Mi'kmaw teen tuning up viola for performance at Carnegie Hall

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After rehearsing an orchestra piece for the third time in a row, 15-year-old viola player Daniel Milliea joked that the acoustics in Bonar Law High School’s music room are no match for those in the famous hall he'll be playing in next month.

He’s not wrong. No cramped classroom could ever compare to New York’s Carnegie Hall.

“It’s nerve-racking, my palms get sweaty,” he said, holding his instrument which is slightly larger than a violin.

Earlier this year, Milliea, a member of Elsipogtog First Nation, placed third in international talent competition American Protégé. 

He's been invited to perform at Carnegie Hall on Dec. 20 alongside some of the best musicians from 10 countries.

“It’s like the Olympics,” Swan Serna, Milliea’s long-time music instructor, said. “It’s the place where the Beatles play, Tchaikovsky ... big names.”

“I feel like I’m prepared but I can go beyond that," Milliea said, adjusting his posture to rehearse the piece one more time before the bell to his next class rings.

WATCH | A young Elsipogtog viola player rehearses for performance at renowned concert hall:Daniel Milliea, a 15-year-old musician from Elsipogtog First Nation, will perform at Carnegie Hall in New York on Dec. 20 with his longtime Sistema teacher, Swan Serna.

Milliea practices for three hours a day. Serna has been teaching him how to “attack the string” of an instrument he says Milliea was born to play.

As director of Sistema’s Elsipogtog Centre, Serna noticed Milliea when he began the youth orchestra program in the first grade. He noted his sweet demeanor, his attentiveness and his ability to “search for a nice sound.”

A young boy holding a violin in a row of orchestra musicians.Milliea, pictured here at a Sistema rehearsal in 2019, originally learned to play the violin before switching to the viola. (Submitted by Swan Serna)

The viola’s sound is lower than the violin, and is not as eccentric, Swan said. Yet, it evokes profound feelings.

“I think that the instrument [is] just suited perfectly for him and all of his personality and his character,” Serna said.

“He is made for this.”

When Serna encouraged Milliea to enter the talent competition, he realized that if he made it through, he would need someone to travel with him to New York and guide him through the feat.

So, Serna entered the contest himself — and qualified.

“We're going to play the same day,” he said. “A Sistema teacher and his student. It’s just a little bit crazy.”

Serna, who is originally from Mexico, has been part of the program in the region for 13 years.

He will play an original piece he composed for the violin while Milliea will play the second movement of Telemann's Viola Concerto.

A man in a coat and scarf sitting in a music room.Swan Serna, director of Sistema's Elsipogtog First Nation program, will play at Carnegie Hall on the same day as Milliea in December. (Katelin Belliveau/CBC)

Milliea said he hasn’t processed the fact that he’ll be stepping on such a big stage soon — and it’s not the only thing he wants to achieve.

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