Main content

The break-up that cost me my voice

Shirley Collins is one of Britain's best loved folk singers – but a painful divorce nearly stopped her singing forever.

Shirley Collins grew up in a folk music-loving family in Sussex, England, during World War Two, and announced her intention to become a folk singer when she was still just a teenager. Her career would lead her to record music with her sister Dolly; to record folk songs in America with legendary song collector Alan Lomax, and to become a key figure in the 'folk revival' of the 1960s and 1970s. But the trauma of a painful break-up cost Shirley her singing voice - "sometimes I would open my mouth and nothing would come out", she remembers - and led to a heartbreaking decision: "I walked away from music for years. I felt I had no option." Shirley did all sorts of jobs to support her children, and avoided even listening to music sometimes - it made her too sad. Then one day, the musician David Tibet, a huge fan, got in touch and begged Shirley to try to sing again. Shirley tells Emily Webb the story of a voice lost and found again.

This programme was first broadcast in 2021.

Get in touch: outlook@bbc.com

Picture: Shirley Collins circa 1963
Credit: Brian Shuel/Redferns via Getty

22 days left to listen

41 minutes

Broadcasts

  • Last Thursday 11:06GMT
  • Last Thursday 17:06GMT
  • Last Thursday 21:06GMT
  • Last Friday 02:06GMT

Contact Outlook

Contact Outlook

Info on how we might use your contribution on air

Podcast: Lives Less Ordinary

Podcast: Lives Less Ordinary

Step into someone else’s life and expect the unexpected