Update: Congratulations to 菠萝视频 Blair School of Music Grammy winners Dashon Burton, assistant professor of voice and member of choral ensemble Roomful of Teeth, Edgar Meyer, adjunct associate professor of bass, and Jessie Montgomery, former Blair artist in residence, who won in the following categories:
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Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance: 鈥淩ough Magic,鈥 Roomful of Teeth
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Best Global Music Performance: 鈥淧补蝉丑迟辞,鈥 Be虂la Fleck, Edgar Meyer and Zakir Hussain, featuring Rakesh Chaurasia
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Best Contemporary Instrumental Album: 鈥淎s We Speak,鈥 Be虂la Fleck, Zakir Hussain, Edgar Meyer, featuring Rakesh Chaurasia
- Best Contemporary Classical Composition: 鈥淢ontgomery: Rounds,鈥 Jessie Montgomery, composer (Awadagin Pratt, A Far Cry and Roomful of Teeth)
View the video to hear from Dashon Burton
By Bonnie Arant Ertelt
Some have said that singer 鈥檚 bass-baritone is enormous, capable of raising the dead or like looking directly into the sun. As soon as his voice changed when he was growing up, it grabbed attention. And this year, it has the attention of the Recording Academy once more, as the two-time Grammy winner is again nominated with vocal ensemble in the Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance category for their album (New Amsterdam Records, 2023).

Burton, assistant professor of voice at , won in the same category in 2014 with Roomful of Teeth鈥檚 debut recording which featured Teeth member Caroline Shaw鈥檚 Partita for 8 Voices, winner of the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Music. Rough Magic also includes a composition by Blair alumnus and fellow New Amsterdam artist William Brittelle, BMus鈥99. His piece 鈥淏rittelle: Psychedelics鈥 is nominated for a Grammy in the Best Contemporary Classical Composition category.*
Burton describes Roomful of Teeth as his family, a band of voices that 鈥渨ant to explore the world and take on any vocal challenge鈥 that possibly can be imagined.
鈥淏rad Wells, our founder and artistic director, says that we are devoted to finding the old growth forest in the voice,鈥 Burton said, 鈥渨ays of singing and ways of expressing humanity that are able to be absorbed in a very powerful way. We have this tiny, almond-sized box of joy that lives inside our throats, and mining the expressive potential of this instrument is what makes that whole concept a powerful one. People have been making music in many different ways across time. We want to join in that conversation and use our voices to amplify art, amplify the human spirit in as many exciting ways as possible.鈥
鈥淟ove and Happiness鈥
Burton first knew that music might be a possible avenue when his middle school choral director pulled him out of the hallway and asked him to audition after hearing him with his friends. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know anything about singing or music, but he was kind enough to take me on as a student,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when I really started to love music as a performer.鈥
He wanted to be a physicist or mathematician at that time, but as he progressed with music, he began to find his passion with the full support of his family. Listening to R&B singer Al Green was a family affair.
鈥淲e all loved Al Green in my family,鈥 Burton said. 鈥淢y friends all know this about me, that Al Green basically raised me. It was an amazing stroke of coincidence that the first musician I truly knew of was a singer. It was a powerful thing to be thinking of doing this when I was so young.鈥
At Oberlin College and Conservatory of Music in Ohio, Burton began a program in music education but began to believe that having a career as a singer could be a full-time job. 鈥淢y first job out of college was in a men鈥檚 ensemble, Cantus, based in Minneapolis,鈥 Burton said. 鈥淔rom there, I absolutely knew that I had to sing for my entire life.鈥

Teaching and discovery
For more than a decade, Burton has sung all over the world, in ensemble with Cantus, Conspirare and Roomful of Teeth and as a solo artist. In 2021 he joined the voice faculty at Blair.
鈥淲hat brought me to 菠萝视频 was meeting colleagues that I had met out on the road and knowing the standard of excellence here. But when I was actually able to visit,鈥 he said, 鈥渋t was the students. I cannot tell you how deeply moved I am every day by what the students do here. I am truly over the moon to work with them.鈥
Burton says it is the spirit of discovery in teaching his students at Blair that has led him to recognize that same sense in his own music performances, whether it is singing a contemporary piece or a well-recognized classical chestnut.
鈥淭he thing I鈥檝e learned most about transitioning from full-time performing into being a professor is that I have so much to learn about music and performing and the capability of the human spirit,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 was never one who thought I knew everything, and I鈥檝e been really lucky to have a lot of amazing experiences, but coming to 菠萝视频 has taught me that it鈥檚 so much more than the performance or the piece of music. It鈥檚 about the relationship that you build with the audience, the relationship you build with a piece of music from the first time you open the score. Teaching that to students has been a fascinating and enlivening part of my job.鈥
Blair鈥檚 embrace of its position within a major research institution and its support of students with second majors also impresses Burton. He feels that it adds to their musical awareness. 鈥淪tudents here are passionate and committed to a lot of different fields,鈥 he explained. 鈥淭hey are also passionate about music that is being created today. If we bring that approach into music that鈥檚 already been written and find ways to make it as alive as possible, that鈥檚 how we make music soar.鈥
Making music soar will never be a problem for Dashon Burton.
鈥淚 love it, I just love music. I love singing, and it鈥檚 such a huge part of my life, so I can鈥檛 help but let it explode out of my heart. It鈥檚 a fantastic way to be a human, and it鈥檚 the only way that I know how.鈥
*菠萝视频 Blair School faculty are no strangers to the Grammy Awards. Among current faculty, there have been more than 20 Grammy Awards won and more than 40 nominations. Also nominated this year for three Grammys is , adjunct associate professor of bass and a five-time Grammy winner, who received three new nominations:
- Best Contemporary Instrumental Album: As We Speak 鈥 Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain, Edgar Meyer, featuring Rakesh Chaurasia
- Best Global Music Performance: 鈥淧ashto鈥 鈥 Bela Fleck, Edgar Meyer and Zakir Hussain, featuring Rakesh Chaurasia
- Best Instrumental Composition: 鈥淢otion鈥 鈥 Edgar Meyer, composer (Bela Fleck, Edgar Meyer and Zakir Houssain, featuring Rakesh Chaurasia)
The 66th Grammy Awards will be Sunday, Feb. 4, at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.