About Me: Douglas Cooke
doug@richardandmimi.com


Me and my cat, Muddy
Good Evening. I am the creator of the Richard & Mimi Fariña Website. People often ask me how I became interested in Richard & Mimi, so here's the whole story:

The Whole Story
I grew up in the 1980s during the rise of MTV and soulless synthesizer music and awful bands like Def Leppard and Journey. But back then, there were still rock stations that played mostly sixties and seventies music like The Doors, The Who, and Led Zeppelin. This made it easy for me to reject the music of my own generation and turn to the glories of the past. My first favorite bands were the Yardbirds, the Doors, and Cream; then the Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Who, John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, Rory Gallagher, Janis Joplin, The Byrds, Crosby, Stills & Nash, Grateful Dead, and so many others.

But it wasn't until the nineties, during my first year at University of Rochester, that I started to explore folk music. I had a mysterious urge to hear "Leaving on a Jet Plane," so I went out and bought a used Peter, Paul & Mary LP. Spellbound by the tranquility of their music and the subtlety of their moods, I drifted more and more toward folk music. I started with the more well-known artists like Baez and Dylan, and I've been digging further and further folkward ever since.

How I discovered Richard & Mimi Fariña
I first read about Richard & Mimi in Jacques Vassal's book, Electric Children: Roots and Branches of Modern Folkrock. I heard them for the first time when I bought the Rhino sampler, Troubadours of the Folk Era, Volume One, which included "Reno, Nevada." I was instantly hooked after hearing that song and eagerly sought out more of their music. Soon there was a party. But it wasn't until I read David Hajdu's book, Positively 4th Street, that I was inspired to create a website devoted to letting people know more about Richard and Mimi Fariña.

Since that time, a basic fan page has evolved into an on-going research project devoted to gathering and preserving information about Richard and Mimi, both as a duo and in their individual careers. Many thanks to all the people who have written to me to tell me about their memories of Richard and Mimi and the impact they had on their lives. I've chatted with Fariña fans from all over the world, including England, Ireland, Australia, Mexico, France, Italy, and Israel! If you'd like to join the online discussion group, send a blank e-mail to club47-subscribe@topica.com (to contact me individually, write to doug@richardandmimi.com).

Some other favorites...

Favorite Groups:
Ian & Sylvia
Simon & Garfunkel
Pentangle
Peter, Paul & Mary
The Byrds
Crosby, Stills & Nash
Strawberry Alarm Clock

Favorite Songwriters:
Joni Mitchell
Bob Dylan
Paul Simon
Gordon Lightfoot
Hunter-Garcia
David Crosby
Victor Jara

Favorite Female Vocalists:
Judy Collins
Joan Baez
Sandy Denny
Jaqui McShee
Janis Joplin

Favorite Male Vocalists:
Tim Hardin
Lennon & McCartney
Neil Young
Jesse Colin Young
Tim Buckley
Ian Tyson

Favorite Guitarists:
Davy Graham
John Renbourn
Bert Jansch
Richard Dyer-Bennett
Elizabeth Cotten
Mississippi John Hurt
Bruce Langhorne
Leo Kottke

Great Albums by Infrequently Recorded Artists:
Blues Run the Game - Jackson C. Frank, 1965
Woman Blue - Judy Roderick, 1965
Rainy Day Raga - Peter Walker, 1966
Morning Song - Jackie Washington, 1967
Penny's Arcade - Penny Nichols, 1968
Children of the Sun - Sallyangie, 1969
Parallelograms - Linda Perhacs, 1970
Just Another Diamond Day - Vashti Bunyan, 1970
Martine Habib - Martine Habib, 1973

Some of my favorite novels:
Lord Jim, by Joseph Conrad
Howards End, by E.M. Forster
The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald
To the Lighthouse, by Virginia Woolf
The Sound and the Fury, by William Faulkner
Journey to the East, by Herman Hesse
The Lost Steps, by Alejo Carpentier
Fortunate Pilgrim, by Mario Puzo
Pale Fire, by Vladimir Nabokov
Atonement, by Ian McEwan

Some favorite movies:
Edipo Re - Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1967
The Godfather 1 & 2 - Francis Ford Coppola, 1972-74
Aguirre: The Wrath of God - Werner Herzog, 1972
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest - Milos Foreman, 1975
The Emerald Forest - John Boorman, 1985
Veronico Cruz (La deuda interna) - Miguel Pereira, 1987
Dazed & Confused - Richard Linklater, 1993
The Ice Storm - Ang Lee, 1997
Almost Famous - Cameron Crowe, 2000

Favorite Artists:
Jim Steranko
Gil Kane
Jack Kirby
Felipe Dávalos
Luis Garay
Maurice Pommier
Gerald McDermott
Some of my Other Interests:
Languages & linguistics
(Spanish, French, Italian, Latin, Greek, Sanskrit, Hebrew)
Mythology & religion
Comic book art & illustrated books
Environmentalism
Cats
Native Americans


My library of folk-music-related books:
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/folkfan

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