The Caribou High School Music Building was established to promote music education throughout Northern Maine. Numerous studies have shown that a music education leads to stronger individuals both academically and socially. Knowing these facts first hand, students at Caribou High School took matters into their own hands and created a non-profit to address the numerous issues that Northern Maine faces musically, with the lack of a proper music center. The objective of the Caribou High School Music Building Fund is to both promote the benefits of a music education and provide the best education possible for our music students in Caribou and throughout Aroostook County by providing community members a music facility which will provide the tools to strive musically.
Once the music center is built, it will remedy numerous limitations that currently afflict Caribou High School. Below are just a few of these limitations:
The Band
The current room was built to accommodate only fifty
students.
The square footage needed for the ninety member band is
over 2,800 square feet. The current room is only 1,400
square feet. Thus, musicians in the room do not have the
individual moving space and air volume that is recommended
in order to allow for proper traffic and sound flow.
Five to ten minutes of the band period is wasted each day
because it takes time for the band to organize itself. In order
for a student to get from one side of the room to the other,
when all band members are present, the student must leave
the room and return through a different entrance.
Practically all storage for the high school music program is
within the band room. There is not enough room for all of
the instruments to be stored on shelves, leaving many of
them on the floor.
All marching band equipment is placed in the orchestra pit
under the Caribou Performing Arts Center stage, which
makes accessing that equipment difficult and time consuming.
Sound quality is an integral part to playing well as a group;
however, the current conditions are not conducive to the
proper study of music. The poor acoustics make it difficult
for musicians to hear all of the instruments within the room.
The department sheet music is stored in the band room.
However, there is not enough space for filing cabinets to hold
it all. Thus, the music is disorganized and it can be difficult to
find the proper sheet music at times.
Students are unable to practice individually. The only place
and time to practice an instrument at the school is in the
band room during study halls. There is usually more than
one musician practicing at a time, making it difficult to
concentrate. If a flute is practicing at the same time as a
trumpet, the flute can be easily overpowered.
The Chorus
The chorus practices in the Caribou Performing Arts Center,
which is a great working environment; however, they are
frequently displaced. The CPAC is constantly being used for
different events and performances, and consequently, during
that time the chorus must find temporary accommodations.
When displaced, the chorus either practices in the gym lobby,
the library, or they are not able to convene.
The Strings
The strings practice in the Athletic Training Room, which
creates problems for both the athletic department and the
strings.
The room is filled with athletic equipment and is a long walk
from the band room, where the musicians must store their
instruments.
If the Athletic department needs the space, the string ensemble
is displaced to the CPAC entry way. This is a distraction for
both the chorus and the strings, as the sound easily carries.
The Caribou Performing Arts Center
The band room does not belong only to the music department.
It also serves as the Green Room for most Performing Arts
Center events.
This is a major problem because the band must constantly
move all of its equipment for these groups.
Because CPAC groups also have access to the band room,
the music equipment is open to being used, damaged, or
stolen by anyone who passes through.
The CPAC is crunched for space backstage. There is a very
narrow hallway that leads from the band room to the stage,
which creates problems for two way traffic.
The CPAC doesn't have the space to move large pieces of
equipment or props, which limits performance capabilities.

