|
Cathy Fink and Marcy Marxer
Music without Boundaries
by Mitchell Tropin
Cathy Fink and Marcy Marxer are musicians that
color outside the lines in many ways. The duo's adult folk
CDs refuse to be confined to a single musical category. Their
family CDs show that parents and their offspring can laugh
at themselves. Their children's discs reject the notion that
kid's music must be fluff to be fun.
Fink and Marxer have a full schedule this fall
with a new CD and some special concerts planned-all reflecting
the duo's no-boundaries attitude. Their latest disc, Postcards,
contains songs that "run from the most serious to the
most ridiculous, with something jazzy," according to
Fink.
The CD features songs from Woody Guthrie, Pete
Seeger, and Lou and Peter Berryman, who wrote some of Fink
and Marxer's most popular tunes, such as "Orange Cocoa
Cake." There's a haunting, lesser-known Hank Williams
song, "House of Gold," and a waltz written by gypsy
guitarist Django Reinhardt.
The disc's songs reflect Fink and Marxer's
desire to make an album that "remembers the places we've
been," Fink explains. "The songs become musical
postcards."
Postcards is only a part of what's happening
with the duo. Earlier this year they released the final CD
in a trilogy of lullaby albums. The CD, Pockets Full of
Stardust, follows Pillow Full of Wishes and Blankets
Full of Dreams.
Pillow is unadulterated lullabies, while
Blanket is bedtime stories. Pockets is all about
the idea that kids do not want to go to sleep.
"There's some even down right anti-sleep
songs because we recognize that kids need to shake it out
of their system," Fink says.
The two musicians met 22 years ago at a folk
festival after growing up in different parts of the country
and taking different avenues in their musical careers.
Marxer is from a Detroit suburb, the daughter
of a minister who would take her to Civil Rights marches all
over the country. Growing up hearing the spiritually-inspired
music of the movement, Marxer recalls, "I remember feeling
the infectiousness of music and seeing how music motivated.
People would get together and while the music played, it gave
the group strength and made us believe we could do anything."
Fink comes from Pikesville, Baltimore's historically
Jewish suburb. She remembers as a little girl wanting to change
the world, but her environment did not nurture political activism.
Fink began listening to popular folk, but discovered all types
of folk music in the1970s when she moved to Montreal, a city
enjoying a boom in the genre.
Hearing performers playing traditional songs
and remembering the music's roots, Fink saw how much folk
music could offer.
"Someone would play 'Freight Train' and
would say, 'this is a Libba Cotton song' I could see that
all of the music was connected," she says."The music
was an eye opener and a door opener. I was thinking [that]
there is all this good music, and I want to eat it and drink
it."
Marxer was drawn to traditional music, forming
an old-time string band, the Bosom Buddies. The band would
get together once a week, playing gigs at festivals and bars.
She also worked in a music store, demonstrating many different
instruments to customers, giving her the chance to learn how
they are played.
Marxer's band received a huge break when one
of Canada's greatest folk musicians, Stan Rogers, took Marxer
and her colleagues under his wing. It was a turning point
when playing music became a career.
"Stan came to see us after one of his concerts
and then he started getting bookings for the group in Canada,"
Marxer said. "You go from listening to a performer's
albums and then suddenly you are on stage with him."
Rogers gave tremendous support to Marxer and
colleagues.
"He would stand on the stage with me after
a performance, patting me on the back, going 'you're doing
great,'" Marxer said.
Back in Montreal, Fink's music career started
when she got a government grant to spend the summer performing
at institutions.
"There were 10 of us. We got the seemingly
giant sum of $90 a week," she says.
Fink considered enrolling at McGill University,
but decided that folk music "was a lot more fun."
After deciding to begin a full-time music career,
Fink realized she needed to understand the financial side
of performing. That's when she started her "Earn While
You Learn" program for musicians, which she continues
today.
"I said to myself, 'I'm going to figure
how this business works,"' she says. "I'm always
learning how to be better at making a living playing folk
music."
Fink's formed her first duo with Duck Donald.
The twosome did folk and country with lots of humor. Traveling
extensively, they played 250 nights a year. During that time,
they moved from Montreal to Winnipeg in Western Canada.
The switch to an isolated town did not work
out. Fink remembers one May in Winnipeg "watching snowflakes
as big as my fist. I thought, 'Enough already!'"
During her touring, Fink had seen Washington
and decided it was a place where she could move without having
to start from scratch. She came to town on the eve of the
1979 Takoma Park Folk Festival, starting a solo career that
took her to the Toronto Folk Festival in July 1980.
It was musical kismet: Marxer's Bosom Buddies
were also appearing at Toronto.
After playing a few workshops, Fink and Marxer
saw they connected on a number of different levels. They agreed
to help each other by doing booking exchanges: Fink would
get the Bosom Buddies gigs in Washington and Marxer would
get Fink gigs in Michigan. They also found festivals where
they could perform together.
Marxer left the Bosom Buddies and formed a duo
with Fink. The change opened the way for Marxer to play more
instruments. Her versatility is clear on the new CD-on the
opening track, "Fool's Gold," she plays 15 instruments.
Marxer gained something else with Fink: the
support that she first found from Stan Rogers.
"If I want to stretch creatively as far
as I can, Cathy encourages me to step even further,"
Marxer says.
A special part of Fink and Marxer's career has
been their relationship with Tom Paxton, one of America's
great folksingers. Fink met him just after her performance
at the 1978 Philadelphia Folk Festival. As she walked offstage,
standing there was Paxton, who extended a hand and said he
wanted her to meet his wife and two children.
"I'm totally delighted that 24 years later,
we are very good friends and do a lot of work together,"
Fink says. "We do as many shows together as we can."
Fink and Marxer produced Paxton's latest CD
for kids, Your Shoes, My Shoes.
Last summer, Fink attended a folk music camp
in Asheville, N.C., where Paxton was teaching a songwriting
workshop.
"He discussed the importance of rewriting-not
just finishing-the song," Fink said.
That piece of advice gave her the help she needed
with a song she had been working on for some time-"Survivors
of the Storm," one of the gems from Postcards.
"Tom worked with me on rewriting the song
using e-mails-a process that worked beautifully," Fink
said.
With Paxton writing the lyrics and supporting
her, Fink focused on reworking the melody.
"Survivors" has important meaning
to Fink. The song was written about a project close to her
heart, the Metropolitan Center for Abused Children (M-CAP).
Fink is a co-founder of the center, along with
Joanne Levin. M-CAP strives to improve the quality of children's
lives by reducing their vulnerability to assault and victimization
through prevention education. Founded in 1994, M-CAP last
year reached more than 20,000 children and their families
in the greater Washington area. Fink said she has become so
emotionally attached that she needed to write a song for the
center.
Another facet of Fink and Marxer's career is
their children's music, which contains equal helpings of fun
and learning. Maintaining this balance is an important aspect
of their work.
"We looked at the kids' albums that were
out there and we decided that if we were going to continue
recording for kids, there needed to be a reason to do it,
other than put more stuff out there," Fink said.
Each kids' CD has a theme. Fink and Marxer have
addressed building self-confidence ("Help Yourself"),
diversity ("Nobody Else But Me"), and media-savvy
kids ("Changing Channels"). The last one looks at
how kids can bring conflict resolution skills to a world filled
with violent media.
Although the songs have a purpose, the duo makes
sure their kids' CDs entertain.
"It's gotta be fun or it ain't gonna hang,"
Fink says. "But just because it's fun, doesn't mean it
doesn't have 'nutrition,'" she says.
Halfway between the adult folk and kids' CDs,
Fink and Marxer have their family albums. The most recent
one, A Parents' Home Companion, combines real life with humor
and features songs about the contrary behavior of the daughters
of feminists, a father's unquestioning pride in his son, and
not using inappropriate language in front of one's mother.
Songs such as "Are We There Yet?" are from both
the parent's viewpoint and the child's viewpoint.
"Older kids love the songs about how they
torture their parents," Fink says.
Many of Fink and Marxer's CDs, including Postcards,
are available on their own Takoma Park-based label, Community
Music, Inc.
And if that wasn't enough, Marxer exercises
her creative muscles by composing and performing music for
National Geographic documentaries.
"The producers just call and say, 'we need
Japan and India,'" she says.
From there, she will craft world-beat music,
performing on a wide variety of instruments, such as flutes,
hand drums, steel drums, and string instruments.
Fink and Marxer have some special concert dates
this fall and winter. They will be appearing at this month's
Takoma Park Folk Festival, where they are a mainstay attraction.
They are also having a CD release party for Postcards on Oct.
14, being presented by the Institute of Musical Traditions
at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Silver Spring.
They will hold their annual family holiday concert
on Dec. 7, at the NOAA Auditorium in Silver Spring. Special
guest Ella Jenkins, "the first lady of children's song,"
will make a return visit. The truly legendary Jenkins is one
of the first performers to play music for young children everywhere,
Fink says.
"It is an honor to share a concert with
her again."
At the end of December, Fink and Marxer continue
a relatively new tradition for them: their Hank Williams tribute
concerts. They held the first six years ago, intending it
as a fun way to make music with friends.
Since then the concert has grown so big that
one night is not enough.
The concerts will be held Dec. 28 at The Ram's
Head in Annapolis, Dec. 29 at the Birchmere in Alexandria,
and Dec. 30 at the Court Square Theater in Harrisonburg, Va.
Also performing is Bill Kirchen, formerly of Commander Cody;
Robin & Linda Williams; and Lynn Morris and her terrific bluegrass
band.
With various CD projects, workshops, festivals,
and concerts, Fink and Marxer always seem on the move.
"The preparation is constant and the business
part is relentless, but the payoff is there," Fink says.
"Folk music allows you to do positive things in your
community."
Recalling her childhood desire to make a difference,
she says, "perhaps I am changing the world, one song
at a time."
For Marxer, "the music gives me the chance
to stand up in front of 500 kids in a room full of ecstatic
joy. When there is a community of people enjoying the music,
I can't imagine anything that's better."
Visit Fink & Marxer's website (www.cathymarcy.com)
to see some postcards from their extensive travels. For more
information on M-CAP, visit www.mcap.org
|