| A L Lloyd |  | A L 'Bert' Lloyd was one of the architects of the English Folk Revival. |
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| | Alan Bell |  | Alan first started writing songs for the Blackpool Taverners, including "Windmills", "The Minstrel", "Alice White" and of course "Bread and Fishes". |
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| Altar Native |  | A progressive folk/funk trail through the history, mystery and traditions of Cumbria. |
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| | Benji Kirkpatrick |  | Benji Kirkpatrick plays bouzouki, guitars, harmonica, bass, and whistle and he sings. |
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| Bob Cann |  | One of England's best melodeon players. |
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| | Bram Taylor |  | Bram is a well established Folk Club and Festival Performer, who has featured extensively on both local and national radio. |
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| | Crucible |  | An amazingly talented group of young musicians. |
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| Dave Goulder |  | Dave is probably best known as the composer of "The January Man". |
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| | Dr Faustus |  | Dr Faustus brings together four of Englands most accomplished musicians and singers. |
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| Elbow Jane |  | Rapidly establishing themselves as one of the UK's premier acoustic bands. |
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| Grace Notes |  | Some traditional songs, some contemporary ballads, three female voices in close harmony with keyboard, flute and bodhran pointing up the clever arrangements. |
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| | Graham & Sam Pirt |  | A highly accessible singer, Graham, began performing in folk clubs in the 1960s. In 87 he joined the much respected group Cockersdale, and with them recorded 3 albums. His son Sam has been earning a reputation as one of the best young accordion players. |
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| | Jon Loomes |  | Traditional English folk songs and tunes from a young man with a strong voice and an equally strong sense of humour! |
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| John Cocking |  | John is one of the finest exponents of the humorous monologue. |
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| Joseph Topping |  | Singer-songwriter Joe is also an innovative slide guitarist. |
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| | Kate Bramley |  | Beautiful fiddle music from Kate Bramley of Jez Lowe's Bad Pennies. |
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| | Last Orders |  | Winners of the BBC Radio 2 Young Folk Award 2006. |
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| | Lizzie Nunnery |  | Quite distinctive, both in terms of repertoire and performance. |
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| Maddie Southorn |  | Bristol-based, West Country born, singer, songwriter and pianist. |
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| | Peter Bellamy |  | Peter has achieved cult status on the English Folk scene. |
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| Little Johnny England |  | Little Johnny England has been steadily making an impact on the Folk and Roots circuit with their own brand of Folk Rock. |
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| | Mabs & Gordon Hall |  | These are two fine traditional folk singers who together sing a remarkable selection of songs from Victorian children's singing games to ancient ballads. |
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| Maerlock |  | Described as "simply one of the most exciting and vibrant young bands to have emerged in recent years". |
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| | Mark Bazeley & Jason Rice |  | Mark and Jason carry on the Dartmoor traditions of their grandfathers Bob Cann and Jack Rice, as well as writing new material themselves. |
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| Martyn Wyndham-Read |  | Marty established his reputation as a singer of Australian folk songs, but over the years has championed songwriters who are not necessarily well-known names. |
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| Patti Reid |  | "Fine tonal accuracy".. "refreshing acapella".. |
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| | Phil Hulse |  | One-third of the exciting folk-roots trio The Queensberry Rules. |
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| Simon Howarth |  | Simons deft and lively guitar playing lifts the old songs from being oft-repeated standards to being well worth a proper listen. |
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| | Swan Arcade |  | Swan Arcade's close vocal harmonies cover vast tracks of folk-club feel-good songs. |
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| | Ushna |  | Celtic-flavoured folk 4-piece band from Northumberland. |
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| The Hut People |  | The Hut People are Sam Pirt (accordions) and Gary Hammond (percussion). |
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| The Urban Folk Quartet |  | The UFQ is virtuosic not just in feel and technical ability but in musical concept as well. |
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