Sparrow and the Workshop were an indie three-piece based in Glasgow, consisting of the Belfast-born, Chicago-raised Jill O'Sullivan, Welshman Nick Packer and Scotsman Gregor Donaldson. The band's debut albumCrystals Fall was released by Distiller Records in 2010 to critical acclaim, with the likes of Drowned in Sound and Clash Magazine awarding the album 9/10. The band was notable for their use of harmonies and bastardized instruments/FX pedals and they have been compared to bands as varied as Jefferson Airplane, Talking Heads and Black Sabbath.
Career
Sparrow formed in early 2008 and soon after caught the attention of Distiller Records, who offered to put out a single and EP for them in 2009. They have toured with many bands including British Sea Power, Idlewild, Broken Records, Sivert Hoyem and supported the likes of The Lemonheads and Thee Oh Sees. They were invited to support American psych-rockers Brian Jonestown Massacre on their 2010 European tour after band leaderAnton Newcombe saw their video of Devil Song on YouTube. In May 2010 the band played a number of gigs in New York, one of which was again supporting Brian Jonestown Massacre in Williamsburg Music Hall. They were also invited by Spider Stacy to join The Pogues as main support on their 2010 Farewell Christmas Tour. In 2008 the band played at Connect Festival and British Sea Power's Sing Ye from the Hillsides Festival in Tanhill, North Yorkshire. The following year they played the BBC Introducing tent at Glastonbury Festival in 2009, along with End of the Road Festival and Kendal Calling. They completed a string of festivals in 2010, including Green Man Festival, T in the Park, Bestival, Stag and Dagger, Pohoda, Hop Farm Festival, Moseley Folk Festival, Standon Calling, Y Not, 2000 Trees and the Insider festival in Aviemore. The band released single Black to Red on 11 October 2010 through Distiller Records with an accompanying DIY 3D video. In April 2011 the band released their second album, Spitting Daggers. Produced by acclaimed producer Leo Abrahams, the album was again well received with Drowned in Sound and the BBC giving the album 8/10 and 7.5 respectively. Spitting Daggers was released in Europe in September 2011. On 6 January 2013, the Scottish blog and label Song, by Toad Records announced it will be releasing Sparrow's upcoming single, Shock Shock. Their album Murderopolis was released in May 2013.
Further projects
Jill O'Sullivan has provided vocals on numerous Scottish bands releases, including:
"There's No Place Like Home" and "Deer in a Crosshair" by The Grand Gestures
"Dia dos Namarados!" by Broken Records
"Work Like You Can" and "Roll Along" by Roddy Woomble
"Kiss the Dirt" and "The Neighbours" by John Knox Sex Club
"Just As Scared" on James Yorkston's I Was a Cat from a Book
O'Sullivan appeared on the The Fruit Tree Foundation project, collaborating with Jenny Reeve, Emma Pollock, Scott Hutchison, Rod Jones, Alasdair Roberts, James Graham, James Yorkston and Karine Polwart. Her 2014 project Bastard Mountain was a songs-reworking collaboration with Meursault's Neil Pennycook and Pete Harvey, Rob St. John, Rory from Broken Records and Reuben Taylor. Donaldson played drums and provided backing vocals throughout Roddy Woomble's The Impossible Song & Other Songs album.
After Sparrow
O'Sullivan next collaborated with Jenny Reeve in the duo , which also featured drummer Jonny Scott. O'Sullivan and Reeve also provided backing vocals for the King Creosote project From Scotland with Love. O'Sullivan participated in the charity project Distant Voices: Not Known at this Address by Vox Liminis in 2018, and has played with Kid Canaveral's David MacGregor's new project, Broken Chanter, since 2019. In 2017, O'Sullivan released a collaborative EP with John Knox Sex Club's Sean Cumming under the name . The EP features and was produced by Frightened Rabbit's Andy Monaghan, with an appearance by Ariane Jackson on cello. In May 2020, O'Sullivan released Not Your First, her debut EP as . It was produced and recorded by Andy Monaghan, who also plays bass on the record, with Peter Kelly playing drums.