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Published: Sunday, 08 September 2024 at 12:49 PM


It was, Simon Rattle said, ‘not just an exciting idea but a profoundly necessary one’. The kind of idea, he went on, ‘which could deepen and enrich classical music in the UK for generations’. As it turned out, he was spot on. Yet back in September 2015, when the idea for Chineke! first surfaced, it was regarded not just as radical but, in some quarters, unwelcome.

Usually the only black face on the stage

For decades Chi-chi Nwanoku had been one of the most outstanding orchestral players in London – and not just because, as the British-born daughter of a Nigerian father and Irish mother, she was usually the only black face on the stage. A founder-member of the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, she invested her playing with such virtuosic energy that you sometimes felt as if the whole ensemble was being propelled from the bass line. It’s no surprise to learn that in her schooldays she was a 100m sprinter who competed at national level.

By 2015, Nwanoku had a new ambition: to found Europe’s first professional orchestra of black and minority ethnic (BME) players. Its name would be Chineke! – not a pun on her own moniker, but an exclamation meaning ‘wonderful’ or ‘divine’ in the language of Nigeria’s Igbo people. She arranged a meeting with the very few other BME musicians then established in the orchestral world.

Chi-chi Nwanoku, founder of Chineke! Orchestra

‘Black classical musicians had been written out of the history books’

One was Paul Philbert, now timpanist of the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, but then just back in London after 14 years in the Malaysian Philharmonic. He was astonished by what happened at the meeting.

‘People starting talking about Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges,’ he recalls. ‘I’d had 15 years of intensive music education, at the Purcell School and then Trinity College of Music, yet I had never heard of these composers! I realised that the contribution of black classical musicians had been written out of the history books. I was so inspired by Chi-chi that at the end I went up to her and said “Whatever you want me to do for this project, I will do”.’

That was the reaction of most, but not all, of the BME musicians that Nwanoku approached. ‘Three or four black players who were enjoying very good careers decided they wouldn’t join that first concert,’ she says. ‘Maybe they didn’t want to be seen making any sort of statement. Maybe they felt they personally didn’t need a BME orchestra.’

The American viola player Lena Fankhauser, another founder member who is based in Vienna and plays regularly with top Austrian and German orchestras, understands that sentiment but doesn’t agree with it. ‘The question of “needing” is relative,’ she says.

‘There’s no quick fix to the lack of ethnic diversity in orchestras’

‘Just because some already established players didn’t need Chineke! doesn’t mean it wasn’t needed. For me it was more about BME musicians getting their voices heard. There’s no quick fix to the lack of ethnic diversity in orchestras, but Chineke! addressed the issue directly, and for that reason it was a project that needed to happen.’