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Magpie's Greg Artzner and
Terry Leonino: singing of the unsung
BY MITCHELL TROPIN
Listening
to Greg Artzner and Terry Leonino is like heading through
a familiar neighborhood. As you walk, you discover a beautiful
house that somehow you never noticed before. Or you encounter
someone with a fascinating story that you hear for the first
time.
Artzner and Leonino, better known as Magpie, have been performing
overlooked songs for 30 years, providing audiences unexpected
treats. Similarly, their songs highlight people whose accomplishments
have been overlooked, again giving an audience something new
to enjoy.
An illustration of Magpie's approach to music is the duo's
25th anniversary CD. They avoided the usual greatest hits
or "best of" album, and instead created a collection
that honors Ella Baker, an overlooked hero of the civil rights
moment, and an organizer of the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.
The CD's title song, "Give Light," is written by
Artzner with Baker's words as lyrics.
"I knew of Ella Baker from my youth in the '60s, when
my father worked for the Urban League and my family was involved
in the movement," Artzner says. "We learned more
about her over the years as we learned more of the details
of the history of the movement."
Artzner and Leonino came across a poster of Baker in Philadelphia.
Underneath her face was a quote: "Give light and people
will find the way."
"We just knew there was a song there," Artzner
says.
A few years back, Magpie discovered a forgotten song that
Pete Seeger had written in the 1950s about Sacco and Vanzetti,
Italian immigrants falsely executed for murder. Seeger wrote
the song based on Sacco's poignant prison cell letters to
his son. Decades later, Magpie performed the song at a festival.
After they played, Seeger came up to them, saying, "That's
my song. I wrote that song 30 years ago." They noticed
there were tears on Seeger's cheeks.
Magpie chooses songs for an album according to which songs
the couple has available and wants to use at the time.
"If
there's a song that has not received proper attention, that's
a plus for using it," Artzner says.
Leonino and Artzner are "researchers and archivists,"
Leonino says. "As musical historians, we look for the
esoteric and look for things people forget about, and then
present them."
Even their latest CD, Last Month of the Year, a combination
Christmas-Hannukah-Kwanzaa-winter solstice album, contains
something unexpected: a rare Hannukah song written by Woody
Guthrie.
"We were going through an old copy of Sing Out!
Magazine from the fall of 1967," Artzner says. "It
was published right after Woody died, and it was supposed
to have been an obituary issue for him. But instead there
was an article about how [Folkways Records founder] Moses
Asch challenged Guthrie to write a Hannukah song. We took
the song right from the magazine."
Sitting in Mark's Kitchen, while eating steamed dumplings
and sautéed vegetables, the duo talked about their
three decades in music and how their musical and personal
union started in their own home state of Ohio. Leonino is
a native of Akron and Cuyahoga Falls, where her father worked
for the Firestone Rubber Co. as a shop steward.
"As a union man, my father believed you were no good
unless you worked with your hands. He was working class all
the way," Leonino says.
Artzner grew up in Canton, a steel town, where his father
took a job with the Urban League.
"I played my first gig at the age of 11, performing
Blowing in the Wind' for a jobs rally that the Urban
League was sponsoring," he says. "Here was this
11-year-old white kid playing for all the black folks in Canton."
Artzner had dreams of becoming either a professional musician
or an actor. But it wasn't until he met Leonino that he was
convinced he could succeed as a performer.
"After meeting Terry, I found the mutual support I needed
to really make a career in music possible," he says.
Their paths first crossed in the summer of 1973, when Leonino
was working her way through Kent State University by playing
music. Artzner was a townie, who performed at a local pub.
One evening, while Greg was on a break, Terry got on stage
and started playing.
"She was trying to steal my gig," Artzner says.
"She even stacked the audience with her friends."
After the incident, she approached the young guitarist, and
they have been a couple ever sincemarried for over two
decades.
The name Magpie comes from the time Artzner and Leonino performed
in a trio with bassist Mark Cozy, who had long, curly black
hair. One day the three musicians were rehearsing in their
apartment kitchen. A close friend walked in and noticed Cozy's
thick black ringlets cascading down to his shoulder. The friend
commented, "You know, Mark, you look like Farmer Cozy's
banjo-playing magpie." Since the folk group needed a
name, Magpie stuck.
Artzner and Leonino's career, however, did not take off until
they traveled from Ohio to visit the Smithsonian Folk Life
Festival, held each summer on the National Mall in Washington.
While touring the mall, the duo decided to earn some money
by "busking"playing for the crowds. Their
singing caught the attention of Patty Glazer, daughter of
"Labor's Troubadour" Joe Glazer. Patty approached
them and offered to introduce them to her father.
After hearing Magpie perform, Glazer, a musician and former
labor advisor to the U.S. Information Agency, arranged for
the duo to do a State Department tour of Mexico. He later
signed them to his record label, Collector Records. Magpie's
first album was released in 1974. They have continued a close
relationship with Glazer, performing on over two dozen of
his albums.
Working with Glazer was something specialespecially
for Leonino, who grew up listening to Glazer's labor songs.
"My father had all of Joe's albums and actually knew
him very well, since they were both with the United Rubber
Workers," Leonino says. "I was validated in my father's
eyes when I started singing with Joe Glazer."
A few years later, another trip produced a big change in
Magpie's lives. The duo would often travel to Berkeley Springs.
W.Va., to perform. The couple would stay with David Eisner,
who had just opened the original House of Musical Traditions
(HMT) there.
Artzner told Eisner that he would attract more business with
a store in Takoma Park. Eisner agreed to open a branch of
HMT if Artzner and Leonino would be the mana-gers. A deal
was struck, and the couple found themselves in Takoma Park,
where they have been residents for 25 years.
Artzner and Leonino's skills as historians and archivists
led them recently to a project that combines music and drama.
The duo was approached by U.S. Park Rangers at Harper's Ferry
(W.Va.) National Park, the site of abolitionist John Brown's
raid. The park was planning to commemorate him with a celebration
called John Brown 2000, and the rangers asked Magpie to create
some music for the event. Artzner saw a rare chance to do
a dramatic performance that honored Brown.
"I thought, This could be my vehicle for getting
back on the boards by doing a one-man play,'" he says.
Artzner considered creating a play based on Brown's speaking
to reporters from his jail cell. An extended monologue, it
would be similar to Hal Holbrook's Mark Twain Tonight.
But Leonino spoke up, asking, "Hey, what about me?"
Their theme then became clear: they would create a play that
reflected the relationship between John Brown and his wife,
Mary, who also was an active participant in the abolitionist
movement, continuing Brown's work long after his death.
"We decided we had to make a conscious decision to commit
to this project," Leonino says.
"We had been musicians for 25 years and suddenly we
were going to shift gears," Artzner says.
They began collecting documents, spending three years researching
the lives of John and Mary Brown. Traveling across the country
to sites where Brown lived, the couple collected letters and
books, reading them to each other as they drove for hours.
Finding quotes from John Brown was not difficult. His letters
had been collected, edited, and published in several books.
Finding quotes from Mary proved more difficult. But they persisted,
finding interviews with Mary's children and stepchildren,
and eventually, they found enough of her writing to fashion
it into dialogue. In the process, Leonino and Artzner developed
a deep appreciation for Mary Brown.
"We found a remarkable person almost completely unknown
in American history. Here was a woman who lived almost entirely
in the shadow of her famous husband, but whose dedication
and sacrifice to the cause of abolition was every bit as great
as his, and perhaps even more so. Very few people in this
country even know Brown had a wife, let alone what kind of
person she was. We immediately were drawn into a sort of a
mission' to tell her untold story," Artzner says.
After writing the play, Artzner and Leonino created a song
cycle as a companion to the drama.
"The Harper's Ferry rangers suggested we add music,
asking, Hey, aren't you guys musicians?'" Artzner
says.
The song cycle includes original compositions by Artzner
and Leonino as well songs by Si Kahn, Reggie and Kim Harris,
and Woody Guthrie.
The John and Mary Brown project, entitled Spirit of the
Sword, premiered in 2000, featuring Artzner as Brown and
Terry as Mary Brown. The play was presented at the Old Opera
House in Charles Town, across the street from the old courthouse
where John Brown was tried and convicted in 1859.
Artzner and Leonino continue to perform Spirit of the
Sword in locations all across the country. They also are
using the drama-music project as a vehicle to discuss racial
issues. The play was presented in Benton Harbor, Mich., the
scene of recent racial strife.
"We want to make the connection between violence and
non-violence, and correct the misimpression that John Brown
was an unmitigated terrorist," Artzner says.
They hope to stage the production in Takoma Park someday
One of Leonino's and Artzner's fondest memories are of recording
their Ella Baker song, "Give Light," with Pete Seeger
in New York. After the song was completed, Seeger sat down
and pulled out a sheet of blank paper. Using the back of his
banjo as a desk, Seeger started writing down the lyrics to
the duo's song they had just finished. He looked up and said
he was going to teach the song to others.
In an acknowledgement of Magpie's continuing contributions
to folk music and human rights, Seeger said: "How lucky
I am to have lived to see and hear more links in the chain."
Last July, the couple became recipients of a musical archivist's
dreama substantial portion of Joe Glazer's massive collection
of music memorabilia and items, including virtually every
issue of Broadside and Sing Out!, the Bibles
of folk music. It is quite an honor considering the fact that
Glazer, who is retiring, plans to donate the rest of his collection
to the Library of Congress, which is creating a wing in his
honor.
In September, Artzner and Leonino will be touring England,
Wales, and Scotland. They also continue to perform with longtime
friends, Kim and Reggie Harris, with whom they have appeared
at many Phil Ochs' song nights. Magpie's interest in the environment
continues as well. They are overseeing production of a compilation
album of songs about Rachel Carson, performed by various artists.
The CD is a project of Musicians United for Sustaining the
Environment.
Looking back at their 30 years of performing, Artzner and
Leonino see Seeger's praise a reminder to them to "remember
our connection to the continuum," as Leonino puts it.
"What is really important for us is what we leave behind,
not about becoming famous."
To find out more about Magpie's concert
dates and recordings, visit www.magpiemusic.com.
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