videos In the brush strokes of a single day, Evening Will Come (© 2023 by Maria Clymer Kurtz) hauntingly paints the love of a lifetime while imagining its loss. Cinematographer/director: Mark Farmwald A Clymer & Kurtz performance of “What If You Knew” (© 2023 by Maria and Christopher Clymer Kurtz, from What If You Knew) at the 2023 Sing Me High Music Festival Clymer & Kurtz at Park View Mennonite Church on the morning of Christmas Eve share three verses of Mary Gauthier’s “Mercy Now” with a “Silent Night” interlude A Clymer & Kurtz desk-front performance of “Nothing You Can Do” (© 2023 by Christopher Clymer Kurtz, from What If You Knew) for the 2023 NPR Music Tiny Desk Contest “Original You” (©℗ 2022 by Christopher and Maria Clymer Kurtz, from Keep Me Around) as depicted by the definitely original YouTuber Jennifer Murch (milkslinger.com) “Shadows in an Empty Room” is featured on Coffee & Cake ©℗ 2021 “Worth the Climb” is featured on Coffee & Cake ©℗ 2021 “We’re Better Found” is featured on Coffee & Cake ©℗ 2021 “Taken With You” is featured on Coffee & Cake ©℗ 2021 A Clymer & Kurtz home studio performance of three songs for the Shenandoah Valley Bach Festival’s 2021 “Spring Into Bach” event: “Sixty Fifty-Five” and “Again” (at 3:17) are on the Clymer & Kurtz album Here Comes the Moon, and “Simple Things” (at 7:02) is included on the 2019 Clymer & Kurtz EP. ©℗2019-2021 Clymer & Kurtz perform “She Got Him” (©℗ 2015 by Christopher and Maria Clymer Kurtz, from Here Comes the Moon) during a Songwriters in the Round that also featured Trent Wagler (The Steel Wheels) and Devon Sproule in Harrisonburg, VA. The February 13, 2020 event was hosted by the EMU Music Department and Composer Collective An at-home Clymer & Kurtz performance of “Everybody’s Looking,” which is featured on their album Here Comes the Moon. “Everybody’s Looking” ©℗ 2016/20 by Christopher Clymer Kurtz As performed for the memorial service of a friend who died much too young. “Brighter” is a Clymer & Kurtz 2020 rewrite of a 2002 original and is featured on the album Here Comes the Moon. ©℗ 2020 by Christopher and Maria Clymer Kurtz In tribute to the folk-rock icon Gordon Lightfoot, “Song for a Winter’s Night” from a 2020 Clymer & Kurtz virtual mini-concert “What Do You Get” ©℗ 2001 by Christopher Kurtz, from the Clymer & Kurtz EP. Video by Andy Sams for Earth Day Every Day