Chi-chi Nwanoku


Chinyere Adah Nwanoku, OBE is a double bass player and professor of Historical Double Bass Studies at the Royal Academy of Music. Nwanoku was a founder member and principal bassist of the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, a position she held for 30 years.
Of Nigerian and Irish descent, she is the founder and Artistic Director of the Chineke! Orchestra, the first professional orchestra & junior orchestra in Europe to be made up of a majority of Black and minority ethnic musicians.

Early Life

Chinyere Adah Nwanoku is of Nigerian and Irish descent and is the oldest of the five children of her parents, Dr Michael Nwanoku and his wife Margaret. Nwanoku's mother, Margaret, was disowned by her parents due to having an interracial relationship, however Margaret's mother secretly travelled to London three months after the birth of Nwanoku. Nwanoku was born in Fulham, London, and before reaching school age she spent some years in Imo State, Nigeria, where her family went for two years. Nwanoku attended Kendrick Girls Grammar School in Reading, Berkshire. At the age of seven she began her education as a classical musician, first piano, and at the age of 18 bass. Nwanoku subsequently studied at the Royal Academy of Music while undertaking training as a 100-metre sprinter but had to end her athletic career following a knee injury.

Career

Nwanoku is the founder of the Chineke! Orchestra, Europe's first classical orchestra made up of a majority of black and minority ethnic musicians, with whom she regularly performs. The orchestra, made up of 62 musicians representing 31 different nationalities, first performed in 2015 at the Queen Elizabeth Hall and in addititon to her work with the Chineke! Orchestra, Nwanoku has worked as principal double bass of the ensemble Endymion, the London Mozart Players, the Academy of St Martin in the Fields, the English Baroque Soloists, the London Classical Players and the Orchestre Revolutionnaire et Romantique.
Besides playing and teaching bass, she has been active as a broadcaster, as in BBC Radio 3 Requests and in BBC TV Proms and as a member of BBC’s Classical Star jury. In 2015 Nwanoku presented the BBC Radio 4 programmes In Search of the Black Mozart, featuring the lives and careers of black classical composers and performers from the 18th century, including Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, Ignatius Sancho, and George Bridgetower. Other positions held by Nwanoku include being a Board member of the National Youth Orchestra, Tertis Foundation, London Music Fund, Royal Philharmonic Society, was previously on Association of British Orchestras board, is Patron of Music Preserved, the Cherubim Trust.
Nwanoku was a guest of BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs on 11 February 2018. In 2019, Nwanoku opened the new site of Hackney New Primary School, a specialist music school for children.
Nwanoku lives in London and has two children, Jacob Hugh and Phoebe Hugh, and a granddaughter, Maya Ekene Hugh.

Awards and recognition

In 2001, Nwanoku was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire in the 2001 Birthday Honours and Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the 2017 Birthday Honours, both for services to music. In addition, she has been made an Honorary Fellow of both the Royal Academy of Music and Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music.
In 2018 the BBC Woman's Hour placed Nwanoku ninth in a list of the world's most powerful women in music and she has also been listed in the 2019 and 2020 Powerlist of the most influential Black Britons of the year.