CCM Professor Awadagin Pratt spotlighted for commitment to inclusion in the arts
The Cincinnati Business Courier features Pratt and his piano competition centered on Black artists
UC College-Conservatory of Music Professor of Piano and Artist-in-Residence Awadagin Pratt spoke to the Cincinnati Business Courier about his aspirations to diversify the arts industry by encouraging the next generation of Black pianists.
Pratt was one of three recipients of the 2021 Sphinx Venture Fund, generating an award of $100,000 to kick-start the biannual Nina Simone Piano Competition beginning summer 2023. Open to African American pianists between the ages of 10 and 35, winners will receive monetary prizes, performance opportunities and admittance into Art of the Piano, an affiliate CCM program run by Pratt.
“We will show that [Black artists are] out there and that they’re everywhere, and how wonderful they are,” Pratt tells the Cincinnati Business Courier. Applications for the Nina Simone Piano Competition will open in December 2022. In addition to the competition, some of the funds will go towards commissioning new piano works.
Awadagin Pratt is no stranger to receiving awards. He won the prestigious Naumburg Piano Competition as well as the National Association of Negro Musicians competition. “I’ve heard of too many young, prodigiously gifted pianists not having the opportunities that people who don’t look like them have. That is why we’re also focused on mentoring...I think there have been young pianists who’ve come up, are professionals and still don’t see that their opportunities matched their gifts.”
Pratt’s multi-faceted career has led him to several exciting engagements in 2022, beginning with his opera conducting debut with the Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess starring Rhianna Giddens at Greensboro Opera. In March he joins the Cincinnati Pops orchestra to premiere a new piano concerto by rising African American composer Jessie Montgomery before gearing up for this summer’s Art of the Piano Festival. “It is evolving....What’s important now is creativity and fostering that in young people,” Pratt says about the festival. “I think that Art of the Piano has gotten itself into an amazing position as one of the premier festivals for pianists within these 10 years.”
About CCM Piano Studies
Piano study at CCM emphasizes the development of pianistic, musical, performing and teaching skills.
All degree programs are designed to integrate the great traditions of the past with the development of skills necessary for the demands of the music profession in the 21st century. The various degree programs are rigorous in their challenges, while retaining flexibility in order to address each student's relative strengths and weaknesses on an individual basis. Piano students at CCM can avail themselves of the enormous variety of programs offered by the college and the university to supplement the core music curriculum.
The philosophy of the CCM Piano Department is one of strong reliance on the mentoring process, by which the students' private teachers guide them both pianistically and musically, and advise them in all aspects of their overall education and development. Our goal is to prepare our students to excel in the demands of college life as well as to prepare them for the rigors of today's professional world.
Feature image at the top: Awadagin Pratt. Photo/Provided.
Related Stories
CCM welcomes new film and media scoring faculty member J.R. Paredes
May 20, 2026
UC College-Conservatory of Music Dean Pete Jutras has announced the appointment of J.R. Paredes as CCM's new Assistant Professor of Film and Media Scoring. His faculty appointment officially begins on Aug. 15, 2026. Paredes is a composer, music producer and audio post-production specialist whose work spans film, television and commercial music. His credits include original scores for feature films and series distributed on platforms such as Apple TV+ and Prime Video, as well as extensive work in sound design and mixing for film and media.
Materials scientist gains valuable research experience
May 20, 2026
The opportunities at the College of Engineering and Applied Science are what attracted Ananth Balasubramanian to the University of Cincinnati. He came to UC as a master's student and after two years, transitioned to a direct PhD program in materials science and engineering. Here, he works in the Digital Fabrication Laboratory and recently was named Graduate Student Engineer of the Month by CEAS.
6 ways starting a GLP-1 medication could affect your emotions
May 20, 2026
When patients first start taking a glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) medication, they probably expect to feel full. But they might not anticipate how it can influence their emotions. The medications act on the stomach and the brain, said Malti Vij, MD, a University of Cincinnati adjunct associate professor in the College of Medicine's Department of Internal Medicine and a diplomate of the American Board of Obesity Medicine.