***Definitions of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion below drawn in part from the Ford Foundation.
Our nation is enriched and illuminated by a panoply of different cultures, ideas, and ways of making music. For us, a major focus is the diversity of the composers whose music we commission, premiere, perform, and record. So, we have set a new goal for ourselves: to have our programming reflect the diversity of our nation, which currently equates to a 50% non-male, 40% ALAANA* population.
We have looked closely at the programming in our past few seasons, and determined the amount of time we have spent on stage each year performing the music of ALAANA composers and non-male composers.
We have also examined our history of commissions and premieres of new work and our recorded output, through a similar lens.
This information is below, and we plan to look back at our programming each year and continue to make this information public so that we can both reflect and hold ourselves accountable to our goals.
Third Coast Percussion has found that what unifies the community of creators and audience members that surround us is a creativity and curiosity that cut across the boundaries of gender, race, class, and more. We are at our happiest and most creative when we are creating an environment that makes everyone in our team and in our audience feel welcome, appreciated, and heard.
As classical musicians, we find ourselves in constant creative dialogue with other composers, either in real time or with their music as a proxy. By shaping our creative voice in tandem with these other voices, we include them and empower them, and inspire audience members who see themselves in the creators we celebrate.
For years, Third Coast Percussion performed almost exclusively music composed by White men of European and North American descent. This was not by design—our programming was the product of a legacy of implicit and explicit exclusion of non-White non-males in classical music.
In recent years, we’ve started to bring an awareness of our own blind spots and limited worldview to every discussion we have about programming. We are constantly searching for composers and collaborators who inspire us, and we deliberately seek out composers and collaborators who are from historically disenfranchised populations so that we can help lift up their voices and their creative work.
(current as of September 17, 2024)
Concert Programming
The figures below reflect the total time we spent on stage performing works by ALAANA and non-male composers.
2023/24 concert season: 52% ALAANA, 48% non-male
2022/23 concert season: 36% ALAANA, 41% non-male
2021/22 concert season: 65% ALAANA, 50% non-male
2020/21 concert season: 46% ALAANA, 32% non-male
2019/20 concert season: 17% ALAANA, 15% non-male.
2018/19 concert season: 28% ALAANA, 5% non-male.
2017/18 concert season: 8% ALAANA, 9% non-male.
2016/17 concert season: 2% ALAANA, 12% non-male.
Commissions and Premieres
Since our founding in 2005, Third Coast Percussion has commissioned, co-commissioned, or premiered 119 new works.
40 of those works (34%) are by ALAANA composers.
37 of the works (31%) are by non-male composers.
Recordings
We have released or been included on 33 commercially-available albums.
ALAANA composers represent 18% of our total recorded output.
Non-male composers represent 20% of our total recorded output.