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Through Jazz, Reaching Students
Members of Collaboration -- from left, Glenn Douglas, Lori Williams-Chisholm, Kenneth Dickerson and Tracey Cutler -- have been playing together for years. Music instills discipline, Dickerson said.
(Marvin Joseph/twp - The Washington Post)
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Douglas, 48, recalled the turning point in 1975, when jazz legend Billy Taylor performed at Roosevelt Senior High School, where Douglas was a student.
"When I was playing before, I felt that there was another side of music that I wasn't touching," he said. After he listened to Taylor perform, he said that he knew what was missing, "it was definitely jazz."
Now, they travel around the country performing four or five times a month. Often they appear at one another's schools, "to expose our students to good music."
The benefits are twofold: "It lets the students know that we are not only teachers who give grades. We are trying to pass this to other generations," Dickerson said.
Chisholm, 45, believes so strongly that music has the power to change destinies that he has reached into his pocket to buy guitars and give them to students who can't afford them. "Because music saved my life, I believe it can save other lives," he said.
The band members view their music as an obligation as well as a pleasure.
"We can't be selfish," Cutler said. "You have to lend yourself to society. We want the music to reach people and change things. Through creating an atmosphere that is relaxing and peaceful, we take away the anxiety of the place we live in. It creates a glimmer of hope for young people."
In 1994, Dickerson was named teacher of the year for his outstanding achievement in music. It came with a $50,000 award in cash and equipment, which he said they are still using to teach students.
The years of hard work have paid off at school, too. The band mates have noticed the effect of music in students' performance in school and in their careers after graduation. Music disciplines students and strengthens their personality, Dickerson said. "One common fact with all the students is that they are all productive citizens.
"The discipline they've got from music have made them better," he said. "It made us better."
Sometimes people asked the teachers whether it was wise to walk the path of music and make educating the audience their main task. But they do not doubt their mission.
"The true success to us is about helping other people," Dickerson, 48, said. In the future, "people are going to talk about your contribution and what you did for them."
The group will perform Sunday at the Islander Caribbean Restaurant and Lounge, 1201 U St. NW.



