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Never too many hats: Alumna Jennie Dorris

Jennie Dorris playing marimba

With ā€œa shortage of job ads for marimba players,ā€ Pittsburgh-based interdisciplinary artist (MM ā€™05) re-invents herselfā€”and her careerā€”continuously.Ģż

ā€œIā€™ve never followed a traditional path in music,ā€ says the award-winning percussionist, writer and storyteller focused on social impact, whoā€™s designed and teaches marimba classes to people with Mild Cognitive Impairment. ā€œIt was always clear to me that I would pursue my interests entrepreneurially and Iā€™ve been so impressed by what the Entrepreneurship Center for Music did for me.

ā€œI love the empowerment that comes with thinking like an entrepreneur.ā€

Specifically, according to Dorrisā€”who studied marimba with Professor of Percussion and Jazz Douglas Walterā€”the Entrepreneurship Center for Music provided her ā€œthe nuts, bolts and resources, on a logical level, for how to create opportunities for yourself, and build and manage a collaborative career to bring music to peopleā€™s lives.ā€Ģż

ā€œAt the same time,ā€ she adds, ā€œI was gaining technical proficiency on my instrument and learning a musical philosophy. Doug Walter put me on a journey of seeing life through a musical lensā€”a beautiful path where studying your instrument is just the beginning of a long and meaningful journey.ā€Ģż

She further credits Associate Professor Michael Theodore, who teaches music composition and technology and interactive media at CU Boulder, for honing her knack for drawing connections among diverse disciplines. ā€œWhat I learned from these influencers was how to adopt an emergent, creative way of thinking that attracts opportunities to develop and implement programs that activate your audiences. Iā€™m always thinking, ā€˜How can I apply my musical way of knowing the world for good?ā€™ā€ĢżĢż

Turns out, Dorrisā€”whose undergraduate degree from Drake University combines music and journalismā€”is answering that question in a dizzying variety of concurrent endeavors. Sheā€™s on the faculty of Carnegie Mellon Universityā€™s Preparatory School as its percussion instructor and teaches courses in Creative Expression, Community Engagement and Percussion Ensemble. And she pioneered a musical storytelling performance technique that sheā€™s performed across the country, and thatā€™s now used in schools, nonprofits, even cancer centers. In 2016, she received a Best of the Creative Industries Award for the top Art + Technology project for andā€”a year laterā€”she was named ā€œWhoā€™s Nextā€ as a musician defining the new Pittsburgh sound.Ģż

Additionally, Dorrisā€™ multimodal Telling Stories programā€”developed in 2008 for the Denver School of the Artsā€”was recently featured on ā€œFrom the Top.ā€ Her podcast series, ā€œTelling Stories,ā€ which mixed music and personal stories from students at The Neighborhood Academy, was named a finalist for the 2017 Media and Entertainment project of the year.Ģż

Currentlyā€”building on her initial research studies on the effects of music on Mild Cognitive Impairmentā€”Dorris is a research associate at Carnegie Mellon University, studying musicā€™s effect on the aging brain. She started a marimba program at the University of Pittsburghā€™s , where artists and scientists work together to create effective programming for people experiencing changes in their cognition. Previously, sheā€™s given innovative artistic performances and built education programs across the country; sheā€™s now focused on developing research techniques and refining her music pedagogy to benefit adults with memory loss.Ģż

ā€œI believe that, for true artists, there is no straight or narrow path,ā€ Dorris continues. ā€œThereā€™s always going to be lots of opportunities to improve and expand your skillsā€”and to generalize your knowledge outside of music.

ā€œEspecially, you have to know who you are as a person so thatā€”when those opportunities ariseā€”youā€™ll recognize them and be able to engage with them.ā€

For Dorris, locally in Colorado, such opportunities have included a teaching gig at CU Boulder, developing coursework for the University of Denver, and teaching positions at Red Rocks Community College and the Community College of Denver. She was named a 2010 Westword Mastermind, and sheā€™s been featured as an artist in a host of local and national newspapers and publications.Ģż

Dorris herself has written for Pittsburgh Magazine Entrepreneur, Real Simple, 5280 Magazine, Colorado Biz Magazine, Boulder County Business Report, Mountain Sports + Living, Rocky Mountain News, Daily Camera and a number of other media outlets. Her feature ā€œThe Auditionā€ for Boston Magazine was a finalist for a City and Regional Magazine Association feature-writing award and aired on NPRā€™s ā€œAll Things Considered.ā€Ģż

Additionallyā€”incredibly!ā€”sheā€™s a founding member of the Steeltown Songbirds, a classical-folk trio comprised of marimba, violin and bass. Dorris further performs with Pittsburghā€™s Hip Hop Orchestra, while teaching at its inaugural summer academy. She also performs with Resonance Works, Alia Musica, Guardians of Sound, the Seraphic Singers and Shelter Music Boston; as well as with the Boston Landmarks Orchestraā€™s Notes in the Neighborhood program, New England Philharmonic, Mercury Orchestra, Colorado Ballet, Colorado Chamber Orchestra, Colorado Music Festival, Colorado Springs Philharmonic, Boulder Philharmonic, Fort Collins Symphony and Greeley Philharmonic, among others.Ģż

Concludes Dorris, ā€œI canā€™t help but be optimistic for music majors. I feel so enthusiastic about the different paths my life and career are taking me. There were never any jobs for me, but Iā€™ve always had more than enough work.

"Itā€™s a way of thinkingā€”and beingā€”that I learned at CU and that continues to guide me through what I consider a really beautiful, artistic life.ā€