1. Sally Barker was born on 19 September 1959 and is a British singer and songwriter, known for her solo work and as a founding member of the Poozies.

1. Sally Barker was born on 19 September 1959 and is a British singer and songwriter, known for her solo work and as a founding member of the Poozies.
In 1990, Sally Barker became a founding member of the Poozies, an all-women folk band.
The line-up featured harpists Mary Macmaster and Patsy Seddon from the harp duo Sileas, and Karen Tweed who Sally Barker met at a folk festival in Hong Kong.
Sally Barker played with the Poozies until 1995, when she left just before the birth of her first child.
Sally Barker appeared on the Show of Hands 1996 album Live at the Royal Albert Hall.
Sally Barker provided vocals for the 1997 Pete Morton CD, Courage, Love and Grace, and the 1998 Janet Russell CD, Gathering the Fragments.
Sally Barker subsequently rejoined the group permanently, the first album with this line-up being Yellow Like Sunshine, released in autumn 2009.
In January 2014, Sally Barker became a contestant on the BBC One talent contest The Voice, joining Tom Jones' team after a blind audition in which she sang "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood".
In September 2014, Sally Barker announced a British tour between September and December 2014.
In 2015, Sally Barker joined the three surviving members of the folk-rock band Fotheringay for six tour dates in the UK and, in 2016, provided backing vocals on a new album by Brooks Williams entitled My Turn Now.
Sally Barker embarked on a solo tour, which concluded in November 2016.