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PlayUSA

Carnegie Hall’s PlayUSA supports community partner organizations across the country that offer equitable instrumental music education programs to K–12 students, including those whose opportunities to engage in instrumental music instruction are limited by socioeconomic, geographic, or other factors. These organizations receive funding, as well as training and professional development for teachers and arts administrators, in addition to guidance from Carnegie Hall staff to help address challenges and develop best practices.

PlayUSA provides up to $500,000 in grants each year. Organizations may apply for a one-year grant. After the conclusion of the first year of funding, they may apply every two years for additional grant renewal. Grants are between $20,000–$35,000 per year. Once the grant period has ended, organizations are invited to be alumni partners, who still can access professional development resources without grant funding. For the 2024–2025 season, the PlayUSA grant will not be open for external submissions.

Partnership Opportunities: Community Nonprofit Music Organizations
Grades: K–12
Available for Partnerships: NYC, National
Season: School Year

PlayUSA Spotlight: Tocando Music Project

Meet our network of PlayUSA community partner organizations! Tocando Music Project, located in El Paso, Texas, has been a PlayUSA partner since 2015. Tocando (which means “playing”) is designed to engage and empower students in elementary, intermediate, and middle schools with intensive music education.

Three young boys in formal attire hold cellos and smile against at white wall.
Grant Application

Learn about how to apply to be a partner, which includes funding for equitable instrumental music education and professional development.

A group of young girls practice playing violin
Reflections on Resilience
Explore music as storytelling for K–12 students studying instrumental music. This project is a collaboration between PUBLIQuartet and PlayUSA.

Our Partners

2023–2024 Partners

Austin Soundwaves (Austin, Texas)

Austin Soundwaves is an arts education organization focused on making learning music accessible and equitable. Founded as an El Sistema–inspired program in 2011, they serve more than 1,000 band, orchestra, and mariachi students in grades K–12 across 23 school and community partnerships. They believe in building communities where young people are supported, as they are, to lead meaningfully creative lives.

Buffalo String Works (Buffalo, New York)

Buffalo String Works’ mission ignites personal and community leadership through accessible, youth-centered music education. It provides rigorous music instruction and a creative home for refugee, immigrant, and historically marginalized youth in Buffalo, New York. It recognizes music as a universal language, and by lifting up the voices of students and parents, the organization cultivates youth to be agents of social change.

Capital Harmony Works (Trenton, New Jersey)

Capital Harmony Works is a rigorous El Sistema–inspired program for students in grades K–12. Young people learn violin, viola, cello, bass, percussion, and music theory, and play five days a week as an orchestra. They are empowered to find and use their voices, and to work together to cultivate harmony and pursue ambitious goals for their orchestra and their city.

Chicago Jazz Philharmonic (Chicago, Illinois)

Chicago Jazz Philharmonic (CJP) presents Third Stream to bridge communities, educate the next generation of musicians, encourage cross-cultural dialogue, and expand creative practice. CJP also provides access to music education through Jazz Alive, a weekly program for Chicago public school students, and Jazz Academy, a weekly Saturday ensemble program culminating in a summer camp that includes music theory and practice.

Community Music Center of Boston (Boston, Massachusetts)

For more than 100 years, Community Music Center of Boston has provided unparalleled arts instruction in a safe, culturally inclusive, and affirming environment. It is the largest outside provider of arts education to the Boston public schools, and a national leader in using music for social change. 2,500 students participate in weekly lessons and classes, and more than $100,000 is reinvested as youth-employee wages each year.

East Bay Center for the Performing Arts (Richmond, California)

East Bay Center for the Performing Arts annually engages 4,000 children and youth in imagining and creating new worlds for themselves and new visions for their communities through rigorous training performance traditions from around the world. Their goal is to use art and culture to achieve healing and wholeness for young people and ultimately the larger community, while recognizing the complexity of each student’s experience.

El Sistema Oklahoma (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma)

El Sistema Oklahoma is a respected afterschool program with more than 200 underserved public schoolchildren in grades 3–12. A creative partnership by Cathy and Phil Busey, St. Luke’s United Methodist Church, and the Wanda Bass School of Music at Oklahoma City University, it serves the community by engaging children with a free ensemble-based music program so they can share the joy of music and grow as responsible citizens.

Enriching Lives Through Music (San Rafael, California)

Enriching Lives Through Music (ELM) is a full scholarship, intensive program whose mission is to inspire and empower students to pursue their dreams through a community dedicated to an immersive music education. ELM provides instrumental, ensemble, and performance opportunities to young people from a primarily Latinx immigrant community to develop the social, emotional, and academic skills they need to succeed.

Hawaii Youth Symphony (Honolulu, Hawaii)

Hawaii Youth Symphony (HYS) celebrates the importance of music study on academic achievement and social-emotional development. Its programs include chamber music, orchestra, band, jazz ensembles, general music, and summer intensives. The only state-wide music education organization in Hawaii, HYS wants to make music a right for every child, bringing young people together from over 100 schools through the joy of music making.

Homer OPUS (Homer, Alaska)

Homer OPUS is a nonprofit organization that delivers string-based music programs to youth and adults in Homer, Alaska. Our mission is to build a stronger community by creating music together. Our programs are privately funded and are free or low-cost, making music instruction—and the joy of music—available to young people across our community. All told, our programs serve some 200 children. And the number grows every year.

INTEMPO (Stamford, Connecticut)

INTEMPO is an intercultural music education and youth development organization that aims to make music accessible, relevant, and inclusive. INTEMPO’s programs reflect the diversity of its students and help them build musical, language, social-emotional, and interpersonal skills that will serve them in every aspect of their lives.

Juneau Alaska Music Matters (Juneau, Alaska)

Juneau Alaska Music Matters (JAMM) is a tuition-free school-readiness and enrichment program that uses music and community partnerships to promote academic success for students. Serving more than 500 students from a range of backgrounds and cultures in three public elementary schools and one middle school, JAMM and its partners support underserved students with year-round programs that take place both during and after school.

Kalamazoo Symphony Orchestra (Kalamazoo, Michigan)

The Kalamazoo Symphony Orchestra (KSO) works to make symphonic music a part of everyday life. KSO is proud to support Kalamazoo Kids In Tune, an afterschool orchestra program that creates inclusive, accessible, and intensive music learning for students in grades 3–12 in Kalamazoo Public Schools, and Orchestra Rouh, a sister initiative designed around the experience of young people from refugee and immigrant communities.

Make Music NOLA (New Orleans, Louisiana)

Make Music NOLA’s (MMN) mission is to give the children of New Orleans the keys to claim their musical heritage and tools to build a creative legacy. Through consistency, discipline, and community support, MMN creates opportunity and provides access to high-quality programs for all interested in schools and communities without music programs. MMN provides music instruction for more than 400 pre-K–12 students each year.

Music Haven (New Haven, Connecticut)

Music Haven creates an inclusive community for young people to learn, play, and express themselves through tuition-free classical music lessons and ongoing mentoring with world-class musicians. Music Haven is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization that provides tuition-free one-on-one lessons, group classes and string instruments (violin, viola, cello, and bass) to students ages 6–18 years old in New Haven, Connecticut.

Scrollworks Music School (Birmingham, Alabama)

Scrollworks Music School is dedicated to making music instruction and ensemble playing available to all, developing character and a sense of community with exceptional teachers who foster a sense of beauty, compassion, appreciation, tolerance, empathy, self-esteem, and respect. Young people of diverse racial, social, cultural, cognitive, and economic backgrounds come together to explore and cultivate their musical talent.

Soundscapes (Newport News, Virginia)

Soundscapes is a nonprofit organization in Southeastern Virginia that uses music to foster life skills for students from early childhood to early adulthood. It provides daily after-school music programs, a regional youth orchestra, and several weeklong summer camps. Through Soundscapes, young people up to age 25 develop skills that prepare them to be today’s successful students and tomorrow’s engaged citizen artists.

Tocando (El Paso, Texas)

Tocando is an after and during-school music program of the El Paso Symphony Orchestra serving urban and rural communities. Inspired by the highly successful El Sistema movement, Tocando (which means “to play”) is designed to engage and empower youth at under-resourced elementary, intermediate, and middle schools through intensive music instruction while offering cultural, educational, and performance opportunities.

Wake Forest Community Youth Orchestra (Louisburg, North Carolina)

Wake Forest Community Youth Orchestra (WFCYO) is dedicated to providing expert orchestral instruction and free instruments for K–12 youth living in rural and under-resourced communities. WFCYO is a place where diversity is valued and collaboration thrives. WFCYO is a student-centered and family focused organization. More than 400 students participate in string programs that take place both during and after school.

West Point School of Music (Chicago, Illinois)

West Point School of Music engages Chicago’s youth through music instruction and performance, cultivating artistically connected, socially conscious, productive, confident adults. They build on the legacy of formerly enslaved Trinidadians, who created the steel drum to celebrate their freedom and culture, using the steel drum and traditional instruments to inspire youth to achieve their goals with perseverance and excellence.

Yakima Music en Acción (Yakima, Washington)

Yakima Music en Acción (YAMA) emphasizes shared learning and collective accountability through our instruction of string instruments. We are más que una orquesta (more than an orchestra) and we aim to disrupt cycles of intergenerational poverty by using music as a vehicle to provide access to opportunities, leadership development, and community cohesion.

ZUMIX (East Boston, Massachusetts)

Since its inception in 1991, ZUMIX has offered award-winning after school and summer music and creative technology programs for low-income young people in greater Boston ages 7–18, winning national recognition. ZUMIX is designed to provide opportunities for creative learning, exploration, skill building, employment, and mentorship so that young people can transition into adulthood with confidence.

Fund II Foundation
Lead support for PlayUSA is provided by Fund II Foundation.

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