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Band of Mothers

In the 1990s, an all-female band called Beaker enjoyed some success. Now re-formed, what are the realities for five 50-ish women juggling jobs, parenthood, gigs, and maybe more?

When a group of female students at Oxford Poly formed a band called Beaker in the early 1990s, they had a lot of fun and were successful enough to attract a record label and appear on Steve Lamacq's Radio One Sound City programme. This was a golden era when bands such as Radiohead and Supergrass emerged from Oxford's independent music scene.

But then careers and parenthood intervened. Now, in their mid-50s, Beaker has re-formed. So what are the realities for a band their age - truly a Band of Mothers?

Beaty Rubens has been following Beaker for the last six months, attending Sunday rehearsals, Friday night gigs and summer festivals, and talking with drummer Clare Howard-Saunders, vocalists Sam Battle and Emma Hunter, bass-player T.J Ward, and Hayley Wright.

Pretty much exactly the average age of the Radio 4 audience, this 'Band of Mothers' has much to consider. There鈥檚 been a bit of a change of the lineup since their student days but they are still Beaker. Three are now schoolteachers, one a university administrator and one a seamstress, all have children and other family responsibilities and, over the years, all maintained their love of music .

As they release a new single - a number penned by Sam about the shocking experience of Gisele Pelicot - how might they position themselves, how welcoming might the music industry be to an all-female band their age, and what kind of success are they actually after?

With music from Beaker and a new interview with Steve Lamacq (who, it turns out, has kept two early Beaker releases in his personal CD collection for all these decades), this is a programme about friendship, second chances, and the pure pleasure of collective music-making.

Producer/Presenter: Beaty Rubens
A Just Radio Ltd production for 麻豆社 Radio 4

Release date:

28 minutes

On radio

Tue 7 Apr 2026 16:00

Broadcast

  • Tue 7 Apr 2026 16:00