Adrienne Thompson
NEWLY-ESTABLISHED EQUITY AND DIVERSITY FELLOWSHIP,
CHICAGO MUSICAL PATHWAYS INITIATIVE,
RECIPIENT OF THE NATION’S LARGEST AND MOST AMBITIOUS “PATHWAYS” MELLON FOUNDATION GRANT TO DATE,
TRUMPETS
NEW LEADER, CHICAGO AREA NATIVE & EDUCATION VETERAN
ADRIENNE THOMPSON
ADRIENNE THOMPSON
CMPI
Steering Team – Merit School of Music, Chicago Youth Symphony
Orchestras, Chicago High School for the Arts, Chicago Sinfonietta, The
Negaunee Music Institute at the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra, DePaul University School of Music, and Ravinia Festival –
seek to discover and nurture promising young musicians from
traditionally underrepresented communities
CHICAGO (January 22, 2019) –
Chicago Musical Pathways Initiative
(CMPI),
the newly-established training program for talented student musicians
from traditionally underrepresented communities, is proud to announce
that music education veteran
Adrienne Thompson will lead the Initiative as its founding Project Director.
CMPI,
a
multi-organization collaborative effort, was established last fall with
an extraordinary $3.5 million grant from The Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation, which will be used to increase diversity
in the classical music field. Implementation of the Initiative is
co-led here by
Merit School of Music, a nationally accredited music school based
in Chicago’s West Loop and working across the city to help young people
of all backgrounds achieve lifelong success through music, and the
Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestras (CYSO), an organization that
has provided top-level orchestral programming for students from across
the Chicago region for more than 70 years.
A native
Chicagoan, Thompson returns to the Midwest from the Atlanta Symphony
Orchestra’s acclaimed Talent Development Program, which supports Latinx
and African American students who want to pursue
careers in classical music. Prior to her leadership role at the Atlanta
Symphony, for twenty years, Thompson was a high school-level orchestra
director at a primarily African American school in Georgia where she
raised the level of the student musicians from
Level 3 to Level 6 over a five-year period. Thompson received a degree
in flute performance from Chicago’s Sherwood Conservatory of Music (now
part of Columbia College Chicago) and has an MBA from Indiana
University. In 1968, as an eighth grader, Thompson
became one of the first African Americans to attend Mount Greenwood
Elementary School, known as the “Mount Greenwood 7.”
“I am
excited to return to the city that sparked my intense personal passion
for classical music. I can’t wait to get started helping young Chicago
musicians acquire the musical and life skills
that will allow them to realize their dreams,” says Thompson.
Thompson will work with
Chicago Musical Pathways Initiative founding partner organizations to identify and collectively develop exceptionally
promising young musicians from traditionally underrepresented communities in the greater Chicago area.
Chicago Musical Pathways Initiative
will
focus on music students of African American, Latinx, American Indian,
Alaskan Native, and/or South Asian/Pacific Islander heritage as well as
those from lower income households who
might be the first in their family to attend college. The goal is for
CMPI musicians to be fully prepared with the skills necessary to excel
in our nation’s top conservatories and college schools of music and,
eventually, the ranks of the nation’s professional
musicians and orchestras.
CMPI will
begin recruiting young musicians to the program this Spring.
Approximately 50 musicians from the greater Chicago area will be
identified as participants this Summer, with a total of approximately
150 young musicians engaged between 2019 and 2022. Each participant
will benefit from individualized plans that create a career roadmap for
them, including the professional training and mentorship necessary for
success. More details on the application and
audition process will be announced soon. The public is encouraged to
visit
www.chicagopathway.org and submit a “Contact Us” form to be
notified of important updates.
About The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Founded
in 1969, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation endeavors to strengthen,
promote, and, where necessary, defend the contributions of the
humanities and the arts to human flourishing and to the well-being
of diverse and democratic societies by supporting exemplary
institutions of higher education and culture as they renew and provide
access to an invaluable heritage of ambitious, path-breaking work.
Additional information is available at
mellon.org.
About Chicago Musical Pathways Initiative (CMPI)
The Chicago Musical Pathways Initiative
is composed
of a Steering Team of the area’s most prominent music education
institutions: Merit School of Music, Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestras,
Chicago High School for the Arts, Chicago Sinfonietta, The Negaunee
Music Institute at the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, DePaul
University School of Music, and Ravinia Festival. As funded by a
generous $3.5 million, 3-year grant from the Mellon Foundation, the
long-term goal of the
Chicago Musical Pathways Initiative
(CMPI)
is to help address the persistent lack of diversity in American
orchestras – a condition which threatens the vitality and viability of
classical, orchestral music. CMPI is aimed
at building a more robust Chicago-area training pathway for talented
student musicians from traditionally underrepresented backgrounds, from 6th grade through 12th grade. The project focuses on instrumental students of classical music
who have demonstrated both aptitude and interest in pursuing intensive study and a career specifically in orchestral music.
The
initiative will involve close collaboration and resource sharing among a
diverse network of well-established non-profit Chicago youth- and music
education-focused organizations. Together, participating
organizations will work to identify talented, motivated students early
in their training. Musicians selected for CMPI will be carefully
assessed and provided with comprehensive supports – musical and
extra-musical (e.g., financial, instructional, academic,
etc.) – to remove many of the barriers to access that can discourage or
derail the training of talented young musicians from underrepresented
backgrounds before they are able to realize their full musical
potential.
Learn more about CMPI at
www.chicagopathways.org.
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