When you listen to Irish Millie, you hear tradition with a jolt of something new. At only 18, Amelia “Irish Millie” Shadgett is already carving her own space in Canadian folk, bluegrass, and contemporary trad—stringing together ancestral fiddle styles, wild emotional honesty, and genre-blurring risk. She’s not waiting for permission; she’s writing her own rules.
Millie’s story begins early. She was mesmerized by the fiddle at age three after hearing Natalie MacMaster. By six, she had her own fiddle, and from there she’s never looked back. What followed is a rise that feels part folk fairytale and part tireless work ethic. She cut her first album Thirteen during lockdown with her dad, Murray. That debut alone scored her a Canadian Folk Music Award nomination in 2022. Then came The Trilogy EP, and more tours—across the East Coast, through Vermont, Vancouver Island and beyond.
What makes Irish Millie stand out is how she walks the tightrope between “old fiddle tune” and “what do you feel right now.” Her album GRACE is proof: it’s rooted in East Coast, bluegrass, and traditional fiddle music, but she layers in fresh textures—modern arrangements, pop sensibilities, even EDM-tinged moments that keep it surprising. She’s not pretending she’s purely traditional, because she knows tradition can evolve.
Her lyrics and compositions tend to pull from memory, relationships, losses, and small-town life—songs that feel like they were written under the kitchen light or walking home in the rain.
She’s already racked up five CFMA (Canadian Folk Music Award) nominations—Young Performer of the Year, Pushing the Boundaries, you name it. People are paying attention. Her live performances? Fired up, grounded and packed with fiddle solos that will pull you in and then drop you into something deeper.
She also gives back. Through “Fiddling for Fox,” she’s raised money for cancer research. She busked at farmers’ markets to support other musicians. She’s one of those rare artists who seems to see community as part of her job description.
Between Then and Now—her newest EP—feels like a turning point. Tracks like Allison, Mystery to Me, Wasted, and You Were There show her looking outward and inward at the same time: relationships, growth, loss, hope.
Expect more touring, more risk, and more moments when you realize you’re watching someone not just with talent, but with something to say.
Irish Millie is more than a young fiddler. She’s a storyteller, lineage keeper, and artist who’s making people look forward to what comes next. If folk isn’t what you usually listen to, she might just make you fall in.
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