Search Results - Wrigley, Jennifer
Jennifer and Hazel Wrigley
![The Wrigley sisters on stage in Hobart, Tasmania, 2002](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/98/The_Wrigley_sisters%2C_Orkney_folk_musicians_on_stage_in_Hobart%2C_2002.jpg)
The success of this album moved them into the UK folk circuit, but this proved arduous (Cornwall to Middlesbrough in back-to-back gigs), and eventually they moved to Edinburgh after launching their second album, ''The Watch Stone'', in 1994. In Edinburgh they became part of the city's folk scene and fronted a six-piece band called Seelyhoo, which recorded two albums.
Playing at London's Barbican Centre in 1995, they were spotted by a New Zealand music scout who invited them to play at the Auckland Folk Festival, which prompted the twins to organise a three-month "world tour" in 1997. At about that time Jennifer won the UK's premier accolade for new folk talent (BBC Young Tradition Award) which helped boost the tour and their international reputation. Working without a manager, they organised a second world tour in 1999 and issued a third album ''Huldreland'' (in the Folk Roots top ten of 1998). Four transatlantic trips in 1999 cemented their place on the international folk scene. In 2001 they issued an album ''Skyran''.
In 2005 they returned to Orkney and acquired premises in Kirkwall where they launched ''The Reel'', a music/social centre offering an instrument/music shop, lessons to aspiring musicians, and a coffee shop where sessions could often be heard. ''The Reel'' was shut down in November 2020 having been closed since March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Provided by Wikipedia