A graduate of the Juilliard School and Oberlin Conservatory, cellist Avery Waite is an active
performer, teacher and international music education advocate based in
New Delhi, India. He is a recipient of a 2016-2017 Fulbright-Nehru Research Grant to study
and perform Hindustani music in India. Avery is
involved in a wide range of education programs, social justice
initiatives, and cultural diplomacy projects and has taught and consulted overseas at
music programs in the Middle East, Central and Southeast Asia, Central America and
the Caribbean.In his current role as project leader for MusAid, a music education non-profit organization, he works to support music programs in countries emerging from poverty and conflict by coordinating volunteer teaching workshops and instrument donations. Avery is also on faculty with American Voices, a US state department sponsored organization at the forefront of cultural diplomacy and cross-cultural engagement. As a teacher with American Voices, Avery has led classical chamber music and orchestral workshops in Turkmenistan, Lebanon and Iraq. From 2012-2013, he was based in Kabul Afghanistan, teaching at the Afghanistan National Institute of Music and was a co-director of the widely acclaimed Afghan Youth Orchestra’s tour to the USA.
As a concert cellist, chamber musician and orchestral player, Avery
has appeared at Avery Fisher Hall, The Kennedy Center, Alice Tully Hall,
Carnegie Hall and has performed solo in concert halls around the world. Avery is also an active
composer and arranger. Inspired and moved by his experiences
teaching and performing abroad, he has done extensive arranging of Indo-Afghan, Central Asian and Kurdish folk music. Avery performs
this music with his ensemble Drifting East and the group recently
released its debut album entitled "Songs and Melodies of Afghanistan." 
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