The Popular Music Program, now in its fourth semester, has about 100 students, and Barra expects it to top out at around 250.
“The Popular Music Program is a contemporary, industry-focused program that holds space for all types of musicians, from traditional instrumentalists to students who express their musicianship through technology or composition,” she said.
“Our goal is to create lifelong learners, multidisciplinary individuals and entrepreneurial creative industry professionals.”
Barra recently organized a recording session for two students and two faculty members to experience playing the John Lennon piano. Each arranged their own version of “Imagine.”
Sophia Humbert, a second-year student with a big voice, said she’d never played anything like it.
“My hands were shaking the entire time, but it was an incredible experience,” she said.
Carly Bates, an ASU alum and a faculty associate in the Popular Music Program, said the piano was “rich and warm.”
“There’s a real specialness to the instrument that I wasn’t prepared for,” she said.
Lennon’s iconic song “Imagine” was released in 1971.
“I’ve been thinking a lot about the energy and the message of this song and its relevance today,” Bates said.
“I think it is really relevant to where we are in life in this moment, but also to these students, who are embarking on their lives and careers as artists, and it’s this call to imagine a future that doesn’t exist, which is kind of where they’re at right now as they are actively building that future.”
A version of this story originally appeared in ASU News.
Photos by Charlie Leight/ASU news.