
Topics
News & Resources
Guest Perspective
Being a Servant and an Artist
Kiana Maria Gonzalez, bassist, Take A Stand Festival Orchestra and El Sistema Lehigh Valley
The National Take a Stand Festival has ended, and 101 students are returning home to over 25 states, each with an intimate and personal experience. Here is the experience of just one of those 101.
During my week at the NTaSF, I worked closely with the team’s staff and with mentors at Soka University and at the American University preparatory school, exploring and refining the repertoire for the final concert. It was my first time working professionally with another group of talented bass players in tackling our section’s challenges in each piece. For me, it was refreshing not only to find other bass players around my age (most at my program are young enough to be my student), but also to experience so many distinct personalities outside the practice room. Playful and yet stern, realistic and yet quixotic, and with a sense of optimism that was touched with a determination like my own. Many times, when I stumbled within a piece l felt more at home with them; as with my family, there was no criticism, only productive solutions. Making me even more empowered to step up my game in this project!
But what made this experience even more worthwhile was that this was present in every other member of the orchestra that I had the opportunity to interact with. Everyone there had a beginning and was carrying with them a glimmering hope of achieving some sort of end goal, whether it was the performance, their future career, or friendship. All of this dynamic energy was present at every moment, both in and out of rehearsals. Being able to work with Thomas Wilkins, the conductor of the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, for a long demanding week before finally being presented by Gustavo Dudamel has been such an honor. This orchestra demonstrated a persistence that other orchestras struggle for years to reach, and that we have achieved within a week — creating a warm community of different faces from different places to perform beyond the concept of musical excellence, to give the piece expression and life itself for the audience to truly connect with.
In the words of Maestro Wilkins, “We are first a servant and then an artist.” He deeply expressed that we must give in a world that only takes. Now, as we return home after the final concert, these words truly resonate even more.
Related Content
Community Building, Europe, Featured, Gather Together, Program Design, Teaching & Learning

Teaching Artistry as a Balance for Cultural Education Mentalities
Hannah Dick

Community Building, Featured, Latin America, Opinion, Perspectives & Collective Action

Dispatch from the Venezuelan Diaspora
Rodrigo Guerrero

Ambassadors, Collaborations, Europe, Student Voice & Leadership, Teaching & Learning

Brazil to the Silk Road, Handmade Drums to Pro Tools: How two youth music organizations in the UK are maintaining engagement and exploring new territory
Matthew Jones

Africa, Ambassadors, Community Building, Student Voice & Leadership
Ghetto Classics Update
Stephen Ongoma
