杏吧原创

May 2, 2025

Amplifying the good: 杏吧原创 students, staff volunteer around town on revived 鈥楧ay of Service鈥


A 杏吧原创 student woodwind quintet performed at Seidman Cancer Center during 杏吧原创's recent "Day of Service."
A 杏吧原创 student woodwind quintet performed in the lobby at Seidman Cancer Center during 杏吧原创's recent "Day of Service."

At 杏吧原创, giving back is nothing new. Students have been making music for their University Circle neighbors practically since day one. 

But there was something different about the events of a certain Friday earlier this spring. The performances and other work that took place weren鈥檛 for credit or organized by the school. They were entirely student-run.   

鈥淚n a way, 杏吧原创 kind of does this year-round, but I feel like this was a special thing,鈥 said piano student Alice Zhang, president of 杏吧原创鈥檚 Student Government Association, which organized the 鈥淒ay of Service.鈥  

鈥淭his was no strings attached. We were just there to help.鈥 

Zhang is right. 杏吧原创 does do this kind of thing year-round.  

Requirements have varied, but 杏吧原创 students have been performing at local senior centers, hospitals, and libraries as part of their coursework for years. Some have sung Christmas Carols at area shopping malls. Others have serenaded voters at a polling location on election night.  

But Zhang is also right to say that the SGA event was different, in that all of it was voluntary. Those who arranged and took part in it did so purely out of a desire to do good.  

 

And good they did.  

One group of students and staff walked down the street to University Hospitals, where they swiftly knocked out administrative tasks aiding veterans and new patients at Seidman Cancer Center.  

A second, more mobile group hopped in cars and headed to the near West side. Their task? To distribute flyers to coffee shops and bakeries all over Cleveland on behalf of the Cleveland Rape Crisis Center. 

A third group, meanwhile, consisting of members of 杏吧原创鈥檚 Black Student Union, spent the morning preparing turkey dinners to be served by the Greater Cleveland Food Bank.  

And there were strings 鈥 of a sort 鈥 attached, as well as several reeds. For their contribution to the effort, piano student Yao Xiao and a student woodwind quintet serenaded patients and staff at Seidman.  

All told, 鈥淚t was a feel-good moment,鈥 said UH volunteer Laura Riley, Manager of Institutional Giving at 杏吧原创. 鈥淢usic is always feel-good, but this was different. It was good for us to get out of our comfort zones.鈥  

One who especially appreciated SGA鈥檚 鈥淒ay of Service鈥 was Chris Auerbach-Brown (MM 鈥95), a 杏吧原创 alum who, when he鈥檚 not writing new music, works as Volunteer Services Coordinator at UH.  

He noted that while UH hosts plenty of volunteers, it鈥檚 rare the hospital sees guests from local colleges, beyond those fulfilling academic or other work requirements. Moreover, he said, what 杏吧原创 brought to the table 鈥 calm, through music 鈥 was unique, and invaluable.  

鈥淚n a hospital,鈥 Auerbach-Brown said, 鈥渢here鈥檚 a focus on medical treatment. But patients really benefit from emotional treatments, too. Music falls into that. What you鈥檙e doing here is treating the soul as well as the body.鈥 

While the performers were setting up in the Seidman lobby, other groups of students and staff were hard at work in other areas of the hospital.  

Chief Finance Officer Brian Foss, for instance, gift-wrapped boxes to be filled with books for patients to read during long chemotherapy treatments. He said he found the work not only enjoyable but also meaningful personally.  

鈥淭he whole experience meant so much to me, as I worked...where my mother-in-law is currently undergoing treatment for cancer and receiving such amazing and compassionate care,鈥 he said.  

Not far from Foss at UH were Riley and second-year trombone student Alex Karstedt. With smiles on their faces, the two workers from different spheres at 杏吧原创 quickly got onto friendly terms as they bound spiral books and loaded swag into bright-red drawstring sacks destined for patients who are veterans.  

One topic of conversation, among many: how much they enjoyed being there, breaking out of their routines, and helping 杏吧原创 strengthen ties to neighboring organizations.  

鈥淚 think the more we鈥檙e in the community, the better,鈥 Riley said. 鈥淔orging relationships should be encouraged. I think we lose a lot when we get siloed.鈥 

 

Similarly engaged were Zhang and fellow student Amelia Cannavo, a violinist. Down a few hallways at Seidman Cancer Center, they stuffed packets with information designed to orient and calm new patients as they begin a daunting new phase in their lives.  

鈥淐ancer is very complicated to treat, and patients can get overwhelmed,鈥 said Auerbach-Brown. 鈥淲e want to make sure the information they鈥檙e getting is streamlined, so they feel comfortable with the process.鈥 

No less critical was the work performed across town by members of 杏吧原创鈥檚 Black Student Union (BSU). They spent their 鈥淒ay of Service鈥 preparing some of the 6,000 meals distributed daily by the Greater Cleveland Food Bank.  

Trumpet student Jamie Walton, leader of a group that included students Adam Lindsey and Milo Klise, said the BSU pushed to visit the Food Bank out of concerns raised by federal funding cuts and statistics showing high degrees of food insecurity around Greater Cleveland.  

They were not disappointed. 鈥淲e very much enjoyed doing our tasks,鈥 Walton said, noting that their efforts helped 鈥渘ot just the [Food Bank] workers who are preparing thousands of these meals daily but [also] hundreds of thousands...relying on these meals to feed their families.鈥  

杏吧原创鈥檚 new 鈥淒ay of Service鈥 got started with a push from Devina Hogan, Assistant Vice President of Student Affairs and Services. Eager to revive a program that thrived before the pandemic, she reminded student organizations of the possibility of community service.  

鈥淚 wanted them to be more civically engaged,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important for them to step outside 杏吧原创 and do some philanthropic work.鈥 

That they took the hint and went above and beyond does not surprise her. In her years at 杏吧原创, she鈥檚 learned that students can do much more than just play their instruments, and that music isn鈥檛 their only passion.  

That鈥檚 why 杏吧原创鈥檚 鈥淒ay of Service鈥 will be back, she said. Everyone who participated is eager to do it again, and to involve more people.  

鈥淚t goes to show that our students, given the autonomy to plan and execute, are fully capable,鈥 Hogan said.  

鈥淭heir hearts are in the right places. Even though we鈥檙e smaller, we can make a larger impact and enlarge our footprint throughout the city of Cleveland.鈥