisgeir, while her father was originally from Pitlochry on mainland Scotland.

Her parents ran a hotel for many years on North Uist.

She moved with her parents to Ross-shire on the mainland when she was 15 years old after her father took a new job.

The family lived in Strathpeffer and Fowlis finished her secondary education at Dingwall Academy.

She attended the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow and studied the oboe and the English horn.

2000

She graduated in 2000 with a BA in Applied Music in 2000.

After university Fowlis attended the Gaelic-language college Sabhal Mòr Ostaig on the Isle of Skye to improve her Gaelic and formally study traditional Scottish music.

2001

After completing her studies on Skye she returned to Ross-shire, taking a job with the organisation Fèis Rois in Dingwall as music development officer between 2001 and 2004.

Fowlis had been involved in singing, piping and dancing since she was a child.

She began her professional music career as a member of the Scottish sextet Dòchas which included Shetland fiddle player Jenna Reid.

The group formed while four of its members were students at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama and Fowlis was a student at nearby University of Strathclyde.

2002

Billed as "a young and dynamic all-female band playing traditional music from the Highlands and Islands of Scotland and Ireland," the band released its first album in 2002.

2003

The group was nominated for the Best Up and Coming Artist/Band award at the inaugural Scots Trad Music Awards in 2003 and won the award in 2004.

Fowlis herself was nominated for the Gaelic Singer of the Year award the same year.

2005

While continuing with Dòchas and releasing the band's second album An Darna Umhail in 2005, Fowlis also began to strike out on her own.

Also in 2005 she released her first solo album Mar a Tha Mo Chridhe (As My Heart Is).

The album was produced by Iain MacDonald and Fowlis and instantly gained her worldwide acclaim.

Fowlis's future husband Éamonn Doorley played bouzouki on seven of the tracks.

She was also accompanied by Kris Drever, Ross Martin of the "Gaelic super group" Dàimh, John Doyle, Iain MacDonald, Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh of Danú, and many other performers prominent in the traditional Irish and Scottish music scenes.

2006

Fowlis won the Horizon award at the 2006 BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, won Folk Singer of The Year at the 2008 awards and was nominated for the Folk Singer of the Year award at the 2007 awards.

2007

Her second solo album Cuilidh was released in March 2007, becoming a worldwide top-seller in the Traditional and World Music charts.

Her album is a collection of songs from her native North Uist.

Doorley again played bouzouki on nearly all the tracks and co-produced the album with Fowlis.

She is also accompanied by John Doyle, Ross Martin, John McCusker, Iain MacDonald, Kathleen MacInnes, and many others.

She appeared on Later With Jools Holland on BBC Two on 25 May 2007, and performed Hùg air Bhonaid Mhòir on the show.

Notable fans of Fowlis include Björk, Ricky Gervais and Radiohead's Phil Selway.

2008

In 2008, Fowlis recorded an album with long-time friends and collaborators Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh, Ross Martin and husband Éamonn Doorley.

The album, entitled Dual, was released in October 2008.

Fowlis also toured extensively around Scotland, Ireland, central Europe and America and launched both her solo albums while on tour.

Fowlis recorded a Scottish Gaelic cover of the Beatles' "Blackbird" for Mojo Magazine to celebrate the anniversary of the Beatles' 'The White Album'.

The song was released as a download single from Fowlis' own website in October 2008.

2009

On 24 April 2009, Fowlis announced that she would begin recording her third studio album in May and that she would preview tracks from the project on her May 2009 tour of England.

On 10 August 2009, she announced the album's title, Uam (Scottish Gaelic for 'From Me').

The album was released 26 October.

2011

In September 2011 she performed the hour-long Heisgeir at the Phipps Hall in Beauly.

The piece, "half-documentary, half-arthouse meditation", celebrated "the history, landscape and legend" of the now-uninhabited Heisgeir, as part of the six "Blas 2011" concert series.

2012

The album was remastered and re-released in 2012.

In 2012, Fowlis contributed to the Pixar film Brave with the songs "Touch the Sky" and "Into the Open Air", sung in the off-screen musical thoughts of the lead character Merida.