‘Just Show Up': Chase Ceglie on Teaching, Songwriting, and the Daily Grind of Making Music

Newport-based musician and educator Chase Ceglie blends his Berklee-honed skills, love of songwriting, and a teacher’s mindset to help students — and himself — find rhythm through routine

Share
‘Just Show Up': Chase Ceglie on Teaching, Songwriting, and the Daily Grind of Making Music
Copy

This feature is a part of Ocean State Sessions.

“The only thing that matters is showing up.” It’s a simple concept, really. But it’s one that’s been on Chase Ceglie’s mind for a while. “You’re making music part of your daily routine, and you’re documenting. You’re not trying to create something. So you’re just working. You’re doing the work every day. You’re finding a low-stakes situation to make music.”

Chase Ceglie getting in the groove.
Chase Ceglie getting in the groove.
David Lawlor

Perhaps it’s Ceglie’s experience as a music teacher that helped him stay in the mind space of just doing the work. “When I actually am faced with problems in my own process, I can kind of tell myself, ‘oh, well, what would I tell a student in that moment?’” Ceglie approaches teaching as less of a hierarchical environment, trying to stay on the level with his students. It’s a method likely adopted from his days at Berklee College of Music, where he became a tutor for incoming freshmen and struggling sophomores. “That was a really good challenge for me,” Chase recalls.

Chase Ceglie setting up for his performance on Ocean State Sessions.
Chase Ceglie setting up for his performance on Ocean State Sessions.
David Lawlor

Today, Chase Ceglie teaches through the Newport Festival Foundation. “I teach at the Met School. I teach an internship where the kids basically learn how to play music in a band from the ground up.” The culmination? “By the end of the year, they perform at the Newport Folk Festival.”

Being a music teacher means Chase needs to know a little about a lot. Ceglie is proficient in many instruments, but there is one instrument he considers his main tool. “To be honest, I feel like I’m really just a saxophone player,” he told us. “And then everything else that I play - piano, bass, guitar, drums, sing, blah blah - are just instruments that I can get by on to actualize the music that I’m writing. So I never took a drum lesson or piano lesson or a guitar lesson, bass lesson.”

Chase Ceglie playing his saxophone at Big Nice Studio in Lincoln, RI.
Chase Ceglie playing his saxophone at Big Nice Studio in Lincoln, RI.
David Lawlor

With enough knowledge to write his own music, Ceglie has been hard at work producing his own works over the years. “Songwriting is my favorite thing to do. And then to figure out how to produce the songs and what style. I use genre as a palette. So if I’m trying to make the audience feel a certain way.”

Chase Ceglie’s music is available on multiple streaming platforms, including Apple Music, Spotify, Bandcamp, and YouTube Music.

Without stoves or modern tools, participants learned to prep a full 18th-century meal over an open flame in a historic Rhode Island home
In Los Angeles, a new crop of curbside libraries are helping communities recover after last year’s wildfires. But instead of books, these libraries are full of seeds
The fires will return from May through November, featuring a milestone 500th lighting and themed nights
Janet Coit, the former director of the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, and a Biden administration official, is set to begin her new job in April
Thousands of protesters gathered in Providence, part of a nationwide day of protests
The paradox of mass shootings in an era of less crime