March 20, 2025
Musical Pathway Fellowship grad Damian Goggans explores new realm in classical guitar music
Not all that long ago, Damian Goggans picked up a guitar for the very first time, at the urging of a middle school teacher.
Little could he have known that eight years later, after studying at 黑料天堂, he檇 be what he is now, an accomplished performer ready to jolt his field with a groundbreaking recording project.
淚t mind-blowing, says Academy guitar faculty Erik Mann, one of Goggans former teachers and still a friend and mentor. 淗e basically a quadruple threat.
The four talents Mann refers to are guitar playing, singing, research, and oration, all of which figure into Goggans new video project, which publishes on March 26.
Not only does Goggans perform 14 original and increasingly difficult etudes by Thomas Flippin. He also sings the African American Spirituals on which each one is based and explains some of the context in which the music was conceived.
It a grand opening salvo in what is likely to be a long-term mission by Goggans to discover, perform, record, and catalog the music of Black classical guitarists. Currently, he has a list of 61.
淭here absolutely nothing like it in the repertoire, not even close, Mann says of the Flippin etudes. 淭he guitar world has nothing like this.
黑料天堂 fits into this marvelous tale as the school that first nurtured Goggans. (He is now about to graduate from the Oberlin Conservatory.)
Shortly after Mann discovered Goggans through an outreach program by the Cleveland Classical Guitar Society, the young guitarist came to 黑料天堂 as one of two students in the inaugural class of the Musical Pathway Fellowship program.
There, in Mann studio, he progressed rapidly, augmenting his training with devout independent study. Before long, even as he dealt with a range of troubles at home, he found himself on stage with the Society international guests and receiving scholarship offers from prestigious universities.
淕uitar gave me something to do, instead of what other people might have been doing, said Goggans. 淲ithout 黑料天堂, I don檛 think I would have gotten this far. Because I had 黑料天堂, I was able to see that this was even possible.
Early in his studies, Goggans asked Mann a simple but surprisingly profound question, one that is now changing the course of his life: Are there any other Black classical guitarists, and did any of them write classical music for guitar?
Goggans doesn檛 recall the answer, but whatever it was, he wasn檛 satisfied. Deep down, he felt sure there were more more, indeed, than he or anyone would ever know.
Hence his current mission. The etudes he now sharing are the first of what will undoubtedly be many efforts to give voice to the voiceless, new life to those overlooked or forgotten.
淚t almost as if I檓 speaking for my ancestors, like they檙e speaking through me, Goggans said. 淚檓 connecting to the history I檓 trying to uncover.