When steps to the conductor鈥檚 podium in Rollins Chapel on May 11 it will be to lead the in an evening of Mexican, American, and European music, the latest offering in a series of concerts sponsored by the .
Started by Messier after he came to Dartmouth in 2019, the initiative brings Mexican music and composers to Dartmouth and other colleges and universities in the United States, and, in a cross-cultural exchange, also sends American students to musical programs in Mexican universities and institutions.
The director of bands at the , Messier was the : first place in the noncollegiate band division for his leadership of the ensemble The Valley Winds in Amherst, Mass., where he lives; and third-place in the college band division for directing the 55-person wind ensemble, which has also performed at Cornell University, Smith College and the New England Conservatory鈥檚 Jordan Hall.
The Mexican Repertoire Initiative emerged from Messier鈥檚 realization, when he was programming music for a Cinco de Mayo concert, that he 鈥渄idn鈥檛 know any authentically Mexican repertoire.鈥
Compositions that imitated or echoed 鈥淢exican鈥 music ran a gamut from 鈥渂eing respectful and informed to being stereotypical,鈥 and were written almost exclusively by white American composers, Messier says.
Messier, who grew up in Fairfield, Vt., has always encouraged students to think of playing and composing music as lifelong pursuits even if they don鈥檛 necessarily lead to concert hall careers. In recent years he has also turned his attention toward audience-building.
鈥淲here we are focusing on relevancy is in terms of representation. If we want people to pay attention to what we鈥檙e doing they need to see themselves in what we鈥檙e doing. They need to see possibility,鈥 Messier says.
The initiative aims to provide a platform for composers and musicians in Mexico as well as shine a light on the musical and artistic contributions of the largest minority population in the U.S. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Hispanics comprise 19% of the total population; of that 19%, people of Mexican origin accounted for 60% of the U.S. Hispanic population in 2021, the Pew Research Center reported.
Without 鈥渄iminishing the importance of the canon or the traditional repertoire,鈥 Messier says, it is critical to showcase music that represents the breadth of people and cultures in the U.S. 鈥淭o me, this is a largely unexplored area of repertoire, an unexplored area of racism, an unexplored area of representation.鈥
For his work, Messier recently received the Holly Fell Sateia Award at Dartmouth鈥檚 2024 Social Justice Awards ceremony, which recognized Messier鈥檚 鈥渄edication to the Mexican Repertoire Initiative, and its impactful mission and efforts to increase awareness of the ongoing racism, inequality, and underrepresentation of Latinx communities in the wind band world.鈥

Messier鈥檚 research into the Mexican repertoire and its composers led in 2020 to a composition competition, which attracted more than 200 entries and laid the ground for the Mexican Repertoire Initiative.
鈥淭he goal was open and he just happened to have the ball. It鈥檚 something that he is really passionate about,鈥 says Rodrigo Martinez Torres, who was awarded first place in the 2020 composition competition and is now a Guarini School of Graduate and Advanced Studies digital music student at Dartmouth.
He also was part of a wind ensemble tour Messier led to Mexico City during spring break last year to foster collaboration and help showcase work by Mexican composers.
The Rollins Chapel program includes work by contemporary Mexican and American composers, as well as classical music by Italian and Spanish composers. It will also feature guest conductors Alma Huerta, Julia D鈥橝ntico, and retired Marine Col. Michael Colburn, who was director of 鈥淭he President鈥檚 Own鈥 United States Marine Band from 2004 to 2014.
Huerta met Messier through the initiative when she attended a conducting course he taught in 2023 in Sonora, Mexico; she has also followed his work on social media. 鈥淭he work that Brian is doing is very important since it is generating an entire musical movement in Mexico in which composers, ensembles, directors, and our society are benefiting,鈥 she wrote in an email.

鈥淭he truth is, not many audiences in America have heard Mexican music at all because this work hasn鈥檛 gotten out there. We鈥檝e done our little part to change that,鈥 says , the 天美影视鈥檚 managing director and executive producer.
Ian Smith 鈥24, the wind ensemble鈥檚 manager and principal trombonist, observes that Messier prompted 鈥渦s to play things as traditional band or symphony players that we didn鈥檛 get exposure to.鈥
Messier could not have necessarily predicted when he began the Mexican Repertoire Initiative that it would have become what he now sees as his life鈥檚 work.
鈥淚t鈥檚 something that I鈥檝e only scratched the surface of,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e nowhere near accomplishing what I would like. I can鈥檛 imagine doing this work long enough to be done with it.鈥
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The Dartmouth Wind Ensemble at 8 p.m. on Saturday, May 11, at Rollins Chapel. Tickets are $15 and up.