Experience The Sounds of Business as CMW Founder & Artistic Director Sebastian Ruth chats with host Sy Yule about the Community MusicWorks programs and his motivation to start the organization.
Listen to Sebastian's interview here.
Listen up! Sebastian on the UR Business NetworkExperience The Sounds of Business as CMW Founder & Artistic Director Sebastian Ruth chats with host Sy Yule about the Community MusicWorks programs and his motivation to start the organization. Listen to Sebastian's interview here. CMW Awarded 2nd National Grant from ArtPlace AmericaHere at CMW we are celebrating the exciting news that we've been selected from among 1,270 applicants nationwide as one of 55 organizations to receive a major grant from ArtPlace America! This award will be CMW's second grant from the program, having received one in 2012 from a similarly large field of applicants. With support from ArtPlace America during 2014-15, Community MusicWorks will expand its work by transforming its headquarters into an outward facing public space with deep community ties, as well as developing sustained partnerships with two nonprofit housing developers, S.W.A.P. and Olneyville Housing Corporation, to activate a decentralized network of storefront art spaces in the low-income communities of South Providence, the West End, and Olneyville. This work will include lively musical happenings on the streets and sidewalks, storefronts, restaurants, and other underused community spaces, bringing people together, enlivening public spaces, and strengthening community ties. "We are honored to be included in this group of compelling projects nationwide. This award will have a catalytic impact on our ability to advance our longstanding work to bring people together through music, to make our communities stronger and more vital," said Community MusicWorks’ Founder and Artistic Director Sebastian Ruth. CMW will be participating with five other grantees nationwide to build a learning and leadership cohort of partners in the performing arts within the field of creative placemaking. This work is an extension of CMW's longstanding work to share its successful model of neighborhood-based music-making with other musicians and arts organizations across the country, through a two-year fellowship program, conferences, and regular institutes. “Investing in and supporting the arts have a profound impact on the social, physical, and economic futures of communities,” said ArtPlace Executive Director Jamie L. Bennett. “Projects like these demonstrate how imaginative and committed people are when it comes to enhancing their communities with creative interventions and thoughtful practices.” Providence Mayor Angel Taveras said of the award, "The City of Providence applauds Community MusicWorks for its longstanding commitment to the betterment of our city, engaging young people and their families in imagining a better future through the arts. We are pleased that the national funders represented by Art Place have recognized their meaningful work in our city for a second time." "Funding the arts is a good investment for our communities and our economy," said Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, an ex-officio member of the National Council on the Arts, the advisory body of the National Endowment for the Arts. "Congratulations to Community MusicWorks on winning this important support." About ArtPlace America ArtPlace America (ArtPlace) advances the field of creative placemaking, in which art and culture plays an explicit and central role in shaping communities’ social, physical, and economic futures. To date, ArtPlace has awarded $56.8 million through 189 grants to projects serving 122 communities across 42 states and the District of Columbia. ArtPlace is a collaboration among the Barr Foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies, The Ford Foundation, The James Irvine Foundation, The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, The Kresge Foundation, The McKnight Foundation, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, The William Penn Foundation, The Rockefeller Foundation, Rasmuson Foundation, The Surdna Foundation, and two anonymous donors. ArtPlace seeks advice and counsel from its close working relationships with the following federal agencies: the National Endowment for the Arts, the US Departments of Housing and Urban Development, Health and Human Services, Agriculture, Education, and Transportation, along with leadership from the White House Office of Management and Budget and the Domestic Policy Council. ArtPlace has additional partnership from six major financial institutions: Bank of America, Citi, Deutsche Bank, Chase, MetLife and Morgan Stanley. What is a Musician’s Role in Society?For the Spring issue of Music at Yale, Sebastian Ruth talks about his exploration of this question as Visiting Lecturer in Community Engagement at Yale School of Music, saying, "a musician's output is not for the sake of the art form, but for the sake of humanity." Read Sebastian's piece here. Daily Orchestra Program Update: End of Year!Things have been busy at the Daily Orchestra Program! From learning the story of Johann Sebastian Bach’s life (in three action-packed installments, complete with cliffhangers) to performing two concerts, our students have had no shortage of things to do and music to learn! As usual they have been embracing it all with enthusiasm, and as we draw closer and closer to the end of the school year the fruits of their hard work are starting to show themselves in exciting ways. We spent much of this semester preparing a full program of music, including four short pieces. The first-year Britten Orchestra worked hard to improve their bow holds and instrument posture and showed off their ease of playing their open strings with the boot-tapping favorite “Tuning Hoe Down.” Meanwhile, the second-year Beethoven Orchestra learned some new, more advanced left-hand finger patterns in order to play a pizzicato bass line for the D-jam Blues (our rendition of Duke Ellington’s C-jam Blues). This meant that the Beethovens actually filled in the role Adrienne Taylor played for them last year, while the Brittens took over for the Beethovens. We also added to the program a cute song referencing the Grimm’s Fairy Tale “The Elves and the Shoemaker,” and last but not least the classic theme from the William Tell Overture by Rossini. We were lucky enough to have two opportunities to perform our repertoire. On the last day before spring break we turned our room at Federal Hill House into an auditorium and presented to families and staff members a full half-hour of music, complete with solo performances! There were feelings of pride and happiness emanating from all corners of the room, and we sent everyone off for spring break feeling victorious! After spring break we returned to perform the same program again (just like a professional orchestra might do!) at a special event for the Olneyville Housing Corporation. Our students were calm and poised in the face of flashing cameras and chatting event-goers, and their families, anxious not to miss a single moment of the performance, crowded the stage and filled the air with support and cheers after each number. Now we are in the final stretch to the end of the year, and we are working on some exciting projects. We’re also learning about the life of Ludwig van Beethoven, while we learn to sing and play his famous melody Ode to Joy. — Lisa Barksdale In Memoriam: Maxine GreeneMaxine Greene has died. My interactions with her set me on the course I am on, and the career I have had. In 1995 I heard Maxine speak at the Coalition of Essential Schools Fall Forum, and her fresh approach to articulating the intersection of arts, education, and social change provided a huge opening in my thinking. Releasing the Imagination was published that year, and it became a bible for me in my academic work, and in forming ideas for what became Community MusicWorks. Maxine was an embodiment of the living philosopher—her ideas weren’t static, but lived, examined, reviewed, discussed. And, unlike some brilliant thinkers, Maxine was truly present and human—not lost in ideas only. It was the latter quality, the familiar Jewish Brooklynite that led me to introduce her to my grandmother over dinner at “Busby’s” in Maxine’s neighborhood—two women, born in the ‘teens, who embodied the culture from which they came, but also transcended the times. Both boldly moved through gender barriers and became women leaders—in Maxine’s case by breaking into the world of professional academic philosophers, and in Grandma’s case by moving to Manhattan and living the last chapter of her life as a city girl, working, going to school, taking in the cultural life and more. (For years afterward, Maxine would try to remember how we had first met…”was it your grandmother who introduced us?” she would ask.) What an honor when Maxine accepted my invitation to come to Providence to speak at a conference we held here, whose purpose was to further build the community of artists and educators who were applying her ideas, albeit with baby steps by that point, in 2000. Then again, in 2008, when I could proudly tell Maxine that we had built the “community of educators committed to emancipatory pedagogy, particularly in the domain of the arts.” (from “Texts and Margins,” in Releasing the Imagination.)
And then there was Maxine’s living room, the venue for so many magical discussions, visits, and salons, including one in which our quartet performed. Maxine would describe for years after, the transformation she felt, looking at the trees in the park across Fifth Avenue from apartment 3C, as they had never appeared before—how the music transformed even her view of daily life. How many people, devotees, students, august leaders, sat in that living room? I remember talking with Maxine on many occasions about Paolo Freire, whose work is another bedrock inspiration for CMW and countless other educational initiatives. “Yes, I loved Paolo. I remember the birthday party I threw for him…” For Maxine it was like that. Friendship, love, humility—never aware of her own stature as among the pantheon of gods who inspire us. It’s always an unfinished conversation. She taught us that. It’s a community in the making, a process of always becoming, never arriving. It’s never static, and we should fear someone who says it is. It’s that quality that makes her death devastating. Of course, at 96, we can say it was a full life, well lived. But, I have never felt finished as her student. The world is emptier without being able to stop by and ask what she thinks of the latest news, the newest angle on the problems of education, of arts, of encouraging young people to imagine. Thank you, Maxine, for a lifetime of inspiration. We’ll carry on for you, and in that honor you, with great love. – Sebastian Ruth Read the transcript of Maxine Greene's 2008 talk at the Imagining Art + Social Change conference here. Watch the video of Sebastian's interview of Maxine Greene for the 2011 Music & Civil Society symposium here. Rally for Peace in the West EndYesterday afternoon, several CMW students who are also students at TAPA (Trinity Academy for the Performing Arts) helped organize and participated in a neighborhood rally for peace, held at the Armory. They also performed on bucket band, alongside the Extraordinary Rendition Band and other community members. A Garden of CellistsCMW Symphony in RehearsalThe CMW Symphony was in fine form last night, rehearsing the CMW Round/Michael Nyman mash up for the year end Gala performance on May 27 at the Roger Williams Casino. We had all the parts together for the first time last night, and our fearless leader, Chase, worked with us on hearing all the parts together, making a more gritty sound together, and cutting off together. (Theme of the rehearsal: TOGETHER!) Join us! Year End Gala Student Performance Tuesday, May 27 at 6 pm Roger Williams Park Casino, Providence CMW receives MAP Fund AwardCommunity MusicWorks has received funding from a nationally competitive performance fund, the MAP Fund, a program of Creative Capital primarily supported by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, with additional support by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The project, one of 39 chosen from over 900 submissions, will support a production in the late fall or winter. Community MusicWorks is commissioning composer Ken Ueno to create a site-specific work for the Community MusicWorks Players at the RISD Museum in Providence to coincide with the re-dedication of the ten-foot Dainichi Buddha housed there. Encompassing three live performances by Ueno and Community MusicWorks Players and a month-long sound installation in the museum, the project will engage diverse urban communities in contemporary music and ancient Asian art. Entitled Four Contemplations, the work takes as its subject the RISD Museum's ancient Dainichi Buddha, and is intended for listeners to gain a new and personal relationship to concert music through their experience with the Buddha and Ueno’s ethereal music. Ueno's compositional approach frequently involves extra-musical modeling, including using images, cultural phenomena, or architecture as the basis for structural decisions, somewhat analogous to the use of architectural proportions in Renaissance music. For this project, Ueno will draw upon the foundations of mindfulness in Buddhist theology. The evening-length work for 12 CMW musicians will unfold in multiple movements – solos, duos, trios, and quartets – some accompanied by throat singer (Ueno). This Sunday: The Fred Kelley Scholarship ConcertDear Friends, We invite you to celebrate the memory of a great friend and to support the Fred Kelley Scholarship Fund. Join us this Sunday, May 2 at 2 pm at the RISD Museum Grand Gallery for a performance by the Donegal String Quartet, featuring CMW Players EmmaLee Holmes-Hicks, Ealaín McMullin, Jesse Holstein and special guest Heath Marlow. Fred Kelley, a CMW supporter who loved chamber music, passed away after a brief illness in 2007. Fred’s son, Mike, is a member of the ensemble in residence for the Apple Hill Center for Chamber Music in Nelson, New Hampshire. Apple Hill’s central mission is to bring people of diverse backgrounds and cultures together to study and perform chamber music together through their Playing for Peace program. It seemed a fitting tribute to form the Fred Kelley Scholarship Fund to honor his memory. The Community MusicWorks Fred Kelley Scholarship helps to send CMW students to Apple Hill to study chamber music with friends from all over the world. Last year, the Fund was able to send six students to Apple Hill in August. This year, we have the largest number of applicants to date. With tuition running at $1,700 per student to attend the ten-day chamber music workshop, the Scholarship Fund needs your support. 100% of your tax-exempt donation will go to sending a CMW student to Apple Hill this summer. No donation is too small (or too big!). We hope to see you there! Jesse, EmmaLee, Heath and Ealaín The Annual Fred Kelley Scholarship Concert featuring The Donegal String Quartet performing the works of Haydn, Beethoven, and Cole Porter EmmaLee Holmes-Hicks and Ealaín McMullin, violins Jesse Holstein, viola Heath Marlow, cello Sunday, May 4 at 2:00 pm RISD Museum Grand Gallery 224 Benefit St, Providence, RI Sunday offers free admission to the museum and free street parking. |