Mary Chung and Carlos
Feller have been traveling the world together for 11 years sharing their love
and passion for music by performing and educating others.
At a young age, Chung
and Feller both found music as their refuge. Chung moved to the Dominican
Republic where she encountered a language and culture barrier; she retreated to
music as her escape. This led her to enroll at a conservatory where she began
to earnestly study music.
Feller attended a
technical school, a specialized high school, at the age of 15. At that mere
age, Feller was living in an apartment alone in Brazil. In an unfamiliar city
with unfamiliar faces, music became his rescue in a new and foreign
environment.
Feller and Chung’s paths
crossed while attending graduate school at the University of Southern
Mississippi. While attending school, the two collected a strong network of
professionals and artists.
“We went through our
master’s degree and doctorate [together]. I think part of our career is also
networking with other professionals, other musicians, other artists, and then
collaborating with them. It is very common for professors from one university
to invite you, and you invite them back. It just happened for us that because
we had such a varied background, we had connections not only in different
states, but we had connections all over the world.” Feller said.
These connections were
the beginning of Chung and Feller’s travels educating others and performing
music. The two have been to at least nine different countries such as France,
Switzerland, Peru, Italy, Japan and more. Each new country brought
opportunities to learn from the culture and people.
When reflecting on these
experiences, Chung said “It is such a privilege and humbling experience because
we get to play a lot, we get to teach, but at the end of the day what we
remember the most is it's not about the music we play, or the people we taught,
it is about the interaction that we had.”
Remembering these great
people and experiences have inspired them to carry this message and instill it
in their students. Chung and Feller’s wish is that Ouachita students would have
the love, passion, and discipline for music.
“I want our students to
have the same passion. Never lose that passion and never lose that love. We're
not only playing a recital just for our own satisfaction, I mean it is
satisfying for us to learn and grow, but you know at the end of the day what we
want to do is share that with other people. We want to share the joy that we
have, the love that we have, and we want to multiply that,” Feller said.
Music is the common
goal.
“When you have one common goal and you work together towards that goal, in this case it is music, you will accomplish something beautiful. If you do it well, I think you make it a better place. That is our mission, our goal,” Feller said.
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