Partnerships
AudioActive are running up the soundtrack to Sussex
AudioActive is preceded by its moniker, an award-winning not-for-profit music organisation offering free, open access music making sessions to young people across the South East since 1999. Michelle Hunter, a pioneer in her field, joined the organisation in 2022 following 25 years of working in the music industry and homeless charity sector, bringing with her a bounty of experience of pulling sound and community together into one space. Now reflecting on the multiple spaces that do just that within AudioActive, Michelle chats with BUILDHOLLYWOOD about the blues parties that soundtracked her childhood, the Ministry of Sound posters that made it on Eastenders, and the vital role that music plays in creating safe, trusted spaces.
Michelle Hunter, Director of Programmes and Operations and the Designated Safeguard Lead at AudioActive cut her teeth in the music industry by way of the world-renowned Ministry of Sound in the early noughties. Michelle’s own story began trying to sleep with the sound of next door neighbour blues parties, a bassline that soundtracked her childhood and followed her to the parties she went to put on herself later in life. “Those blues parties were my first understanding of community and music coming together,” she shares, “it was always about belonging”. That feeling of a neighbourhood coming together to shake legs on a make-do domestic dancefloor extended into a life-long love affair with music and community, two facets of Michelle’s practice that continue to travel in parallel.
15.05.25
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