inTUNE: Stories of Connection through Music
inTUNE explores how music connects, heals, and empowers — from private studios to correctional facilities.
inTUNE: Stories of Connection through Music
River of Life: Marc Recor on Incarceration, Music and Transformation
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IIn this episode of inTUNE: Stories of Connection Through Music, Dr. Melissa Martiros sits down with Marc Recor, a Worcester County House of Correction alumnus and opporTUNEity participant, for a conversation about transformation, resilience, and the power of music during incarceration.
Marc shares his lifelong connection to music — from being the family DJ at age seven to teaching himself guitar at 18 and rediscovering his passion inside the Worcester County Jail. Through opporTUNEity's songwriting program, he wrote and performed original songs including "Turtle Suit" and "On My Way," describing how the program gave him "freedom of mind" in a restrictive environment and helped him reclaim control over his own growth and identity.
Marc reflects on what it means to "do your time" rather than let time do you — using the metaphor of being pulled out of "the river of life" and placed on the banks, where incarceration became an opportunity to slow down, reflect, and change direction. He discusses the role music played in his mental health, the camaraderie it built, and how songwriting gave him a sense of accomplishment that continues to shape his life today.
Now reunited with his family, attending AA meetings, and writing and playing music daily, Marc offers advice to those currently incarcerated: take the step, don't be scared, and take advantage of programs that help you grow — because you have everything to gain and nothing to lose.
Episode Summary A firsthand account of how music, accountability, and creative expression can transform incarceration into a stepping stone toward meaningful change.
Key Themes
- Music as mental health and emotional processing
- "Doing your time" versus letting time do you
- Songwriting as identity reclamation and accomplishment
- Breaking stereotypes about incarcerated individuals
- The role of dignity-centered programming in reducing recidivism
The Pulse Topic: Building credible teaching teams in correctional spaces
In correctional settings, what often goes missing is the opportunity to reflect, create, and be heard without judgment. Songwriting changes that — but only when the space is held by people who show up prepared and grounded.
Marc described how opporTUNEity's teachers didn't talk at or down to participants. They read the room, spoke their language, and showed up with mutual respect. When someone writes a song inside, they're organizing memory, naming emotion, and asserting identity in a system designed to reduce people to numbers.
Music Featured
All music was written, performed, or produced by opporTUNEity students.
"Nowhere Right Now" — Lyrics by J. Commey, S. Oppong, T. Boutwell-Campbell, Vocals recorded by M. Recor and J.W. Cormier produced by OpporTUNEity Records LLC.
“5-Minute Beat (Challenge)” — Zae. Main Jail Beatmaking & Production (Spring 2025); Teaching Artists: Dan Thomas and Dan DeCristofaro
"Turtle Suit" — Lyrics by Marc Recor, Teaching Artists: Dan Thomas, Paul Boisvert
"On the Bone" —Lyrics by Marc Recor, Teaching Artists: Dan Thomas, Paul Boisvert
"Changing My Ways" —Lyrics by Marc Recor, Teaching Artists: Dan Thomas, Paul Boisvert
“Wish I May” — WCHA Worcester County Housing Authority (2021)
Get in Touch
Submit questions or topics for future episodes at
https://opporTUNEitymusic.org/intune
Episode produced and edited by Angela Senicz.
Learn more about our programs, stories, and community at https://opporTUNEitymusic.org