KIDS MEET THE MUSIC
WITH D-COMPOSED
+ SPECIAL GUEST SHANTA NURULLAH
March 21, 2026 / 11:00AM
Performance run time: 45 minutes + artist meet and greet
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Special thanks to VOCEL for supporting this program with sensory activities on Lobby Level 2.
Harris Theater Mission Statement | Staff + Board | Our Supporters
This program is generously sponsored by:
Harris Theater Presents Sponsor: Irving Harris Foundation, Joan W. Harris
Additional Support by: The A. Montgomery Ward Foundation, Bank of America, N.A., Co-Trustee
PERFORMING ARTISTS
Caitlin Edwards, violin
Khelsey Zarraga, violin
Wilfred Farquharson, violin
Lindsey Sharpe, cello
Shanta Nurullah, multi-instrumentalist + storyteller
ARTIST BIOGRAPHIES
Caitlin Edwards
Caitlin Edwards is a multi-genre violinist, arranger, recording artist, and teacher based in Chicago. She began her musical journey at age eight within a non-profit organization in her hometown of Birmingham, Alabama. She later attended the University of Louisville (BM) and DePaul University (MM). Caitlin is a classically trained violinist, but she's inspired by gospel, jazz, hip-hop, and neo-soul. She released her debut album, "Exhale," in 2021 and her sophomore album “Mere Mortals” released in October 2023.
She composes original music and intentionally performs the works of Black composers to help ensure that these composers and their compositions are remembered and spotlighted for aspiring young BIPOC musicians and the world as a whole. Recognition for Caitlin’s versatile career continues to propel her work. She is a 2023 Advocate for the Arts awardee (Grant Park Music Festival), 2023 Sphinx MPower Artist Grant recipient, a 2022 Esteemed Artist Award recipient from the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, and a 2021 3Arts/Walder Foundation Awardee.
Caitlin was also a recipient of the Rising Star Award from the Gateways Music Festival and is a co-curator with the Fulcrum Point NewMusic Project and a former fellow with the Chicago Sinfonietta. In addition, she has received Grammy certificates for recordings on Disney's "The Lion King" with the Re-Collective Orchestra and for albums by John Legend and PJ Morton. Caitlin is a proud member of D-Composed, Ensemble Dal Niente, and Sphinx Virtuosi. Newly appointed to the Board of Directors of the Chicago Federation of Musicians Local 10-208, Caitlin is proud to amplify the voices of and serve the vibrant community of musicians within Chicago.
Khelsey Zarraga
Of African American and Venezuelan descent, Khelsey Zarraga is a violinist, educator, and social justice advocate based in Chicago, IL. As a chamber musician, Khelsey is a proud member of D-Composed, an all-Black chamber music collective celebrating the works of Black composers. As a member of D-Composed, she has collaborated with acclaimed artists and creatives such as Jamila Woods, Tricia Hersey, Cheryl Lynne Bruce, Pamela Z, Nathalie Joachim, and Plinio Fernandes. She is also the violinist of Black Moon Trio, where she enjoys the exploration of new works and innovative collaboration. The trio released their first album, Principal, in 2024, and can be frequently heard on Chicago’s premier classical radio station, WFMT. Khelsey was previously the violinist and Director of Operations of Fifth House Ensemble, and violinist of Lincoln Center Stage, the Residency Chamber Ensemble aboard Holland America cruise line, in partnership with the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. She has enjoyed performing across Europe, South America, and the Caribbean and in venues such as the Chicago Theater, Kaufman Music Center, Sala São Paulo, Wilbur Theater, and Harris Theater. Khelsey is a mentor for the Chicago Musical Pathways Initiative and has been in residence and led masterclasses at the Jacobs School of Music, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Civic Orchestra of Chicago, Connecticut SummerFest, Southeast Missouri State University, Centre College, and Denison University.
Wilfred Farquharson
Wilfred Farquharson is a violist from the Atlanta, Georgia area that now calls Chicago, Illinois his home. With his versatile musicality, he thrives as a studio, orchestral, and chamber musician. As an active contributor to the dynamic musical ecosystem of Chicago, Wilfred is a violist for the Chicago-based chamber ensembles D-Composed Chicago and Crossing Borders Music. In these ensembles Wilfred has performed to critical acclaim both nationally and internationally as well. On top of these ensembles Wilfred can be heard around the city performing and subbing with renowned orchestras such as the Lyric Opera of Chicago, Grant Park Symphony Orchestra, Chicago Philharmonic, Chicago Sinfonietta, and occasionally as the Principal Violist of the Elmhurst Symphony Orchestra. Outside of Chicago, Wilfred has also performed with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, served as guest Assistant Principal for the Augusta Symphony Orchestra, and many recording orchestras including the Re-Collective and Matt Jones Orchestras. Furthermore, Wilfred has performed and recorded for some of Pop’s and Classical Music’s biggest artists. Some of these artists are Ms. Lauryn Hill, John Legend, Jessie Montgomery, Rachel Barton-Pine, Sudan Archives, DRAMA, Andra Day, Robert Glasper, Burna Boy, Arthur Verocai, and Carlos Simon. Recently, Wilfred performed as part of Stevie Wonder’s Sing A Song To Fix Our Nation’s Broken Heart Tour throughout the Midwest. Beyond his performance endeavors Wilfred has an ardent dedication to nurturing and educating aspiring violists and budding artists. He proudly held a faculty position at the esteemed Merit School of Music Pfaelzer Conservatory of Music from 2022-2024 and currently serves as a mentor for the Chicago Musical Pathways Initiative. He also proudly contributed as an advisory board member for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s African American Network from 2022-2023. Having been honored as a Premier Young Artist awardee, he obtained his bachelor's degree from the Jacobs School of Music at Indiana University and graduated with honors from the University of Southern California for his graduate studies at the Thornton School of Music.
Lindsey Sharpe
Lindsey Sharpe is a cellist, educator, and arts administrator based in Chicago, IL. Raised in Atlanta, GA, she began playing cello at age 7 and piano at age 10. In 2007, Lindsey was accepted into the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra’s Talent Development Program and studied with Martha Gerschefski until she graduated high school in 2015. Lindsey went on to earn degrees at the University of Michigan and the Shepherd School at Rice University, studying with Anthony Elliott and Norman Fischer, respectively.
An active orchestral musician, Lindsey is the newly appointed Principal Cellist of Chicago Sinfonietta and also holds positions with the Sphinx Virtuosi and the Northwest Indiana Symphony. She recently completed a three-year term with the Civic Orchestra of Chicago and has performed with ensembles including the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Gateways Music Festival, Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, Chineke! Orchestra, Music of the Baroque, Grant Park Orchestra, Lyric Opera of Chicago, Chicago Philharmonic, New World Symphony, and the Classical Tahoe Festival Orchestra.
Her versatility has also led her to the stage with artists such as Stevie Wonder, Nas, Lauryn Hill, Chance the Rapper, and Smokey Robinson. Lindsey has also been featured live on WFMT, performing in both the Rush Hour Concert Series and her own solo recital for the Dame Myra Hess Memorial Concert Series.
With a passion for education, Lindsey is a faculty member for the Merit School of Music and coaches for Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestra. As an arts administrator, Lindsey has held positions with several reputable arts organizations and currently works as Account Coordinator for 8VA Music Consultancy, a PR firm representing the world’s most notable classical artists.
Lindsey performs on a cello made in 1994 by Gary Garavaglia in the workshop of William Harris Lee & Co.
Shanta Nurullah
Shanta Nurullah is a nationally known storyteller and musician based in Chicago. She has presented storytelling programs and workshops in schools, libraries, colleges, churches, festivals, prisons and many other places where people gather and listen. Career highlights include the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, TN, nine iterations of the National Black Storytelling Festival and Conference, the Illinois, Michigan, Nebraska and Las Vegas Storytelling Festivals and at the headquarters of National Geographic.
Shanta has received an Illinois Arts Council Artist Fellowship, the Zora Neale Hurston Award from the National Association of Black Storytellers, and a Lifetime Achievement Award from Mutual Mentorship for Musicians(M3). A 2021 3Arts Awardee, she has received grants from the Nevada Arts Council, the American Association of University Women and the City of Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events. Shanta has an original story on permanent display at Brookfield Zoo (IL) and has been a storytelling teacher and mentor for many years.
ABOUT D-COMPOSED
Historians of art and culture may not currently take into full account that Black culture and creativity are a part of every musical institution's foundation that we currently see today. D-Composed, a Black chamber music collective, exists to ensure that we never forget it. Led by their mission to uplift and empower society through the music of Black composers, this Chicago-based creative incubator acts as a bridge between the past and present to the future of representation, music-centered experiences, and the communal power of Black composers and their impact. Music is not just solely entertainment, for this collective music is a storytelling tool that educates and inspires. Unapologetically, Blackness is at the core of their experience, with protecting, nurturing, and sustaining on the other side. In the middle lies their impact — the people who make up these experiences, whether as musicians, creatives, or community members. As a Black ensemble that focuses exclusively on the works of Black composers, D-Composed ensures to partner with institutions that have a proven commitment to communities of color. They have collaborated with Apple, Theaster Gates’s Rebuild Foundation, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, The Kennedy Center, Kaufman Music Center, and TEDx. While merging the worlds of contemporary music and classical, they have also collaborated with Jamila Woods during her appearance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and hip-hop artist Chance the Rapper. The walls that exist to keep Black people out of America’s most beloved cultural institutions are meant to be scaled and then dismantled by the creative architects who are bold enough to build against the status quo. The meaning of the collective’s name embodies that boldness in action. D–COMPOSED /DEE-KUHM-POHZD/ – ADVERB: Our creative process that involves the breaking down of preconceived notions, barriers, and opinions of what people think classical music should be, to rewriting our own narrative to reflect what the classical world could be.
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With your generous contribution, you can play a key role in our mission to be Chicago's primary residence for music and dance, connecting diverse audiences with outstanding artists from across the city, the nation, and the world.
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Land Acknowledgement
The Harris Theater for Music and Dance resides on the traditional homelands of the Council of the Three Fires: the Ojibwe, Odawa, and Potawatomi Nations. Many other tribes such as the Miami, Ho-Chunk, Menominee, Sac, and Fox have also called this area home. The region has long been a center for Indigenous people to gather, trade, and maintain kinship ties. Today, one of the largest urban American Indian communities in the United States resides in Chicago, and members of this community continue to contribute to the life and culture of this city.
To learn more about the practice of land acknowledgement and the importance of honoring native land, visit usdac.us. The Chicagoland region is home to over 65,000 American Indians and the country’s oldest urban-based Native membership community center, American Indian Center Chicago (AIC). Visit aicchicago.org to learn more about AIC’s mission to foster physical and spiritual health in the community, an active connection with traditional values and practices, stronger families with multigenerational bonds, and a rising generation of educated, articulate, and visionary youth.
Photo Credits: Harris Theater Exterior by Hedrich Blessing. Harris Theater Nevelson Reflection by Kyle Flubacker. Kids Meet the Music by Kyle Flubacker. D-Composed by Sulyiman Stokes. Harris Theater donors by Kyle Flubacker.
The Harris Theater for Music and Dance acknowledges support from the Illinois Arts Council.