Sometimes the big moments for a musician happen nowhere near the recital hall or the practice room. Sometimes they happen on the other side of the world, in a classroom with a young student who canāt read sheet music, and who can barely speak your language.
Thatās where the big moment happened for Patrick Sutton. The guitar performance grad (DMA ā14)ācurrently an adjunct at Naropa University and Community College of Denverāwas in Afghanistan, at theĢżĢżin Kabul. He and cellist Kimberly Patterson (DMA ā12) were invited there for a two-week guest artist residency in January 2014.
āIt was really meaningful teaching music there,ā says Sutton. āMusic was illegal in Afghanistan through the 90s. So now theyāre trying to rebuild music in the younger generations and give kids a chance to play. To be a part of that was amazing.ā
Now Sutton, who with Patterson performs and records music as theĢż, says his life is no longer just about making music. Itās also about bringing music to people who donāt have the access heās always had growing up in Colorado.
āThatās how you can make the biggest impact in the shortest amount of time,ā Sutton says. āIn places like that, people are so desperate for proper music teachers. Itās so important to find a way to make music a part of their lives.ā
After returning to Kabul for another two-week stint in March, Sutton established an ongoing relationship with the National Institute of Music, teaching classes over Skype and helping a local guitarist run the program. But he says the schoolās biggest champion for classical guitar is a 21-year-old student. āHeās really self-directed because heās had to go through so much. Heās raising nine brothers and sisters, so heās a natural fit teaching the younger kids at school.ā
The student, like so many Sutton has met, experienced heartbreaking violence in his young life. His father and best friend were killed by the Taliban, and his school was the scene of a suicide bombing during a concert last year. Sutton says itās life-changing to hear these stories, and still be met with such joy for music. āJust being there for two weeksĢżputs everything in perspective. They do this to escape the reality of whatās happening around them every day.ā
Suttonās musical mission has also taken him to Egypt viaĢż. The cultural diplomacy organization, which does outreach with people who donāt have access to music education, brought Sutton to another realization about his craft: it crosses boundaries.
āI spent most of my time writing music with an Egyptian band. We played a mix of jazz, rock and traditional Egyptian music. And even though none of them could read musicāand I rely so heavily on notationāwe were able to play together and make a connection because thatās the nature of music. It helped us transcend those differences.ā
This summer, Sutton did a tour of South Africa with flutistĢżCobus Du Toit (MMĢżā10, DMAĢżā14), playing concerts in every large city in the country and doing outreach with local schools. Sutton says students still contact him to express their gratitude. āWe did master classes at the University of South Africa for kids near Pretoria. Just a few weeks ago, one of the students posted on Facebook that he could still remember what we taught him.ā
Next up will be a trip with Du Toit to Indonesia, where the pair will present a two-day music camp for kids and perform at a music festival. Itās part of a journey that Sutton says he intends to continue. āIāve seen what music can mean to people,ā he says. āItās not just a fun thing that you get to do if youāre lucky enough to be born with the opportunity. It saves lives.Ģż
āItās the most important thing in the world to them. Sometimes, itās the only thing they have.ā
Sutton says he could have never traveled the world teaching music if it hadnāt been for the people he met at the College of Music.ĢżāI never stayed in my guitar box. Thereās such a great atmosphere of collaboration and open-mindedness here,ā he says. āYou have to feed off the people around you to improve as a musician and as a person.
āAnd never say ānoā to someone who asks you to do something with music. Something else comes from it every time. It could snowball into the coolest thing youāve ever done.ā
Sutton is also a part of the quartetĢżThrow Down or Shut Up!Ģżwith Associate Professor of Music Theory and pianist Daphne Leong, Thompson Jazz Studies Program Director and saxophonist/flutist John Gunther, and Percussion Instructor Michael Tetreault. They perform as part of the Faculty Tuesday series onĢżOct. 13 at 7:30 p.m. in Grusin Music Hall.