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Singer songwriter - guitar, keyboard and English concertina.
"...a keen eye for the cruel, greedy, selfish and just plain silly people in our society, and goes for their jugulars via the funny bone"
(Bill Caddick, in "Shreds and patches")
A cock-eyed look at the world through songs that make you laugh, think and sing, interspersed with some traditional songs and tunes.
Writer of "The PR Man from Hell", Trevor Carter has been singing in folkclubs in and around North Staffordshire for longer than most people
(particularly himself) would care to remember. He is now best known for his own brand of thought provoking and satirical songs that take
a cock-eyed look at the world. Self importance, greed and new-management speak are particular targets.
Pete Coe includes two of his songs in his repertoire, one of which, "The PR Man from Hell", was described in English Folk Dance and Song as
articulating anti-Thatcherism more potently than any politician could hope to do. In the new millennium, Carter is still definitely not
on message.
Trevor has three albums available: "Come to the Edge" (1996), "The PR Man’s Dozen" (1999) and "Nothing that can't be mended" (2003)
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