Fowlis had been involved in singing,
piping and dancing since she was a child. She began her professional music career as a member of the Scottish
sextet Dòchas which included Shetland fiddle player
Jenna Reid. The group formed while four of its members were students at the
Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama and Fowlis was a student at nearby
University of Strathclyde. Billed as "a young and dynamic all-female band playing traditional music from the Highlands and Islands of Scotland and Ireland," the band released its first album in 2002. The group was nominated for the
Best Up and Coming Artist/Band award at the inaugural
Scots Trad Music Awards in 2003 and won the award in 2004. Fowlis herself was nominated for the
Gaelic Singer of the Year award the same year. While continuing with Dòchas and releasing the band's second album
An Darna Umhail in 2005, Fowlis began to strike out on her own. Also in 2005 she released her first solo album
Mar a Tha Mo Chridhe (
As My Heart Is). The album was produced by
Iain MacDonald and Fowlis and instantly gained her worldwide acclaim. Fowlis' future husband Éamonn Doorley played bouzouki on seven of the tracks. She was also accompanied by
Kris Drever, Ross Martin of the
Gaelic super group"
Dàimh, John Doyle, Iain MacDonald,
Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh of
Danú, and many other performers prominent in the traditional Irish and Scottish music scenes. The album was remastered and re-released in 2012. Her second solo album
Cuilidh was released in March 2007, becoming a worldwide top-seller in the Traditional and World Music charts. Fowlis won the
Horizon award at the 2006
BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, She appeared on
Later With Jools Holland on
BBC Two on 25 May 2007, and performed
Hùg air Bhonaid Mhòir on the show. Notable fans of Fowlis include
Björk,
Ricky Gervais and
Radiohead's
Phil Selway. The song was released as a download single from Fowlis' website in October 2008. On 24 April 2009, Fowlis announced that she would begin recording her third studio album in May and that she would preview tracks from the project on her May 2009 tour of England. On 10 August 2009, she announced the album's title,
Uam (Scottish Gaelic for 'From Me'). The album was released 26 October. In September 2011, she performed the hour-long
Heisgeir at the Phipps Hall in
Beauly. The piece, "half-documentary, half-arthouse meditation", celebrated "the history, landscape and legend" of the now-uninhabited
Heisgeir, as part of the six "Blas 2011" concert series. In 2012, Fowlis contributed to the
Pixar film
Brave with the songs "
Touch the Sky" and "
Into the Open Air", sung in the off-screen musical thoughts of the lead character
Merida. In 2011, she graduated from the
University of the Highlands and Islands (UHI) with an MA in material culture and the environment. In 2013, Fowlis was named "UHI Alumnus of the year". Fowlis' fourth studio album,
Gach Sgeul (Every Story), was released on 24 February 2014 and her fifth,
Alterum, was released on 27 October 2017. All of Fowlis' albums including
Dual have been released on the
Machair Records. The label, which is operated by Fowlis and her husband
Éamon Doorley, is an outlet for their music.
Machair "is a Gaelic word which describes rich and fertile low-lying land. Almost half of all Scottish machair occurs in the Outer Hebrides and it is one of the rarest habitat types in Europe. It is a fragile environment which is under threat, a little like the music which is produced on this label." Their label distributes through Cadiz Music.
Broadcasting career Fowlis has a notable broadcasting career complementing her musical accomplishments. She appeared as a guest on
BBC Radio Scotland's flagship traditional music programme
Travelling Folk and the world music show
Global Gathering. In 2007, BBC Two broadcast a one-hour documentary entitled ''Bliadhna Julie / Julie's Year
about her travels and travails in the music business. In 2008-09, Fowlis hosted her first broadcast series, a weekly folk music programme titled Fowlis and Folk
on BBC Radio Scotland. She co-presents the annual Radio 2 Folk Awards with Mark Radcliffe and has deputised for Radcliffe on his weekly BBC Radio 2 Folk Show. In 2012, a short documentary on Fowlis, her family, and her band broadcast on the United States television channel PBS as part of an episode of the program Sound Tracks: Music Without Borders''. In 2015, Fowlis and her frequent musical collaborator Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh hosted a television series
Port dedicated to traditional Scottish and Irish music. In each episode, Fowlis and Nic Amhlaoibh travel to a new location highlighting local folk musicians and the local traditional music scene. The programme is narrated by Fowlis in Scottish Gaelic and Nic Amhlaoibh in Irish, with English-language subtitles. It is broadcast on both
BBC Alba and
TG4. The first season ran seven episodes, and a second season of seven episodes in 2016. ==Personal life==