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The Daily Tar Heel

Two Triangle nonprofits team up for concert

Band Together, a Triangle-based nonprofit, has selected Kidznotes, another nonprofit based in the Triangle, as its 2016 partner.  

Having organized concert events since its inception in 2001, Band Together chooses a nonprofit partner yearly in order to raise awareness for that nonprofit’s cause. The process takes approximately a year to complete and has raised more than $3.5 million for the partner programs.

“The summer is planning, the fall is fundraising, the winter and spring is event planning, and then everything culminates in the spring with a large concert,” Band Together executive director Matt Strickland said.

The approach is collaborative and transparent, with both organizations involved in each step of the process.

“It is very open source, they open up their donor database to us, and we open up our donor database to them, and together we go in and make pitches to our donors and sponsors for their cause,” Strickland said.

Katie Wyatt, executive director of Kidznotes, believes the partnership will allow her organization to continue to provide music lessons as a means to catalyze social change.

“The goal is really to share the powerful news of the power of music for social change. That, together, we can really amplify our impact and push the movement of empowering young people everywhere, no matter what, that they can be successful through music,” she said.

The idea for Kidznotes came from the Venezuelan nonprofit El Sistema, which afforded impoverished children the opportunity to learn orchestral music.

“El Sistema is not just about exposure or demonstrating that music is fun, it’s really about empowering them to be the best musicians and people they can be,” Wyatt said.

The monetary goal for the partnership is $1.5 million, which will be used to help Kidznotes expand throughout the Triangle. Wyatt believes Kidznotes will be able to add two schools and 300 additional students to its program.

According to Kidznotes director of programming Kim Demery, students are accepted into the program in kindergarten as beginners.

“All of our kindergarten and first grade students start on violin, so that is their first venture into learning to play an instrument many times. The beginner students get six to eight hours per week,” Demery said.

Due to the fact that the program started in 2010, the oldest students in Kidznotes are in 8th grade. However, Demery expressed her hope that students will stay involved in the program after they graduate from high school.

“We really want our Kidznotes kids to remain with us as partners eventually, as collaborators, as mentors. That’s what El Sistema is about, it’s about that collaboration and giving back after you’ve learned some of the things that enable you to help a younger student.” 

arts@dailytarheel.com 

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