Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

FINDING THEIR NICHE

Executive director of Chicago Philharmon­ic ‘championin­g diverse voices’ in new role

- BY KYLE MACMILLAN

Terell Johnson was appointed executive director of the Chicago Philharmon­ic just a little more than seven months ago, and his recent receipt of a prestigiou­s national award suggests that the ensemble made a shrewd choice.

Musical America, a respected journalist­ic website devoted to classical music, picked Johnson as one of the top 30 profession­als in the field in 2021. The selectors put an emphasis on leaders who helped their organizati­ons and the broader classical community contend with the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Although many of Johnson’s accomplish­ments last year took place while he was still serving in his previous role at the New World Symphony in Miami Beach, Florida, Scott Speck, the Philharmon­ic’s artistic director and principal conductor, said he has already made a strong impact in his new position.

“He’s forward-looking, which is great, and he’s really open to challengin­g assumption­s about the organizati­on, and then he also brings experience from the New World Symphony, which is an enormous organizati­on,” Speck said.

In December 2020, Johnson was invited to take part in LEAD (Leaders in Excellence,

Arts and Diversity), a two-year executive leadership training program overseen by the Sphinx Organizati­on, a Detroit-based group that promotes the participat­ion of people of color in classical music. “That organizati­on has been tremendous in terms of preparing me for this current role,” Johnson said.

He, in turn, wants to make “championin­g diverse voices” a central theme for his tenure at the Philharmon­ic.

“I’m so excited to work with our artistic committee,” he said, “and Scott Speck to make sure that we are continuing to honor the community who resides here and to program great works by many voices, especially voices that haven’t always been heard.”

The Chicago Philharmon­ic is a musicianru­n organizati­on, with members of the orchestra filling at least half of the seats on its board. In addition to presenting an annual four-concert season, it collaborat­es with a range of area arts groups and served as the pit orchestra for the Joffrey Ballet from 2012 through 2020.

“We’re not trying to be a little Chicago Symphony,” Speck said. “That’s absolutely not the goal of the Chicago Philharmon­ic. What we’re trying to do is find a niche — that there are certain things we can do that the Symphony can’t do.”

Johnson, 36, was born in New Jersey and grew up Cape Coral, Florida., attending an

“I WANTED TO BE PART OF STEERING AN ORGANIZATI­ON AND SUPPORTING AN ARTISTIC COMMUNITY. I THINK THE CHICAGO PHILHARMON­IC HAS SUCH A TERRIFIC MISSION, BEING SO UNIQUE WITH ITS GOVERNANCE STRUCTURE.”

TERELL JOHNSON, executive director of the Chicago Philharmon­ic

arts high school in nearby Fort Myers. He went on to earn bachelor’s and master’s degrees in clarinet performanc­e from the University of Central Florida and Florida State University, respective­ly.

He lived in Chicago in from 2010 to 2014, freelancin­g in area ensembles and running a private music studio where he taught clarinet and piano to some 40 students. He also served as a recruiter for the Chicago High School for the Arts, which he called a “great experience.”

In 2015, he joined the staff of the New World Symphony, an internatio­nally known pre-profession­al training orchestra cofounded by famed conductor Michael Tilson Thomas and what Johnson called a “hub of innovation.”

He ultimately rose to director of business developmen­t and community engagement and headed the orchestra’s equity, diversity, inclusion and belonging committee. In April, as part of a program titled “Being Black in America,” he moderated a discussion with pianist Awadagin Pratt and Nicole Austin-Hillery, executive director of the US Program at Human Rights Watch.

While at the New World, Johnson began his participat­ion in the Sphinx program, which he called a “catalyst” in his becoming a leader of the Philharmon­ic. “I wanted to be part of steering an organizati­on and supporting an artistic community,” he said, “and I think the Chicago Philharmon­ic has such a terrific mission, being so unique with its governance structure.”

Among his goals in his still-new post is getting the orchestra’s achievemen­ts better known, especially its collaborat­ions with

area arts organizati­ons. Many people, for example, don’t realize that the Philharmon­ic doubles as the Ravinia Festival Orchestra, which performed most recently in September with singer-songwriter Ben Folds.

He also believes that the Philharmon­ic’s composer-in-residence program, which began in 2021 before his arrival, can play a major role in his bid toward promoting greater diversity and inclusion. He called the initiative, which is open to composers of color ages 20-40, a “launch pad for great talent.”

One of the first three participan­ts in the three-year program, Reinaldo Moya, an assistant professor of compositio­n at Augsburg University in Minneapoli­s, will have a work premiered during the Philharmon­ic’s March 27 concert at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance.

“It’s re-illustrati­ng how important it is to launch the career of the composers by putting them on our subscripti­on concerts right next to a Pulitzer Prize and Grammy winner,” Johnson said, referring to noted composer Jennifer Higdon, whose Mandolin Concerto will receive its American debut on the same program.

Speck said he enjoys working with Johnson, and they have become a good duo already. “We have a lot of fun bouncing ideas off each other,” he said. “I think we both have a good, light-hearted sense of humor, and we laugh a lot when we are together, which is really nice.”

NOTE: Chicago Philharmon­ic, Scott Speck, conductor, 3 p.m. March 27, Harris Theater for Music and Dance, 205 E. Randolph St. Tickets: $25-$75; chicagophi­lharmonic.org

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Terell Johnson, photograph­ed at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, was appointed executive director of the Chicago Philharmon­ic in 2021.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Terell Johnson, photograph­ed at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, was appointed executive director of the Chicago Philharmon­ic in 2021.
 ?? ELLIOT MANDEL ?? The Chicago Philharmon­ic performs at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance.
ELLIOT MANDEL The Chicago Philharmon­ic performs at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance.

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