
18/07/2025
Ever been humbled by the great outdoors? ⛅️
For Ray Mandel-Mueller (‘26), a native of Somers, New York, the natural world has motivated them from a young age to be thankful for their friends and family.
“Growing up, my parents would take us to different national parks every summer. I think that being confronted with the enormity that exists around you, and the enormity of the natural world, makes me appreciate the connections that I have, as well as just the vastness of how interconnected everything is from an ecological perspective. If you’re gonna be hiking for miles and you’re out in the wilderness, it’s just limited contact with others. It’s humbling to understand that you’re a part of something bigger, rather than often the human focus, and being in spaces that aren’t necessarily designed for you.”
Ray’s reflection on these parks has inspired their interests in intimate communication, especially while studying Biology and Music at Brown.
“I am very much inspired by intimacy, music and art. I study communication in the biology research I do at Brown, and I think a lot about how you can get information from one person to another that isn’t just talking to someone. I am trying to explore intimacy in live performance as well as its relationship to electronic music or recorded music. I want to try out this larger group improvisation idea. I want to have a couple people in the situation know the songs I conduct and then a lot of people who don’t know what the songs are or how they’re played. That communication between musicians of not knowing what’s gonna happen or not having everything planned out can inspire new ideas.”
When asked about their plans, Ray responded with certainty about being productive in the moment.
“I tend to lean more so into whatever I’m making at the time, because that’s a concrete and immediate thing. I’m not typically thinking far out into the future like, “Oh, 10 years down the line, I want this to happen.” There’s no real way to know what’s gonna happen. So it’s just about what you can control now and immediately.”
Keep up the stellar work, Ray!