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Arts duo raises ‘Brave Voice’

Their hands are both on a keyboard.

Kelley Hunt, coming from a background in rhythm and blues music, has hers on a piano keyboard. Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg, a poet, has her hands on a computer keyboard.

They meet each other in the middle to write songs.

“I’m a musical poet,” Mirriam-Goldberg says. “She’s a pretty poetic musician. This seemed natural.”

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Blues singer-songwriter Kelley Hunt, left, and Lawrence poet Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg have teamed up to co-write poetry and songs.

Their songwriting relationship started in 2004, when they collaborated to write one song for “Dangerous Curves,” an event at the Lawrence Arts Center that explored issues relating to breast cancer.

Since then, they get together about once a month to write songs.

“It’s worked really well,” Hunt says. “Caryn has a completely different perspective as a writer. I’m coming at this from a song form, but she’s used to writing poetry and novels and short stories. It’s really refreshing to me, and energizing. We clicked right off the bat.”

They’ve written about a dozen songs together. Hunt performed one of them, “You Gotta Be the Vessel,” on National Public Radio’s “A Prairie Home Companion” last year, and she performed another for a recent interview and performance she recorded for XM Satellite Radio.

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Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg reads her poem "The Wishing Tree Talks"

Hunt, who also writes solo and with professional music writers, plans on using several of the collaborative songs on the album she’ll record next year.

“In a way, it’s stimulating,” Mirriam-Goldberg says. “When you create something, there’s always a moment when you have no idea what you’re doing, and you just jump. This is the same way, but you’re holding someone else’s hand when you jump.”

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