On 12 May 2007, Waterson appeared with the Waterson family at a special concert at the
Royal Albert Hall entitled
A Mighty River of Song, and on 25 October 2007, she appeared at the
BBC Radio 2 Electric Proms concert
Once in a Blue Moon: A Tribute to Lal Waterson at
Cecil Sharp House in London. In 2007, Waterson replaced
Eliza Carthy in
Blue Murder, and made her concert debut with that group on 23 November at the
Met Theatre in
Bury, Greater Manchester. In January 2010, Waterson performed at the Sydney Opera House in a line-up of rock, punk, pop and folk musicians under the musical direction of Hal Willner as part of his ''
Rogue's Gallery'' project. After signing to
One Little Indian Records, in 2011 Waterson released the album
The Days That Shaped Me, co-written with her brother
Oliver Knight. The album was nominated for a Radio 2 Folk Award. During that year she both recorded and toured with her brother, billed as Marry Waterson & Oliver Knight. A second album by the siblings,
Hidden, was released in 2012. In October 2013, Waterson curated a tour with
The Barbican bringing
Bright Phoebus, by Lal and Mike Waterson, to the stage for the first time. She performed with a cast which included
Jarvis Cocker and
Richard Hawley amongst others. Also in 2013, Waterson designed and produced ''Teach Me to Be a Summer's Morning'', a book and CD celebrating the works of Lal Waterson, released on the
Fledg'ling Records imprint. In 2015, Waterson released a third album, this time collaborating with guitarist David A. Jaycock, entitles
Two Wolves. This album, produced by Neill MacColl, featured performances by
Kate St John and
Kami Thompson, one song for which Waterson shared writing credit with her late mother Lal Waterson, and another which incorporated a recording of her late uncle Mike Waterson. ==Reception==