Andrea Corr
The folk rock and alternative rock movements of the 1990s drew on a wide range of regional traditions, blending acoustic textures with harder electric sounds to produce music that crossed readily between mainstream and independent audiences. Andrea Jane Corr, born on 17 May 1974 in Dundalk, Ireland, emerged from this environment as a singer, songwriter, composer, and multi-faceted performer whose work spans both music and acting.
Corr's professional output places her across several creative disciplines. As a musician working in folk rock, rock, and alternative rock, she has contributed to genres that draw on both traditional Irish musical culture and broader international rock idioms. Her role as a singer-songwriter and composer means she has been involved not only in performance but in the creation of material itself, giving her a more active part in shaping the work she presents. Beyond music, she has also worked as an actor across stage and film, extending her practice into performance contexts outside the recording and concert setting.
Her contributions across these fields have been formally acknowledged. Corr received an Honorary Membership of the Order of the British Empire, a distinction that reflects recognition of her work at an institutional level. This honor, awarded to an Irish citizen whose career has touched both the performing arts and popular music, serves as a concrete marker of the standing her output has achieved within the broader cultural landscape of the British Isles and beyond.
Quotes by Andrea Corr

To us, it’s vey natural. Initially, it sounded kind of strange to people, because it is different to put traditional Irish music in a pop and rock mode. But they get used to it – it is our sound.

I love escaping into character. It’s a chance to try on people that you wouldn’t be brave or stupid enough to be in real life.

I hate people who splash their own pain on covers, like the whole world should hear about them. Why are we all supposed to be interested in one individual’s suffering?

You can’t live in your own secluded world. If you’re not on the Tube, on the bus doing normal things, how can you relate to people?





