After a brief stint with Mac MacLeod in 'Mac & Maddy' (another act formed at
The Cock pub), by 1966 she began performing with
Tim Hart, another St Albans resident, and together they recorded two albums before becoming founding members of
Steeleye Span in 1969. They were the backbone of the group until the early 1980s when ill-health forced Hart into semi-retirement. Prior plays the
tambourine,
spoons and ukulele, and always gives a sprightly performance of her individual dances. In 1974
Ralph McTell wrote "Maddy Dances" in her honour, included on his album
Easy. Prior married bassist
Rick Kemp, though they have since divorced. The singer
Rose Kemp is their daughter. Prior has recorded session work, albums of her own songs and eclectic styles from medieval (with
The Carnival Band), through
British folk rock — Steeleye Span and Maddy Prior appeared on television with a regular BBC 4 programme
Electric Folk —
prog-rock and
traditional songs, including session work on
Mike Oldfield's
Incantations. She left Steeleye Span in 1997 but returned in 2002. The 1999 album
The Journey was recorded in 1995, when Maddy was still in the band, but not released until four years later. She was also one half of the duo
Silly Sisters, which helped to boost
June Tabor's career. and Prior performing with
Steeleye Span in 2006. Since 2003 Prior has run and hosted an Arts Centre called Stones Barn in
Cumbria. Working with fellow singers and performers like Abbie Lathe and daughter Rose Kemp, Prior has offered residential courses focusing on singing, meditation, cookery and performance. Other events, hosted by other teachers, include classical Indian dances, painting and drumming. Prior campaigns on behalf of the charity
Cancer Research UK. In 1983, Maddy Prior became the namesake for
Madelyne Pryor of the
X-Men, created by
Chris Claremont and
Paul Smith. The band was directly referenced five years after Pryor's first appearance in the comics in
Uncanny X-Men #238 with Pryor's child self singing a line from "Gone to America", one of Steeleye Span's biggest hits. Claremont had previously named a one-shot character "Maddy Pryor" in
Avengers Annual #10 (1981). ==Recent tours and albums==