From the Takoma Voice, June 2002
TPFF: Homegrown and Proud of It
By Charlene Porter
Sifting through 25 years worth of Takoma Park Folk Festival (TPFF) memories
uncovers stories about great performances and near-disasters, about sparkling
fall days and rain-outs, about musicians and volunteers who've come and
gone, and those who've returned year after year. But in a quarter-century
of festival lore, you won't hear a story about the day the TPFF organizing
committee set out to reach a silver anniversary festival.
"It's always been one
year at a time," says TPFF Chair Lenore Robinson. She can remember
times many years ago when the prospects for another year's festival seemed
as bleak as the winter days in which planning for the autumn event begins.
"There have been times in the past when we were trying to get started
up again, and only two or three people showed up for the meeting. You
wonder if you're ever going to be able to do it."
Done it they have. Year after
year, the community has produced the necessary creativity, talent, and
energy to stage successful festivals. "So many people have done so
many things for the festival that have allowed it to achieve a longevity
that no one dared to dream when it began," Robinson says.
One unfailing resource is the
unusual level of creativity and artistry found locally. "I don't
know which came first: the House of Musical Traditions [HMT], the Takoma
Orchestra, the Takoma Singers, the Fourth of July parade music, the Street
Festival the Jazz Festival or TPFF, but they all keep the music alive
here," says Pam Larson, the chair of the TPFF Program Committee.
"The local culture nurtures creativity, even eccentricity."
House of Musical Traditions owner Dave Eisner has helped nurture the music
scene locally and has been a member of the Program Committee. "There
are a lot of people playing music in Takoma Park. I'm not just talking
about American folk music. We have Andean groups, we have Cajun bands,"
he says, smiling as he shakes his head at the diversity of sounds and
styles coming out of this little city. "It's a hotbed of musical
talent."
"It's not just musicians,"
says Terry Leonino who has lost count of the number of festivals in which
she's performed at the TPFF with Magpie partner Greg Artzner. "This
is an artistic community of some of the highest quality of artists that
you could find in the whole D.C. area."
Describing the scope of talent
during an interview in her home, it's as if Leonino is describing a Carroll
Avenue parade. "You've got dancers, theater people, puppeteers, painters,
sculptors, everybody."
Roots in 1970s Volunteerism, Community Involvement
Tapping
the creativity of the community was an objective when Sam Abbott set in
motion plans for the first festival in 1978. Artzner says Abbott, who
was Takoma Park's mayor for a time, was well aware that he "was both
planting a seed and reaping what was already here."
The seed was a one-stage festival
held on September 10, 1978 with 11 acts performing. It's grown to produce
this year's harvest more than 50 acts, with more than 200 performers
on seven stages.
The variety and diversity of
the program rival those to be found at some of the nation's most prestigious
festivals. But at TPFF all the performers are working without pay. The
TPFF is a nonprofit event, and admission is free. The performers donate
their talents so that some proceeds from T-shirt sales, concessions,
and sponsors can be distributed to community groups. Those groups,
in turn, donate "sweat equity" by joining other volunteers in
doing all the jobs that invariably present themselves any time a crowd
of some thousands gathers on a late-summer day.
"Those performers see
this as a natural way to give back to the community that nurtures them,"
says Larson. Artzner confirms, "A lot of us feel that one of the
best things we can do with our music is to help raise money for things
that are important."
"That's what folk music
is all about," Leonino adds, as if finishing a chorus that her singing
partner has begun. "It's about community. It's about supporting each
other
and making this a better place to live."
For the Performers, Festival Is A Special Gig
The pro bono contributions of the artists are one basis for what Eisner
calls "the charm and splendor" of TPFF, but he also knows that
musicians throughout the region consider a 45-minute set on a TPFF stage
to be a pretty decent gig. Each year, the program committee has four to
five times the number of applications than there are slots on the bill.
For
the performers, it's a chance for greater exposure to the local audience,
not to mention a really good time. They have the opportunity to sell their
recordings on festival day, and sales are frequently brisk at Eisner's
HMT booth and at card tables set up alongside most of the performance
stages.
Scott Moore, another member
of the program committee and a stage coordinator, recalls a performance
at the 2001 festival when local favorites Cathy Fink and Marcy Marxer
brought songwriter-activist Pat Humphries on the stage to join them. "Pat
absolutely wowed the audience," he says. "Midway through her
one song, people were running up to the CD table" to buy her recording.
Guitarist-composer Al Petteway
is another Takoma Park musician who has lost count of his TPFF performances.
He has a national reputation and a devoted local following, but playing
the September festival with partner Amy White is always an opportunity
to introduce his music to new listeners. The festival "is a way to
broaden our fan base," Petteway says.
Takoma Park "is just naturally
given to community effort and to helping the less fortunate, so [performers]
want to jump on the bandwagon" to be part of the annual festival,
says White, a pianist and singer.
With so many locally based performers
contributing their talents to a worthwhile cause, a special rapport is
created between these artists and the neighbors, families, friends, and
coworkers who turn out each year for the festival. You see it with waves,
kisses, and handshakes exchanged between performers on the stage and audience
members. You hear it when sly jokes are shot from the stage at some red-faced
friend in the audience. You feel it from the warmth that comes from the
stage (and don't think it's just the temperature).
"Those are special moments
that in part come about because the performers feel so comfortable, like
they're really at home," says Moore.
That "at home" feeling makes TPFF a special event for Artzner
and Leonino. Magpie has performed in festivals in Europe, Canada, Mexico,
and across the United States, and the duo can't name another event with
the same intimacy they find at TPFF. "There are no walls between
the performers and the people," Artzner says. "We know so many
performers, so many people in the audience."
Many of the performers at TPFF
are in a close circle as friends, artists, and occasional collaborators.
Each year's event brings unique moments when one artist joins another
on stage to add a new harmony or another guitar. Pettaway says these impromptu
collaborations are another reason TPFF stands out as a special performance.
"It's nice to do it just for fun."
White is nodding on the couch
beside him. "The whole festival feels like a celebration," she
says. "It's a block party, a giant block party."
Reaching the Next Generation
As TPFF now reaches the quarter-century mark, Moore says for some performers
in recent years the special moments of connection with the audience have
genuine history. "I've heard from many young performers that they
attended this festival growing up in this area, so it has a special meaning
for them," he says.
You might even call that "roots."
In fact, Eisner does. TPFF has remained true to the origins that those
young performers recall from their own childhood, at the same time that
it has expanded the diversity of the program to reflect the rich, multi-cultural
influences of Takoma Park and the nearby area. "It's oftentimes for
many people a return to their roots," says Eisner.
The rich musical and dance traditions of Irish, Hispanic, Eastern European,
Native American, and many other cultures have graced the TPFF stages through
the years. Eisner has found that audience members rediscover the musical
traditions of their own ethnic past, or perhaps experience an initial
discovery of a form of music they've never known.
Magpie's Artzner says that diversity
in cultural music forms and the quality of musicianship that graces the
local area, make TPFF an equal to any of the professionally managed festivals
in which he and Leonino have performed. But none of them, he says, can
equal TPFF when it comes to atmosphere. "You also have this feeling
of community, this feeling that this is a tremendous festival that grew
up out of this little town."
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