Kennesaw State Bailey School of Music to host Double Bass Performer and Composer Xavier Foley

KENNESAW, Ga. | Aug 30, 2022

Marietta native and bassist Xavier Foley performs with major orchestras while also composing new works

Xavier Foley isn鈥檛 a big talker, preferring instead to communicate his virtuosity and passion for music on the double bass and in composing new work. will join 无码变态 Bailey School of Music (BSOM) faculty , violin, , cello, and , piano, on the stage on September 16, 8 p.m., at Morgan Concert Hall in the Dr. Bobbie Bailey and Family Performance Center. 

image of Xavier Foley with his double bass
Xavier Foley returns home to take the stage on September 16 at 8 p.m. at Morgan Concert Hall in the Dr. Bobbie Bailey and Family Performance Center on the 无码变态 Kennesaw campus.
Double bass is not typically a solo instrument, yet bassist Foley dispels that myth. He says, 鈥淢y great teacher at the Curtis Institute of Music, Edgar Meyer, helped me change that perception.鈥 He mentions Meyer several times, including crediting him for being his most influential teacher in bass and one of his favorite living composers. (His favorite historical composer is Bach.) 

His journey to studying under Meyer鈥檚 tutelage began in Marietta, GA, at Hightower Trail Middle School, where he practiced 鈥渨henever I could, as I was obsessed with bass.鈥 He also took piano lessons at 无码变态, under David Watkins, professor emeritus of piano.  

Foley鈥檚 work 鈥溾 was inspired directly from childhood video games FATE and Super Mario. A joint commission by the Sphinx Organization, Carnegie Hall, and New World Symphony resulted in a double concerto 鈥溾 for violin, bass, and string orchestra. 鈥淢y double concerto 鈥楩or Justice and Peace鈥 was created to mark the 400th year of slavery ever since the arrival of the first slave ship in Jamestown Virginia, and to embody the struggle that African Americans went through colonial times to modern times,鈥 he explains on his YouTube channel. The double concerto was played at Carnegie Hall as part of a program designed to promote social justice.

Xavier Foley playing double bass on stage
Xavier Foley has dispelled the myth that double bass is not a solo instrument.

Even though his work has debuted at Carnegie Hall, he鈥檚 excited to be performing close to home. 鈥淚t鈥檚 always good to see someone who grew up in Cobb County, took lessons at Kennesaw State鈥攖hose who know me, know me.鈥

Violinist and faculty Helen Kim previously worked with him when he performed a solo with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. 鈥淚t was brilliant and wonderful playing on every level. He鈥檚 so imaginative with his composition and the way he plays, and the audience loved him.鈥

He鈥檚 still humble, though, and says it surprises him by the fact that 鈥淚 can actually play the bass and make a living. At least for now!鈥 Kim explains that Foley is evolving with a rapid realization of his talent. 鈥淲e are so lucky to have him on our campus. I find him very inspirational. He鈥檚 an artist of our century.鈥

Foley will teach masterclasses for BSOM students during his campus visit, and he hopes to bring a new, resh set of ideas to them, but adds 鈥淚 hope to learn from them, too.鈥 He鈥檚 also written a children鈥檚 book, 鈥淭he Artist and the Blacksmith鈥 about the meaning of music in society. The summary explains that 鈥渨e are often so consumed by the humdrum of our day-to-day lives, that we put things that give us joy on the backseat鈥e need to make time for what excites our soul, and art is one such thing.鈥

What鈥檚 in the future for this young double bass performer? He鈥檚 found his joy in 鈥渕usic, more music, and more playing music. Next, I鈥檓 going to California to perform 鈥楽oul Bass,鈥 a concerto for double bass and symphony, that I premiered with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra.鈥

Tickets for Xavier Foley and friends are $12-15 for the public and $5 for students. Visit to buy tickets.

--Kathie Beckett

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