The Universal Connections of Music and Fulbright
In my never ending pursuit of becoming the best musician I can possibly be, Fulbright aided me in successfully taking my next step. In the last couple of months I have become friends with people from all over the world, including the US, Korea, New-Zealand, Japan, Mexico, Chile, Costa Rica, Trinidad and Tobago and Paraguay. People in and out of the music field, searching for knowledge, personal growth, global connection and fulfilment. As much as I had to fight to get to this point in my life, it is nothing in comparison to the amount of purpose and fulfilment I currently feel. Yet, with the current health crisis, the collapsing economy and the uncertain future that a lot of us – and in particular fellow musicians – face, I want to zoom in on the one thing that has connected us all. The love for doing what we do and the urge to collaborate, in whatever way we can, is something that I believe will help us overcome anything.
Collaborating in the Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University
As a musician, collaboration is a vital part of your education and further development. However, it was only at the Jacobs School of Music that I was assigned a fixed amount of hours to accompany fellow students. Having to prepare all this music in addition to the solo repertoire – often times very close to the concert deadline – was often very stressful, but also made me a better reader, communicator and musician overall. I collaborated numerous times with the clarinet studio, but I also had the pleasure of working with two exquisite singers and a versatile guitarist. Those projects resulted in some pretty cool concerts that included masters recitals, but also a fully original concert program with classical and musical theatre repertoire.
Were it not for Covid-19, we would have continued collaborating on stage and in the recording studio, but nonetheless we made some good memories along the way and continue to stay in touch. Below are two videos with wonderful musicians I could share the stage with.
Collaborating outside of the Jacobs School of Music
However busy we constantly were, that did not mean we restricted our performances to school related projects only. In February 2020, I was lucky enough to attend a Fulbright Enriching Seminar in Nashville, focusing on Digital Technology and the Future of the Music Industry. Apart from the wildly interesting information, businesses, events and seminars we attended, I got the opportunity to connect with 136 fellow Fulbrighters form 68 countries. The four exhausting, but truly fulfilling days, came to an end with an open mic event where any one who wanted to share music got on stage. Professional musicians and amateurs shared the stage, music and laughter filled the room, and even though country music is not at all within my comfort zone, I was persuaded by an Australian composer to perform “Sweet Home Alabama”. Having over a hundred people sing along this classic in such a setting is truly one of the greatest feelings a musician can experience.
With Azariah Felton during the open mic. Picture by S. Bird
And of course, the moment the pandemic hit and everything went into lockdown, we worked on new material and ways to get music out there. Together with my roommate and one of my closest friends here in the US, I worked on Béla Kovács A la Flamenco. A wonderfully Spanish influenced piece, originally composed for clarinet solo as a homagehommage to the Spanish composer Manuel de Falla. This will be part of our portfolio once we finish completing a new concert program and music can be performed for live audiences again.
The connections through music and Fulbright
Fulbright, just as music, provides a community. A collection of similar spirited people, ambitious and open-minded, trying to connect and better the world in whatever way they can. It was not until I came to the US that I fully realized what an incredible resource Fulbright is, how well it is known, how much it means to be a part of this group and how it provides human connection, much like music. A big thank you to all the people who make this program happen, it truly changes lives.
Commissioned by Fulbright
The featured image is a group picture of all the Fulbrighters present in Nashville. Photographer unknown