The University of Chicago’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1892

Chicago Maroon

The University of Chicago’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1892

Chicago Maroon

The University of Chicago’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1892

Chicago Maroon

Kucharik’s Cunning Folk Transcends Genre

“My songwriting probably wouldn’t have happened if I hadn’t studied and written poetry…”
The+cover+of+Amy+Kuchariks+new+album%2C+Cunning+Folk.
Amy Kucharik
The cover of Amy Kucharik’s new album, Cunning Folk.

Depending on who you ask, the ukulele is an instrument that people tend to most readily associate with Hawaii, Eddie Vedder, or the “Lava” song. Amy Kucharik’s music, however, shows that the ukelele also has an important place in the blues and swing dance scene—and beyond.

Cunning Folk is the first full-length album to come from Kucharik, a Boston-based singer-songwriter. Kucharik—who has an MFA in poetry, makes all of her album art, and is a longtime swing dancer—finds that all the art forms she loves unite when she produces an album.

“My songwriting probably wouldn’t have happened if I hadn’t studied and written poetry,” Kucharik said. “Dancing and DJing blues and swing [also] got me interested in certain patterns a song could take, and [in] certain rhythms and sounds.”

Kucharik says that she often thinks about what kind of musical elements dancers will like when she composes a song, especially since a community of dancers often perform at her Boston shows. For her, dancing and music-making are firmly connected; she even sees parallels between the lead-follow dynamic in partnered dancing and directing a band.

Before Cunning Folk, Kucharik put out an EP called “Dance Crush Blues” that she created specifically for blues and swing dancers. Back then, the instrumentation was simpler: the band was a five-piece jazz ensemble and the ukulele was only featured on one of the songs, “Damn Ukulele Girl.”

For Cunning Folk, Kucharik expanded the scope of her composition, incorporating both the cello and violin to create a more diverse sound. The ways in which sources have shaped her music are equally diverse: the 1920s–1930s blues women inspired her lyrics, the songwriter Meschiya Lake influenced the New Orleans horn sections in her songs, and various types of world music informed her songwriting. And it doesn’t look like she is going to stop there.

“The next project will be even more diverse,” Kucharik said. “I’m not really sure what it’s going to sound like yet, but some of the sounds are less jazz-based. There’s also going to be pop and country.”

Regarding the sound of her new songs, Kucharik said that she has been thinking about how a non-dancing audience will react to her songs. “While I never want to lose that connection to the partner dance world, I want to also reach a broader audience and explore a wider range of musical styles and moods.”

Ultimately, Kucharik said that “it is more about the songs than it is about the instrument.” In a similar way, she thinks that genres are more helpful in selling records than they are for defining what a piece of music sounds like.

When listening to Cunning Folk, you will certainly hear the ukulele in a different light. Beyond that, you will hear elements of folklore, heartbreak, a sense of self-reliance, and most irresistibly of all, rhythms that urge you to move your feet.

Kucharik will be performing at Uncommon Ground next Wednesday with Keith Burman and Jim Swayzee. 7–9 p.m., $5.

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