Sarah McQuaid


Sarah McQuaid is a singer, songwriter and guitarist. She has recorded five solo albums: When Two Lovers Meet, I Won't Go Home ’Til Morning, The Plum Tree And The Rose, Walking into White, and If We Dig Any Deeper It Could Get Dangerous. Three songs on McQuaid's Walking into White album were inspired by the Swallows and Amazons books by English author Arthur Ransome. After recording her first three albums in Ireland with producer Gerry O'Beirne, McQuaid enlisted her cousin, Adam Pierce to serve as producer for Walking into White. Her fifth album, If We Dig Any Deeper It Could Get Dangerous, was produced by veteran English guitarist and singer-songwriter, Michael Chapman. Under the band name Mama, she and Zoë Pollock recorded Crow Coyote Buffalo, an album of songs co-written by the pair. McQuaid has also guested on albums by Clodagh Simonds, Wendy Arrowsmith, Colin Harper and the Cafe Orchestra amongst others.
McQuaid's work has been likened to classic 1970s British folk singers such as Sandy Denny and Nick Drake, and her diverse work has also explored three-part round singing. All of McQuaid's albums are distributed in the U.K. by Proper Music Distribution. She is one of several artists who have covered Ewan MacColl's "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face," which appears on McQuaid's Walking into White album.
McQuaid is the author of The Irish DADGAD Guitar Book.
Born in Spain to American art critic Jane Addams Allen and Spanish artist :es:José Paredes Jardiel|José Paredes Jardiel, McQuaid grew up in the USA, lived for 13 years in Ireland and now resides in Cornwall, England. McQuaid's great-great-great aunt, prominent pacifist and activist for women's suffrage Jane Addams, won the Nobel Peace Prize for her work in the settlement house movement. McQuaid is married to artist Feargal Shiels and they have two children.