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Events Featured NYC

Doris Dear Decks the Halls: An Interview with Raymond DeForest

All photos by Kristen Blush

2019’s Doris Dear Christmas Special may have ended just a few short weeks ago, but creator Raymond DeForest is already hard at work dreaming up his show for Christmas 2020. This is the fifth year for the special, which features host Doris Dear, played by DeForest, joins a cast of performers to share diverse holiday traditions and stories. For us at Downtown, it is a favorite annual treat. 

Each year, the show has raised money for “The Longest Day” initiative with the Alzheimers Association, selling custom-made enamel pins and cookies. The character of Doris Dear was inspired by DeForest’s mother, who passed away a few years ago from Alzheimer’s.

As the new year passed, we got a chance to learn more about the Doris Dear Christmas Special with DeForest–Ms. Doris Dear herself–and a peek into the creative process behind the show. 

Downtown: How do you prepare for your infamous holiday show?

Raymond DeForest: I start thinking about my next show in January after I have had time to relax and come down from the absolute enjoyment I feel from doing my three-night run of “The Doris Dear Christmas Special.” It starts with an idea, usually sparked by a memory of growing up in Staten Island with my family that I then run by my director, Lina Koutrakos. I am usually inspired by a certain moment growing up like when my sister and I would lay on the floor, staring up through the Christmas tree at the lights. Then I start looking at music and songs; I try not to repeat what was done the year before. That’s not easy. It’s a holiday show, and there are some songs like White Christmas that, for me, seems to say “Merry Christmas” better than anything. There is always a balance between giving my audience a nostalgic feeling through songs and stories mixed with more modern takes on the holiday to keep current.

DT: Who were your guests for this year?

RD: This year’s guests were, as one audience member exclaimed to me, “AMAZING!”. Lina Koutrakos, my director, has a permanent spot. She is a bluesy rock gal that does a song like no one I know. “Those Girls” are a girls group that brings a nostalgic, yet modern take on some great songs (“Jing-A-Ling” is an audience favorite). Patrick DeGennaro, my musical director this year, wrote a brand-new song just for us, and it was so wonderful and holiday spirit-filled. Ari Axelrod was a new addition, and he was charming and funny. Not only did he sing a beautiful rendition of “The Nearness of you” but also played the conga and charmed us with his stories of Hanukah. Sean Harkness is another permanent guest in the Rumpus Room. When Sean plays guitar, the audience swoons.

Doris Dear, Ari Axelrod, Those Girls, Lina Koutrakos, Sean Harkness and Steve Count

DT: How long does it take you to rehearse?

RD: I start rehearsing myself around mid-summer. I am constantly writing and refining my material as I rehearse the songs, so the stories and songs feel seamless. I don’t stop that refining until the show closes! The cast comes in about a month before the shows, to work with the musical director, director, and I, going over parts and script.

DT: Do you add new guests each year?

RD: Each year I try to change the talent slightly. About 50% of my audience are repeats, so providing them with new talent is important.

DT: Tell us a little about your piano player and his song, which he performed this year.

RD: My piano player/musical director this year was Patrick DeGennaro. We had worked together on my new solo show, “More Gurl Talk,” that I performed at The Music Theater of CT, NYC, and the historic theater in Fire Island. I wanted him to do something special for the show, so he decided to write something for us. The song, “I Know It’s Christmas” was perfect and Doris Dear was in it!

DT: You have a lot of guests at your show. What do you attribute this to?

RD: This was my fifth year doing the show. The shows sell well and attract an audience that is not the usual “cabaret” audience. It has a wider reach, so talented singers and musicians want to be a part of the show. I am very honored that I have that rich talent on my stage. When I sit back on the side of the stage and listen to these artists, I think to myself, “wow, how are you so darn lucky!”

Doris deaar, Lina Koutrakos and Patrick DeGennaro

DT: Where does your talent come from, and when did you know that you were going to be a performer?

RD: My talent comes from the very deep pool of amazing singers and musicians that are here in NYC. These are world-class performers. As I said, I am truly a very lucky girl to have them in my “Rumpus Room.”

I stepped on stage in college and new that very minute that I wanted to do this as my profession. I am honored to say I have been a full time working actor/singer for 42 years!

DT: What can we expect next from your work?

RD: I am always looking for ways to bring my message of family and love to a wider audience. At 61 years of age, I only do the work that is authentic and real for me. If I am not going to enjoy the work, I turn it down. The character of Doris Dear has opened up a whole new way of storytelling and performing for me. I am in talks with a major studio about bringing Doris Dear to a wide TV audience as well as bringing my shows to Universities and also teach students about the “art” of character development and storytelling. It’s very exciting for me to share my experience of the past 42 years in the business.

I also work on several committees with the SAG-AFTRA union and can help new actors coming into the business with maneuvering the real world. We live in such a strange world right now. There is so much hate coming from so many places. When my audience walks into my “Rumpus Room,” I want that feeling of a tough world left outside. I want my space to be one where all people can come and have a good time. As one reviewer from your magazine said…“ … I LEFT THE PLAY WITH A SMILE FROM EAR TO EAR AND THAT WARM AND FUZZY FEELING OF A LIFE FAR LESS COMPLICATED THAN THE FAST-PACED ONE OF TODAY. THANK YOU, DEAR DORIS!” – DOWNTOWN MAGAZINE

DT: Every year your show gets us ready for the holidays, and now you are hitting an even younger generation, who know nothing about the 1950s/60s. Does this lack of direct connection and experience worry you?

RD: It doesn’t “worry” me as much as it keeps me aware of what I am writing. I try hard to reference nostalgia without being so “old fashioned” that I lose anyone under 50 years of age!! LOL. This year I had several children come to many of my shows. Many stopped by after the show to tell me how much they loved it and especially the character of Doris Dear. As one beautiful girl said to me …” You are the aunt I always dreamed of having”. That’s the best compliment I could get. So, I guess that makes Doris not only the “Perfect American Housewife” but also the “The perfect crazy aunt”!!!

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Categories
Culture Events Music NYC Theater

Josh Turchin – New York’s Youngest Musical Prodigy

By Olivia Vengel

The month of June is a great time to be a piano in New York City. The Fosun Plaza at 28 Liberty on June 3rd was a hub of vibrant color and music in honor of the unveiling of the fifty Sing for Hope 2019 piano art pieces, and musicians and music-lovers alike attended the event to enjoy and create music.

Downtown spoke with twelve-year-old Joshua Turchin, one of the younger musicians who was sharing his music in the plaza, about his passion for music and musical theatre, and his bright future in the industry.

Image courtesy of the Turchin Family

Turchin is already a star at age twelve; he has performed in two Broadway National Tours, is the host and creator of the Early Night Show cabaret, has written the music, lyrics, and book for his own musical, which debuts in August. His energetic presence as a performer and musician make him stand out from the rest, whether his stage is in a theater or on the bench of a piano in a public plaza.

Downtown: How long have you been playing piano?

Joshua Turchin: I’ve been playing piano since I could first reach the keys, but I officially and professionally started taking lessons when I was four.

DT: Do you play any other instruments?

JT: I actually play eleven other instruments other than piano, all my instruments together are piano, guitar, electric guitar, drums, accordion, harmonica, cajon, ukulele, recorder, banjo and ocarina.

DT: So you mentioned you wrote a musical, what is it about?

JT: It’s about the business, it’s about a girl named Alexandria, a struggling actress…It was just accepted into a theatre festival called the Rave Theater Festival, it’s a brand new theater festival.

Rave Theater Festival

DT: Is it in New York?

JT: It is in New York, it’s from August 9th to the 23rd.

DT: So what brought you to this particular event?

JT: So, I first started working with Sing for Hope when earlier in January at Broadway Con, I stumbled on their piano cause I had a panel there with the band I created, Broadway Kids Jam, and I just started playing it and I introduced myself to Mel, and I’ve been working with them ever since! I sometimes play at Port Authority, and we were invited here, and I came here and I’m like oh my god pianos! It’s incredible.

Joshua Turchin’s personal website is https://www.joshuaturchin.com/, and information about Rave Theater Festival is available at http://ravetheaterfestival.com/. The Perfect Fit debuts on August 11th at 4 pm and runs on August 12th, 18th, 19th, and 23rd. Tickets are available at https://ci.ovationtix.com/35213/production/1012928.

Categories
Art Culture Music

Sing for Hope Unveils 500th Piano

By Michael Izquierdo

Whether you’re eager to play the piano or digital piano in front of a live audience or looking to admire originally-designed artwork, the Sing for Hope Pianos project returns to the streets of New York City for its eighth consecutive year.

From June 4th to the 23rd, Sing for Hope will display 50 artist-designed pianos in parks and other public spaces across the five boroughs for any passerby to walk up and play a tune. The piano designs are vibrant, striking expressions of the creativity found within the city, featuring designs like the New York City skyline, an underwater theme, and pride-colored stripes. The non-profit organization founded in 2006 by opera singers Monica Yunus and Camille Zamora celebrates as they unveil their 500th Sing for Hope Piano this year.

Sing for Hope was built upon the foundation of being a resource for New York artists to use their art to give back to the community, and they continue to abide by their roots. This year’s masterpieces were created by a wide range of artists, including the Broadway casts of Mean Girls, Dear Evan Hansen, and Jersey Boys; along with prominent visual artists around the world, including artist/designer Alpana “Tejaswini,” Florida-based educator Bridget Wendt, Staten Island-based family of artists Rob, Peggy and Megan Padovano, and many others.

The Sing for Hope Pianos project is made possible in partnerships with New York City Parks and Recreation, New York City Department of Education, the Office of the Mayor, the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment, with additional support from Fosun International. This year, the pianos will be distributed in high-traffic locations included Virginia Park and Van Cortlandt House Museum, Brooklyn Bridge Park: Pier 6, Coney Island Boardwalk, Tompkins Square Park, Central Park, Unisphere Flushing Meadows, Midland Beach, and many more.

Once the Sing for Hope Pianos project is over, the pianos will find permanent homes in NYC public schools starting this fall. This initiative will extend the outreach of educational programs to over 100,000 NYC students and community member annually.

Earlier today, Downtown Magazine had the opportunity to attend the official unveiling of the 2019 Sing for Hope Pianos event at Fosun Plaza on 28 Liberty in NYC.

Categories
Culture Entertainment

It Was Whiskey Sours and Holiday Cheer at “The Doris Dear Christmas Special”

Ray DeForest was back at The Triad Theater with his now annual Christmas Party, “The Doris Dear Christmas Special.” This year, Doris performed to three nights of packed houses. Mr. DeForest is first and foremost an actor. He created the character of Doris Dear when his mother was slowly declining from Alzheimer’s and Ray wanted to salute the powerful woman he called mom. This year the show was also a fund raiser for The Alzheimer’s Association, New York Chapter. Mr. DeForest collected money after the shows and is donating a portion of the proceeds from the show. As Doris Dear said, “There comes a time in your life when giving back is more important than anything”.

dear doris 2018

This year’s show was all new. Starting with a rousing full cast number “Christmas Isn’t Christmas Till You Get Here”, we all knew we were going on a fun filled sleigh ride complete with sleigh bells! Doris of course sat down with a whiskey sour, lifted her glass with a funny toast and dished out holiday advice from her “bible of the American housewife,” Better Homes and Gardens, 1950’s style. From homemade aprons to gay decorations and parties, Doris Dear knows Christmas. We all look forward to Doris and her recollections of her parents Taffy and Duke, and this year was no exception. Doris gave us a heartfelt “I’ll Be Home for Christmas” which made us all happy to be in the rumpus room with Taffy, Duke and Doris.

Doris welcomed her usual mix of amazing singers and musicians to the Rumpus Room. Rick Jensen, Steve Doyle and Sean Harkness are all multi-talented musicians who are themselves successful solo performers that seem so in synch with Doris Dear, it’s hard to imagine them all not being together. Sean Harkness and his guitar playing is that glorious star on top of this delightful Christmas Tree. Lisa Yaeger joined Doris in a powerful duet, “Happy Days/Forget Your Troubles”. Their voices blend beautifully, and the audience cheered as their vocals both soared with the music. Lina Koutrakos, also Doris Dear’s director, joined Doris on stage to share some Greek Christmas with us and sang a heart wrenching “After the Holidays”. Lina has a voice that reaches inside you and grabs your heart and doesn’t let go. Of course, it wouldn’t be a Doris Dear Christmas show if Lina and Doris didn’t do their hilarious duet “I Wouldn’t Trade Christmas”, a Sinatra family favorite! One of the new additions to the Rumpus Room this year was the all-girl group “Those Girls”. Their “Jing-a-Ling” was so fun, and their tight harmonies so well executed, I felt like I didn’t want to ever leave this Rumpus Room.

dear doris cast 2018

Doris came out dramatically in an all-black rhinestoned gown to do her comedic take on the Rosemary Clooney song from the movie White Christmas, “Love You Didn’t Do Right By Me”. You never know where Doris will take us, and this number was no exception. Doris “brought the house down” with this old standard. Doris finished with an audience sing a long and then wrapped us in her holiday warmth with “Merry Christmas Darling”.

Ray DeForest is more than just another drag queen performer. There is no lip synching or cheap music tracks in these shows. His amazing vocals, extraordinary comedic talent, and subtle expressions consistently show us that there is more to drag than what we think. Mr. DeForest also writes the script and produces the entire show. This is family friendly fair full of advice, songs and laughs. After an evening in the rumpus room, you feel like Taffy and Duke are your friends and Doris Dear is your ultimate den mother. As I walked into the sparkling holiday lights of New York City, I knew that the world was going to be ok as long as Doris Dear had a say!

By Nick Appice

 

Categories
Culture Featured Music

Singer/Songwriters Maggie Rogers & Andy Seltzer Talk the Unlikely Origins of “Split Stones”

Sometimes, things work out exactly how they’re supposed to.

Singer/songwriters Maggie Rogers and Andy Seltzer never planned to work with each other. Rogers was already amassing a steady following via her homegrown blend of soulful, folk-inspired electronic pop. Seltzer, meanwhile, had cut his teeth and honed his chops in teenage punk bands, but his musical ambitions found him wanting to do, explore, produce and collaborate more. The pair was brought together by a networking initiative presented by the New York headquarters of their shared performing rights organization, BMI, called Speed Dating for Songwriters.

Established in 2013, BMI’s Speed Dating for Songwriters™ initially began as a way to introduce and foster creativity among some of BMI’s most promising NYC-based songwriters, producers, and artists whose paths may not have otherwise crossed. Since then, the program has expanded to Los Angeles and Nashville, bringing together a number of BMI songwriters with the intention of establishing collaborative creative partnerships.

Rogers and Seltzer demonstrated an immediate chemistry that caught the BMI New York team’s attention and the duo was recruited to work on a song for another artist. But when that artist failed to materialize, the two music creators seized the opportunity to collaborate with each other. The end result was “Split Stones,” a shimmering slice of emotive pop that showcased both writers’ distinctive gifts. The track was so stirring, in fact, that The North Face ended up selecting it for placement in an advertising campaign, going so far as to even feature Rogers in the commercials.

BMI’s VP of Creative, NYC Samantha Cox sat down with Maggie Rogers and Andy Seltzer to discuss their inspiration, collaboration and the success of “Split Stones.”

 

How did you first get involved with BMI and what were your expectations when you were asked to participate in Speed Dating for Songwriters?

Maggie Rogers: I became a member of BMI while living in Boston, attending Berklee School of Music’s Five-Week Program. Becoming a member of a PRO seemed as good of a first step as any. I was looking to explore the world of co-writing and writing for other artists when a friend connected me to the New York team. I’m not actually sure what I thought would come out of it [Speed Dating for Songwriters]. I remember being really nerdy and over-prepared. I made a three-minute edit of a couple different songs so people could get a wider sense of where I came from [folk music] and what I was working on at the moment [electronic]. I maybe even brought business cards? I was definitely the first person there.

Andy Seltzer: I think I had randomly signed my pop-punk band up in high school when I was 16 without knowing what the company truly did. It wasn’t until I had moved to New York City in 2015, [that I met the New York team]. I showed up with a messenger bag of my college demos, and [they] sat with me for hours talking and getting to know me. I consider them family and they’ve been my core and life support in the city ever since! As for Speed Dating for Songwriters, I was nervous and intimidated imagining myself in a room showcasing my music individually to 10-15 other songwriters, but excited at a new opportunity to meet a new set of writers with a shared goal of keeping the New York City music scene alive. For some context, I was running late from my internship in midtown, and everyone was waiting to start when I got there. I didn’t have time to prepare a playlist of my music, so I gaged what songs I would play within the first minute or so of meeting each writer. Everybody there was so open and supportive, and it solidified my feeling that BMI was going to become a second family to me. I met Maggie Rogers that night, as well as close friends like Jess Carvo, Micky Blue, Totem, Carter Matschullat, and Rob Grimaldi whom I still talk and work with to this day.

 

 

How does the process of songwriting differ when you’re co-writing?

MR: I’m pretty particular about lyrics and love being involved in the production. If I’m co-writing for my own project, I usually like to get in the studio and start playing around with a beat or a chord progression. Once there’s a solid idea going, I’ll usually find a way in through melody and the lyrics come pretty quickly from there. To be completely honest, I haven’t really done too much songwriting for other people, but it’s something I’d really love to do. I can imagine I would be much less precious about lyrics, or rather just work to structure them in someone else’s voice and within someone else’s narrative instead of stressing my own.

 AS: When I’m co-writing as opposed to writing alone, at its core I feel the added responsibility to put my best self forward and to be there for the other writer in the room, because suddenly it’s not about me anymore, it’s about creating a song out of thin air with another person. Co-writing is a very in-the-moment feeling, and the accountability of not wanting to let the other person down causes me to get out of my head and not be so precious with holding onto ideas, which in return, I think, causes me to open up and come up with different kinds of melodies/lyrics I wouldn’t have thought of alone! When I’m alone, I can be inconsistent — either bursts of a full song or only two lines of a verse. I’ll write about things so deeply personal that I get caught in tunnel vision and very in my head, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but just difficult for me to be as objective. My foundation as a person has always gravitated towards being a supporting role — growing up, I was the bassist in bands, and my day-to-day role as a producer is to do my absolute best to see an artist’s vision through. When I’m co-writing, I take that sentiment and usually am the one asking the other writer what’s been going on in their life, and bouncing ideas and concepts off of deep conversation and listening to their stories. Co-writing takes a lot of empathy and openness, and when both people have that mixed with a willingness to create, the room becomes a safe haven for a great song to be written.

 

What was the songwriting process like with each other? 

MR: When I think of Andy as a collaborator, the first word that comes to mind is selfless. His work is completely in service of the artist he’s working with and the story they’re trying to tell. Andy is one of the most compassionate and generous people I’ve ever worked with.For us, “Split Stones” started with two sound samples I brought in; one of my breath that I had recorded while hiking in Oregon, and the other of two sticks against an empty silo across from my family’s house in Maryland. Andy and I started working them into the beat you hear in the intro of the song. Once that was settled, he picked up the guitar and started playing the song’s progression; I started writing the first verse.

The song was done by the end of the day. In between verses, Andy talked me through the story I was telling, asking about the root of the person and the experience I was trying to get on paper. He earned my trust quickly and has kept it wholeheartedly. I think Andy and I will be friends for a long, long time. Something worth noting after the speed dating session, Andy and I were actually paired to work together with and for another artist, but she never showed up to the session. Sometimes, things work out exactly how they’re supposed to.

AS: Maggie is a jack-of-all-trades and incredibly gifted musician — she writes, produces, and is a multi-instrumentalist, so my first thought was what my best role could be writing with her that day and how I could support her vision. She has an uncanny sense of herself, intuitive, and as real as it gets when in conversation, which made me feel comfortable and inspired to write with someone who shared an equal passion for art. She had just gotten back from a trip, and collected a ton of cool environment sounds with her field recorder — including the sound of a stick stuck rattling in a windmill and the sounds of her breathing while meditating. The first thing she suggested was if we could try sampling these sounds and possibly turn them into a drum loop. Within a few minutes of tweaking, quantizing, and experimenting, the windmill-turned-drums became the first blip of “Split Stones,” and she pulled out her notebook and immediately began writing the lyrics out by hand while I arranged out the drums and added some chordal structure.

I don’t remember us talking to each other much in those hours because we were both so in the zone until it came time to demo out the vocals. She had something personal to her life she wanted to write about that day, so instead of chiming in, I made sure to make myself available as a sounding board to bounce ideas off of when needed. It was an inspiring day, to say the least, and we both felt proud of how honest and natural the song felt for having just met each other.

 

How did you feel when you heard it was going to be used in that ad?

MR: Definitely a pretty wild feeling. I’ve never done anything in the ad space and this is definitely…in the ad space. I’m still trying to figure out how much of that kind of stuff I want to do, but when it came to the North Face ad, I’m a really big fan of the athletes in the video; Jimmy Chin, Emily Harrington, Alex Honnold. Seeing them in their element, in all of these beautiful, natural spaces – it’s amazingly inspiring and an honor to have my craft intertwined with theirs.

AS: I think Maggie and I shared the same determination, openness, and curiosity that day to experiment and create a new sound together. I didn’t sense any pressure or goal other than to try writing and see what happens. Maggie told me it was going to be featured in a North Face ad backstage at her sold-out show at Brooklyn Steel — in that moment, I had just seen her perform a song we wrote in my bedroom only a year prior now to 1,800 people, so I was filled to the brim with pride and happiness for my friend.

My initial reaction to the ad was excitement that something tangible, let alone a huge brand, had validated our song. I then became afraid and skeptical because I was so proud of the song itself that I didn’t want anything else clouding its release, and I wanted the “Split Stones” to stand on its own with the purpose we intended and not associated with another brand or vision other than Maggie’s. However, once I saw the ad, I thought it was understated, seamless, cool, and the number of people who discovered “Split Stones” first because of the ad’s reach gave me perspective that it was a helpful force to facilitate our reach of the song.

 

Andy, you’ve just signed a publishing deal with Warner-Chappell. What are you currently working on?

AS: In the first month of being signed to Warner/Chappell, I’ve been in writing sessions and working on demos with Hailey Knox, Kimbra, Tyler Glenn of Neon Trees, Sophie Beem, All Time Low, Wes Period, Katy Tiz, Jacob Sartorius, T.O. Speers, Alice Kristiansen, and James A.M. Downes. I have singles coming out this fall with Zuri Marley and Penguin Prison which I’m really excited about and can’t wait for everyone to hear!

 

Maggie, it’s been rumored that you’re stepping away from the limelight in the wake of “Split Stones”?  What is your next chapter? 

MR:  I’ve taken the past couple months to just be very, very quiet and very, very still. Daily dates with the collected works of Joan Didion and Virginia Woolf, long walks and phone calls with friends — it’s been the first bit of processing I’ve done all year. So much has changed for me since graduating from college and with the pace of things, I started to find that I was having difficulty remembering things or having a moment of wonder at all of it. I’ve taken a good chunk of time to find my feet again, to have new vision. Now, I’m just so overjoyed at the idea of writing and creating again. And so the cycle continues!

 

Categories
Culture Entertainment Events Living Music

Guitar Mash returns to City Winery on Dec. 11; Downtown talks with its performers

Screen Shot 2016-12-10 at 1.33.13 PM

Downtown had the pleasure of interviewing Guitar Mash’s musical director Mark Stewart to preview last year’s event at City Winery. After hearing how well the event did, and that the 5th Annual edition of Guitar Mash was booked for a Dec. 11 return to City Winery, it was obvious that another feature had to be done by Downtown.

Taking place from 12:00 PM to 3:30 PM, this year’s lineup not only features Mark, but also singer/songwriter Dar Williams, newgrass pioneer Sam Bush, blues master Bill Sims Jr., singer/songwriter (and Sting backing musician) Jo Lawry, Steely Dan sideman Jon Herington, singer/songwriter Joseph Arthur, and the voice of the Tunisian revolution, Emel. Prior Guitar Mash events have featured the likes of Kaki King, The Roots’ “Captain” Kirk Douglas, Wilco’s Nels Cline, Living Colour’s Vernon Reid, and The Patti Smith Band’s Lenny Kaye.

Q&A with conducted with the aforementioned Mark Stewart, Jo Lawry, Emel, and event producer Rebecca Weller over e-mail, as arranged by GreenHouse Publicity’s John Seroff. Tickets to “The Best Concert You Ever Headlined” can be purchased through Eventbrite, while more info on Guitar Mash itself can be found at www.guitarmash.com.

How did you get involved with Guitar Mash?

Jo Lawry: I was invited by the wonderful Mark Stewart, who I met when we toured together with Sting and Paul Simon.

Emel: They got in touch with me about two months ago, I think. I hadn’t heard of such a thing before. It sounded funny to me at first to be performing while people will be jamming, but it’s just wonderful. I think it’s a very cool concept.

What is your favorite part of working with Guitar Mash?

Mark Stewart: Everyone playing and singing together.

Rebecca Weller: Ear to ear smiles. Great songs are irresistible. And I LOVE when someone who came without a guitar one year, comes back the next with an instrument in hand.

Jo Lawry: Well, I can’t say for sure yet, as it’s my first time! But the house band is mostly made up of guys I know and love, like David Cossin and Rob Schwimmer, so I’m really looking forward to playing with them again. And Mark Stewart is able to turn anything into a magical party!

Emel: Interacting with people. We never connect enough with each other, the musicians as well as the crowd and with the live-streaming people from all over the world!

What else is coming up for you besides Guitar Mash?

Mark Stewart: Solo show at the Old Stone House in Brooklyn this Thursday. Recording sessions with Meredith Monk and Bang On A Can just after the Mash.

Rebecca Weller: The Women’s March On Washington — I’ll be bringing song sheets for the bus.

Jo Lawry: I’m currently deep in the thick of making my third solo album, and I’m running a PledgeMusic campaign for that, which is super-fun, and is giving me a chance to engage a lot more with my audience. I’m also going to flee the New York winter in a few weeks for my homeland of Australia, to enjoy the summer there, to hang out with my awesome family and do a few shows.

Emel: I will be releasing my new album Ensen on Partisan Records on Feb. 24. An album with very modern sound experimentations, marrying berber and north african inspirations and percussions with electronic and cinematic soundscapes. I co-produced it with four different collaborators, such as Iceland’s Valgeir Siguròsson. The release party will be held on the release day at Joe’s Pub and a U.S. tour will start in May.

When not busy with music, how do you like to spend your free time?

Mark Stewart: Walking and digging — what is actually going on? Swimming, too.

Rebecca Weller: I love to watch my 11-year old daughter play basketball — Greenwich Village Girls League!

Jo Lawry: We just adopted some stray kittens, so they are providing a huge distraction from all the musical and non-musical things that I should be doing! Also, I have my own backyard for the first time in my life, so I am getting way into gardening. Also, I like to needlepoint. Yes, I am aware of how much like a grandma those last two make me sound.

Emel: Discovering great visual art, whether in real galleries or on Instagram. Watching independent movies — I saw an excellent one recently, two trains running about the parallel of great blues musicians stories and the black rights movements in the 60’s.

Do you have a favorite restaurant in New York?

Mark Stewart: Our kitchen. My wife Karen and I love to cook.

Rebecca Weller: Momofuku Ssäm Bar.

Jo Lawry: Supper in the East Village is an old favorite of mine, and in my Brooklyn neighborhood of Bedford-Stuyvesant, I love Saraghina.

Emel: Hot Jalapeño, a great Mexican spot in Harlem where the food the music and the service are good, which is a real rarity in New York!

Finally, any last words for the kids?

Mark Stewart: Play and sing music with your buddies. It’s cool. Then make a meal together. Just as cool.

Rebecca Weller: Well, as a mom, I tell my kids to PLAY MUSIC like other people tell their kids to EAT VEGETABLES. I don’t care what instrument, I don’t care what kind of music, just play something. And listening is really important. Listen to all kinds of music, even if you think you’re going to hate it. If we only ate Italian food all the time, think of what we’d be missing out on!

Jo Lawry: Don’t be afraid to look or sound stupid! Here’s a dirty little secret: I only started playing guitar at age 33! To be honest, I’m still pretty scared every time I have to play it in public, but facing those fears is so worth it for the things I learn each time. Keep at it!

Emel: Believe as much as you can in yourself, in your power, in your ideas, in who you are. It might sound easy, but I think that’s where it all starts and that’s what events, people, and societies try to steal away from you all along the way.