Posts Tagged ‘family music’
Robbie Schaefer- OneVoice- Interview
We hang with lots of musicians and music lovers. Here’s a friend you GOTTA know, (unless of course, you already know him!).
Robbie Schaefer has become a wonderful voice in family music – on the radio (Sirius XM’s Kids Place Live), on stage, on recording and now, through a new effort called OneVoice, linking US schools to schools abroad in music.
Catch him live at Wolf Trap Theater in the Woods July 6-10, or check his schedule at
www.robbieschaefer.com
Robbie also took the time to jam with us in the XM Parking lot! Watch the video clip at the end of the interview.

C&M – ROBBIE, YOU ARE PART OF A FABULOUS BAND, EDDIE FROM OHIO. GREAT SONGS, HARMONIES AND SPIRIT. YOUR SOLO WORK HAS FOCUSED MORE ON FAMILY MUSIC. CAN YOU TALK ABOUT ADDING THAT DIMENSION TO YOUR MUSICAL WORK?
Robbie- Hi Cathy and Marcy. I fell into family music a bit by “accident” (and there are no accidents). I had been teaching music once a week at my son’s preschool when Julie Wells, the lead singer in Eddie From Ohio, was diagnosed with breast cancer. All of a sudden, our winter tour was canceled, our future was uncertain, and I found myself wondering what I’d be when I grew up. I decided that it would be as good a time as any to try to record a children’s CD. I did, and that eventually led me to an on-air gig at Kids Place Live. I found that I really loved making and sharing music for and with families and kids. There’s a purity to it for me. It is so often less about performance and more about communication–sharing music and stories. For me it ends up being more about the essence of the thing. I still very much enjoy playing with EFO and performing my own “grown-up” solo material, but with music for kids and families there’s a lightness of being that comes with playing music at such an essential level that I’m really drawn to. By the way, Julie is fully recovered and doing well these days.
C&M – WHAT GAVE YOU THE IDEA FOR OneVoice AND WHAT EXACTLY ARE THE GOALS?
Robbie-OneVoice came about in June of 2009. I was sitting with Kenny Curtis, my boss at Sirius XM and he was saying, “so where do you want to move creatively with your show in the next year?”. Great question, right? And I told him I didn’t know for sure but I felt that as a channel that reaches anywhere from 500,000 to a million listeners per week, we had an incredible amount of power, and with that power an incredible responsibility to do more than just entertain. I wasn’t sure how to do that, but I had long wanted to play music with kids in Africa, having seen my friend (and fabulous musician) Samite do just that. Samite is from Uganda but has lived in the U.S. for about 25 years or so. He goes back and plays for kids in refugee camps and orphanages every now and then. Anyway, Kenny practically leapt out of his chair and said, “that’s what we should do–we should send you to Africa!”. I was shell-shocked. I mean, Sirius XM is a big corporation, but they don’t just send a kids’ DJ to Africa because he feels like it. The short of it is that within the next two weeks or so, a more specific idea revealed itself: to help to create and cultivate peace and cultural awareness through musical sister-school relationships between kids abroad and kids here in the U.S. Kind of like musical pen pals whose “conversation” would then be broadcast to our audience.
Talk about fun and energizing–this just lit me up! We still didn’t know how we’d do it, where we’d go, or where the money would come from, but you know, all that is really needed is to set your own intention and the rest will come. Sure enough, within a couple of weeks, I was headed to Uganda to visit with the Brain Tree school. I went with a freelance videographer, Tom Hommeyer, whom I had never met, and who donated his time and talents. It was, of course, an unforgettable experience. Upon returning I knew that I needed to continue this kind of work. It’s what I’m here for. And yet, I couldn’t expect Sirius XM to keep sending me all over the world. So, since then I’ve been working to create OneVoice as it’s own organization to support this work in the future.
PLEASE TELL US ABOUT 1 OR 2 OF YOUR EXPERIENCES IN UGANDA THAT HAVE INSPIRED YOU TO MAKE THE COMMITMENT TO CREATING AN ORGANIZATION THAT WILL SUPPORT THIS WORK.
Two that stand out are “The Avocado Tree” and “The Security Guard”. I’ll start with the latter. While at Brain Tree, I would gather separately with each class of kids in an unfinished schoolroom. The room had open squares in the walls for windows, a concrete floor, and not much else. The kids would come and sing their hearts out. But as each class would sing, other children would wander over from their classrooms or from the library and peek in the windows–even if their class had just been singing with me minutes earlier! They couldn’t help but be drawn to the music–in Uganda music is a very communal thing. Anyway, as at most schools over there, there was a gate and an armed security guard who, as you might imagine, never smiles and whose job is to look as imposing as possible. It’s quite noticeable since everyone else in Uganda seems to smile all the time. On my last day there I was teaching the kids “Do, Re, Mi” from The Sound of Music. They had never heard this music and were just loving it. We were going over it again and again so we could perform it for Muzzei Mukasa (who founded the school with his wife Agnes) when, out of the corner of my eye I saw the security guard, leaning in one of the open windows, mouthing the words to the song–learning Do, Re, Mi–with such intent and interest. It was so beautiful to see this tough imposing man inexorably drawn to the music. I think that’s when I realized that this music is for everyone. I know this is so trite, but the language is truly universal, not just across countries and cultures, but across generations.
Ok. Second story. I think it’s best told from the blog I wrote while I was there. This is at the end of our last day at Brain Tree . . . . They called us to the front of the school at about 5pm. The kids were all gathered and there were two holes in the ground and two baby avocado trees. To be planted in our names (mine and Tom the cameraman). Knock me over with a feather. I placed mine in the ground and filled it with dirt and watered it. The whole school was singing and cheering. They do this thing in Swahili where they rub their hands together and say “asanti asan to you” (or something like that) and clap six times. It’s their way of giving thanks to you. When they say “to you”, you are supposed to put out your hands with your palms up and bring them to your heart to receive the thanks. We did this over and over. And then we said goodbye to the kids. I choked up so many times I lost count. Some gave us colored pictures, some letters. I stood there not talking. Not even a little. There is so much to learn about living. Just as we, in the U.S., are certainly rich in ways that most Ugandans are not, they are rich in so many ways that we are not. This was not hospitality, it was love. Ugandans seem to live close to the essence of life, and while that can include violence and chaos rarely seen in our country, it also reveals itself in an outpouring of love–for people, the earth, and yes, music–that is equally rare. I think that if I can bring the richness of what I experienced and learned in Uganda to children literally halfway across the world in North America–and vice versa–then that’s a meaningful day’s work.
HOW CAN KIDS AND FAMILIES HERE GET INVOLVED, BOTH ON THEIR OWN, AND IN SUPPORT OF OneVoice?
Good question because I very much feel that this is and will be a collective creation. The more people investing their energy, the better. That said, since OneVoice, as an official organization, is still developing, the best thing to do would be to sign up on my mailing list (www.robbieschaefer.com) and I’ll keep everyone up to date on the shape of things. In the meantime, I say, SHARE MUSIC. Sing with your family, begin learning an instrument, make up a song in the car–do whatever you can to bring more music into your community and the world.
THANKS TO ROBBIE SCHAEFER for his music and inspiration. CATCH HIM THIS SUMMER LIVE, ON HIS RADIO SHOW, “ROBBIE SCHAEFER’S BANDWAGON” ON KIDS PLACE LIVE–SIRIUS XM CHANNEL 116, OR ON RECORDING. LET’S MAKE OUR WORLD BIGGER AND SMALLER AT THE SAME TIME!
Here we are having a lunchtime jam at XM’s parking lot.
Cathy & Marcy Duo Concert – Frederick, MD – 05/22/10
| Who | Cathy & Marcy Duo Concert |
| When |
Saturday, May 22, 2010
|
| Where |
7612 Willow Road
Frederick, MD, USA 21702 To Benefit The Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fun |
| Other Info | Festival runs from 10am-5pm and will feature some fabulous regional kids music folks. This is a benefit for the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund. |
GRAMMY Stories, Taylor Swift & More
It was a whirlwind weekend for the GRAMMY Awards. We started Saturday, Jan. 31 with a networking breakfast @ 8:30am with nearly 100 folks involved in children’s music. The more the merrier! Then Cathy, Marcy & Chris Bacon were part of a Children’s Music nominees concert at the GRAMMY Museum. Standing room only created a special feeling and we were honored to perform with our fellow nominees. Later, at the Lifetime Achievement Awards, we saw Thomas Edison’s GREAT grandchildren accept an award. WOW! WOW! Real descendants of this inventor genius who’s phonograph and 1000+ patents changed much of the course of history.

Sunday, the pre-telecast event gave out 100 awards. And the winner is…….Ziggy Marley in the children’s music category.
Saw friends Bela Fleck, Sharon Isbin and quirky Loudon Wainwright win (High, Wide & Handsome).
MEANTIME, my nephew asked me to get Taylor Swift’s autograph. Nine year old Laila, part of our entourage, also had that in mind. So, when a friend pointed Taylor out in the crowd, we headed her way to request the autographs. We were stopped by her body guard who told us we couldn’t go near Ms. Swift. I said, “This nine year old simply wants an autograph. Are you gonna break the heart of a little girl?” He said, “There’s lots of little girls in the world.” I reminded him this was the price of fame and Taylor was more than happy to sign 2 autographs for us, JUST before winning her first GRAMMY and becoming the big winner that evening.
If you saw the TV show, just know that we saw it LIVE-along with 14,000 of our closest friends at the Staples Center. We were touched that our friend Mike Seeger’s name and picture were amongst the group the academy said goodby to this year.
At the GRAMMY party, Chris Bacon and his date led the dance floor in some cool SE DC line dancing moves. A few hours later, we were headed to the airport for Maui to work on a new cross cultural CD with our friends Ginger and Robyn of the Hula Honeys.
Long as we’re making music and life is interesting and we think we can make people happy, or thoughtful, or both, we’ll keep on doin’ it. Aloha for now.
Cathy & Marcy
Ella Jenkins Songs-Am. FolkSongs for Families – North Bethesda, MD – 01/09/10
| Who | Ella Jenkins Songs-Am. FolkSongs for Families |
| When |
Saturday, January 9, 2010
|
| Where |
The Music Center at Strathmore
10701 Rockville Pike North Bethesda, MD 20852-3385 The Mansion at Strathmore 10701 Rockville Pike North Bethesda, MD 20852-3324 North Bethesda, MD, USA 20895 |
| Other Info | Saturdays, January 9, 16, 23 2–3PM Mansion, Shapiro Music Room Join acclaimed musicians and educators Cathy Fink, Marcy Marxer, Michele Valeri and Valerie Baine in lively sessions exploring the music of Ella Jenkins, such as “You Sing a Song and I’ll Sing A Song,” “Jambo,” and “Go Miss Mary Mack”—and learn how to create your own family folk songs! Ages 4-8 and families. Tuition: $30 per person (3 sessions). Children must be accompanied by at least 1 adult. |
Happy New Year- Cathy & Marcy’s 2009 in Review
Out with the old, in with the new. But how did we spend 2009? It’s amazingly difficult to choose 1 highlight per month but it beats writing a whole book, so here we go:
JANUARY: We performed at the Smithsonian’s American Indian Museum the day before Obama’s inauguration in a pre-inaugural multi-cultural party.
Marcy produced a CD by Kellie Allen & Pete Peterson
FEBRUARY- At the GRAMMY Awards we announced about 20 awards, handed the GRAMMY to 2 friends (Bill Harley and Art Rosenbaum) and Cathy had her photo taken with Paul McCartney, REALLY.
MARCH- We launch the Brownie Troop of Kensington, MD Ukulele Orchestra

APRIL- BANJO TO BEATBOX plays Philly kids fest and CD is released on our SongShop™ label
MAY- Can’t do just 1. Birchmere Mother’s Day show with Deborah Tannen (NY Times Best selling author), Peggy Seeger & the dynamic duo AND
While in Maui for business (ha, ha, ha) we meet the HULA HONEYS, jam for days on end with them and vow to produce their next CD
Film JUBILATION MUSIC VIDEO
JUNE- Perform tribute to ELLA JENKINS at Smithsonian Folklife Festival’s Ralph Rinzler Memorial Concert
JULY- gotta do 4
*Old time Banjo Festival at the Birchmere includes Cathy & Marcy, Bruce Molsky, Mike Seeger, Adam Hurt, The Old 78′s- Mike’s last Washington DC performance
*Ukulele Festival- James Hill, Victoria Vox, Cathy, Marcy, local friends & 3 uke orchestras-WOW
*Wolf Trap Theater in the Woods w/ Chris Bacon & BANJO TO BEATBOX
*Kennedy Center Millenium Stage w/ James Hill & Adam Hurt
AUGUST- Clifftop Appalachian String Band Festival gives a chance to chill & play old time music with friends from all over the country. BUT, we lost good friend and old time music torch bearer Mike Seeger to cancer. 
September- Record 2 DVD’s (Meet the Instruments) and a CD (Michele Valeri’s “Little Ditties for Itty Bitties”) for our SONGSHOP™ label. February releases.
October- Favorite show was the Tribute to Utah Phillips celebrating the 2 CD set, “Singing Through The Hard Times” honoring his music & raising $ for the homeless shelter he helped build.
NOVEMBER- The dynamic duo sold 110 ukuleles to pre-school teachers at the National Association for the Education of Young Children Conference in Washington DC, plus plenty of C&M CD’s & DVD’s, but most importantly, loved hanging out with pre-school teachers and teaching ukulele at our booth. 2 chords makes you ready to sing 100 songs! 3 chords=500+ songs
DECEMBER- gotta mention a few
*BANJO TO BEATBOX becomes our 14th consecutive GRAMMY nominated CD, for Best Musical Recording for Children
*24th Annual Winter Family concert including Scottish fiddle virtuoso Bonnie Rideout and the Rockville High School Bagpipe Band. Some families bring 3 generations of Cathy & Marcy fans
*Then a memorial & music party in honor of Mike Seeger
Then- Marcy’s mom has major surgery and lives to tell the tale
Then- 17th Annual Gingerbread House decorating party
Then- Xmas party at rehap center for Marcy’s mom with musical friends
Then- Xmas dinner & music party
Then- Hank Williams Tribute nights at the Birchmere Music Hall & Court Square Theater (Harrisonburg, VA)
Then- HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Someplace in there we also contributed to the National Geographic’s new Documentary on the Appalchian Trail on dulcimer, banjo, guitar and mandolin. Cathy got a new bike in trade for banjo lessons. Marcy collected a few tenor guitars and we each rescued some special instruments from gloom and doom on ebay and elsewhere. Cathy became more active with the Washington Area Women’s Foundation and Marcy built up the Girls with Guitars and Ukulele Social Network social websites. There’s always more, but now that it’s 2010, we’ve got new work & projects to get to.
Here’s to a year of CHANGE, HEALTH CARE FOR ALL AT AFFORDABLE PRICES, GOOD HEALTH, SONGS, PEACE, HAPPINESS, PEACE and ever expanding hat collections. Keep your sense of humor-you’re gonna need it. Get up and do something and it’ll get done!
Cathy & Marcy
Today’s Hats
Dust Collector, Human Snow Plow, Bookkeeper, Philosopher, Mosaic Artist, Buddy, Shipping Clerk, Secretary, Label Manager, Artist Rep., Grammy Winner, Banjo Player, Pro Bono Advisor, Satirist, Content Creator, Dishwasher, Songwriter, Activist, God-Mother, Aunt, Chameleon
Cathy & Marcy’s HEARTSTRINGS program
Cathy & Marcy’s HEARTSTRINGS program is a way for us to help you find the musical instrument of your dreams within your budget and to inspire you to give the gift of music to a child who doesn’t otherwise have the opportunity.GUITARS NOT GUNS of the National Capital Area Area is a local nonprofit whose mission is to inspire at-risk and underprivileged youth to succeed by providing them music education opportunities through the use of volunteers and partnerships in our community. They help instill in these youth the confidence and character necessary for them to grow into productive members of society and responsible adults. The program provides free guitar lessons with the belief that the art of music connects the child to higher life goals and ambition. Students are loaned a guitar to use for the beginner’s class; once they complete the class they are awarded that guitar; it is theirs to keep. Read HERE.
Our goal is to raise at least $2500 for GUITARS NOT GUNS this holiday season. By setting the example of us giving our time to you, we hope you will donate some of your $ to this wonderful program. The process is quick and simple.
First: Make a tax deductible contribution of $25 or more to Guitars Not Guns by going to their web site www.gngnca.org – and clicking on the “Donate Now” button in the upper right corner of any page. Specify the amount you want to give and in the “Dedication” section, write:“HEARTSTRINGS”.
Second: You will receive a Thank You from Guitars Not Guns that includes a request form for you to fill out.
Third: Complete the request form and e-mail it to us at info@cathymarcy.com
Fourth: You’ll hear back from us within a few days. We will suggest up to 3 instruments within your budget as well as recommendations of convenient, friendly and reasonably priced places to buy online or near you, depending on where you live.
Then: as you make more music in your life, you’ll enjoy it more knowing that you helped provide that same opportunity to a deserving kid in the metropolitan Washington D.C. area.
We will be helping people find electric & acoustic guitars, banjos of all kinds, ukuleles, mandolins, whistles and folk flutes, dulcimers and more.
We teach Marcy’s song, “SHARING” in sign language. The sign for “sharing” shows that you give some away and you take some for yourself. Click on song to LISTEN.
The song is from the CD, “CHANGING CHANNELS“.
SHARING
PLEASE SPREAD THE WORD. The program will run from November 1- December 20, 2009
Scottish Bag Pipe Band – Groovy Kids
We have always enjoyed hearing, seeing and performing with talented kids. Our upcoming 24th Annual Winter Family Concert will include the best in Scottish music. Our good friend and master Scottish fiddler, Bonnie Rideout joins us. In 1998 Marcy produced Bonnie’s family CD, “Gimme Elbow Room” which won a Parents’ Choice Gold Award.

Bonnie introduced us to the Rockville High School Pipe Band. They will also perform in the concert. The members of the band meet every Wednesday at Rockville High School to rehearse. Ages range from 12yrs.-high school. They work hard, practicing as a group for 2 hours per week marching in formation, learning new material and fine tuning the band sound with Highland Pipes, bass drum and snare drums.
To keep up, many of the kids take private lessons during the week and everyone has to practice. We LOVED the sound of lots of Pipes together.
This band has been going since 1961 (with different kids of course). Some of its more notable performances include concerts at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, the dedication parade for the Vietnam Veterans’ Memorial; a Redskins half-time show; the world premeires of the movies Patton and a Bridge Too Far. For over 30 years, the Pipe Band has also been responsible for holding the annual National Capital Area Scottish Festival.

Come meet these talented kids, see and hear how the bagpipes work-or if you don’t live near here, find a local Pipe group.
Hear the Pipe Band, Bonnie Rideout & Cathy & Marcy together!
Check out the pipes up close!
For tickets, click HERE

JUBILATION NEW LYRIC CONTEST
KIDS/TEACHERS/FAMILIES
Sept. 1- Sept. 30 with COOL PRIZES
We’ve gotten so much fun response to the song and video “JUBILATION” from the BANJO TO BEATBOX CD. The first time we performed it, for a 5th grade class, the teacher said, “Wow, we could use that song as a lesson plan on rhyming and vocabulary.” A week later, we got 3 pages of new verses to the song from that class.
That gave us the idea to invite everyone in on the fun. We’ll read every submission and choose some of the best for publication in the blog. We will even record some of the best for folks to hear in the blog and on the website.
We encourage kids, families and even teachers to have as much fun with this as possible!
Watch the JUBILATION MUSIC VIDEO below
PRIZES: Top 5 will receive FREE CD of their choice from www.cathymarcy.com AND Cathy & Marcy SongShop Washboard.
Here’s how to join the JUBILATION LYRICS CONTEST:
1)Write a new verse to JUBILATION and email it to: info@cathymarcy.com
PLEASE INCLUDE
Name of entrant
Age of entrant
Your new verse
2) YOU MUST INCLUDE AND AGREE TO THIS IN YOUR SUBMISSION:
I understand that by submitting my verse to the song JUBILATION, Community Music, Inc. has the right to print, record or otherwise use and distribute my verse. It becomes the property of Community Music, Inc. Though Community Music, Inc. will attempt to credit and thank each entrant if their material is used, there are times that this may not be possible. Community Music, Inc. has permission to use my submission regardless of credit.
____ AGREED Name___________________________________
_____Parent/Guardian Agrees for entrants under 21
Name of Parent/Guardian__________________________________
Email:_______________________________________________
That’s it-let the word fun begin.
And, you can also have fun with the JUBILATION WORD SEARCH HERE
Marcy’s Corner-UKEFEST 2009
Hello Music Friends!
Welcome to my very first eclectic, eccentric, esoteric music blog for artists and listeners with exquisite taste. That’s YOU my friends!
Here’s a link that describes YOU to a T!
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/exquisite
My friends enjoy the finest of the fine. The talent of the most talented. The skill of the most skillful. The funniest of the most humorous. This is the top, friends. This is the cream of the crop!
Let’s dive in the deep end of the pool! Here we go….
Here’s a video of our friend James Hill performing at the Kennedy Center. James is a brilliant and ground breaking performer on the ukulele and other instruments. He’s also a great singer and entertainer. We were lucky to be special guests on the show.
You’ll see some beautiful video footage of James, Cathy, Marcy and more friends from the Ukulele Festival at Strathmore in the near future.
Link to James at Ken Cen
Here are some fantastic photos from The Ukulele Festival at Strathmore.
We’re very proud of Brownie troupe 2773 (ages 6-9) for their beautiful ukulele playing and singing. There have never been more beautiful arrangements of The More We Get Together and Make New Friends.
Congratulations also go to The Riders, a group of 30 vivacious and courageous seniors for “bringing down the house” with their renditions of Mockingbird Hill and Edelweiss.
Special thanks to Paul Sharratt for taking these beautiful pictures! Here’s a link to more.
Enjoy!
Marcy Marxer
Vienna, VA – 07/25/09
| Who | BANJO TO BEATBOX-Cathy & Marcy & Christylez Bacon |
| When |
Saturday, July 25, 2009
|
| Where |
1645 Trap Road
Vienna, VA, USA 22182 |
| Other Info | COOL songs, sing-alongs, with GRAMMY winners and young hip-hop artists with songs from the new BANJO TO BEATBOX CD in beautiful outdoor ampitheater. |




