Hayes was born on The Wirral, but moved at the age of two and a half to the village of Warkworth in Northumberland. She learnt recorder, piano and the flute.[2]
Folk singer Sandra Kerr lived nearby and encouraged Hayes to listen to folk music.
Kerr's encouragement was crucial, since there was no interest in the music from Hayes's peer group.
"Nobody at my school likes folk", sighs 14 year old Northumbrian, Sarah Hayes, a song finalist in this year's Radio 2 Young Folk Awards. "But I love the music, it's funny being part of this big folk thing that my friends know nothing about. But it makes me sad there's nobody of my age here to sing with me".
[1]
In 2007 Hayes became a founding member of Brother Louis Collective, forerunner to Admiral Fallow, after meeting fellow band members in college.[4]
Hayes also plays in three classical chamber ensembles, two other folk groups, and has taught at summer schools for Folkworks Junior School, Tinto School, and at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.[5]
Hayes released her debut solo EP Mainspring in 2013.[7]
Wildings
With Jennifer Austin (piano) and Fiona MacAskill (fiddle), Wildings was released on 29 July 2015.[8]
Woven
Woven began as a commission for New Voices, a series designed to produce new work from artists on the Scottish traditional music scene, at the Celtic Connections festival in 2014. It consists of fragments of traditional folk songs set to music composed by Hayes.[2] It was released on 20 November 2015.
Reviews of the album were positive, with The Scotsman describing Hayes as "a boldly emerging new talent".[9]The Guardian described Woven as an "inventive concept work" and "a fresh, emotional collection that shows her skills as a composer, multi-instrumentalist and singer."[10]