Trevor Nicholas is a music educator who works with Chicago high school students and professional musicians to create collaborative works of art that respond to real world events and experiences. Growing up in the Northwoods of Minnesota, Trevor’s family modeled deeply caring for others, gathering around music, and delighting in the outdoors - especially water. Early experiences of trauma drew Trevor to develop an intimate connection with sound and improvisation.
Trevor began experiencing chronic joint pain during elementary school, which initiated a long journey of medical apparatuses, medications, injections, and spending most of 5th grade in a wheelchair. When he couldn’t run outside with the other kids, he turned to music improvisation as his interactive companion. “Growing up in the rugged Northwoods of Minnesota - surrounded by a nurturing, interconnected, and grounded community - gave me deep roots, which have allowed me to care for my students while weathering the storms of this pandemic.”
One of Trevor’s greatest joys is to see purpose awakened in his students as they realize that their artistry can change and uplift the world around them. Trevor draws upon his experiences with both physical disability and personal loss as a youth to compose music with and for his ensembles. He believes that art-making can play a unique role in healing from the traumas of life.
Trevor has led student ensembles to premiere works at Chicago venues such as the Lyric Opera of Chicago, the Chicago Symphony Center, Millennium Park, the Harris Theater, and Wrigley Field. He has partnered with arts organizations to bring over $300,000 in grants, donations, and free music lessons to his Chicago Public Schools students over the past decade.
Representing his students and colleagues from across Chicago, Trevor was honored as a Teacher of Excellence at the December 2020 Chicago Public Schools Board of Education Meeting. He presented the internationally-recognized "Who Will Carry Me?" trauma-responsive virtual project, which was visibly moving to board members. He also used this platform to advocate for the city to invest more deeply in school arts programs so that every student has access to a quality arts education. He recently has been selected as a Semifinalist for the 2022 GRAMMY Music Educator of the Year Award.
As someone with Midwestern roots, Trevor holds a Bachelors of Music Education from North Park University in Chicago and a Masters of Arts in Music Education with a concentration in Choral Conducting from the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, MN. He has had the joy of helping steer over $10 million in grants to creative classrooms across Chicago through his participation on Ingenuity Inc.’s Creative Schools Grant Review Panels.