Vocal Arts Institute
July 26 – August 1, 2026 | MPulse Summer Performing Arts
Priority Application Deadline: February 1, 2026
One-Week Summer Program
The MPulse Vocal Arts Institute is a one-week program that offers a comprehensive introduction to studying vocal music at the collegiate level. Students will engage in group lessons, choral ensemble singing, in addition to sessions on diction, vocal pedagogy, music theory, and conducting classes. Students will also receive introductions to related topics such as Alexander technique, Dalcroze, fitness for singers, and much more! Finally, students will participate in sessions on how to prepare collegiate prescreening recordings, tips and best practices for college admissions, and career options in the vocal arts.
Students particularly interested in solo repertoire can apply for the MPulse Vocal Arts Institute Solo Voice Track. The VAI Solo Voice Track is in addition to the MPulse Vocal Arts Institute Core Curriculum and offers students the chance to perform in daily masterclasses on topics such as opera, oratorio, African American art song, and Lieder and to present varied repertoire in VAI concerts. Solo track students will also receive individual one on one voice lessons with University of Michigan voice faculty. Students interested in the Solo Voice Track should review additional audition requirements in the sections below.
High school students interested in exploring future careers in choral music can apply for the brand new VAI Leadership Track that is designed to provide students with pedagogical knowledge and refine their skills as choral student leaders. The VAI Leadership Track is in addition to the MPulse Vocal Arts Institute Core Curriculum and offers students the chance to grow musicianship skills required for choral leadership, including : conducting skills, effective choral warm-ups, rehearsals techniques, and presentation style. All students will work directly with the School of Music, Theatre & Dance faculty and participate in all VAI Core Curriculum activities including singing in the large ensemble. Students interested in the Leadership Track should review the additional audition requirements in the section below.
Submit a 3 minute video describing
- 1) past/present experiences working with groups;
- 2) what they are hoping to learn at a leadership program;
- 3) goals for the future
Institute Dates: July 26 – August 1, 2026
Tuition (Including Room & Board) Core Curriculum: $1,495
Tuition (Including Room & Board) for Core Curriculum and Leadership Track Add-On: $1,750
Tuition (Including Room & Board) for Core Curriculum and Solo Track Add-On: $1,950
Application Status: OPEN
Non-Refundable Application Fee: $75
Vocal Arts Solo Track: CLOSED
Priority Application Deadline:
February 1, 2026*
Priority Admissions Notification:
March 1, 2026
*Applications will remain open until the program is full. Rolling application submissions will be reviewed on a monthly basis. Please check the application status above to see if we are still accepting applications on a rolling basis.
Application Fee Waivers
Review the qualifications and the documentation you will need to provide here: How can I apply for a fee waiver for my application? Qualified students/families will reach out to the Acceptd Support team to request a waiver code to waive the $75 application fee. Fill out this fee waiver form to request a code.
Program Sample Schedule
While schedules vary year-to-year, the prior year schedules will provide insight into the programming provided for both tracks:
Faculty
Eugene Rogers
Director of University Choirs and Associate Professor of Choral Conducting, Institute Faculty Director
Stanford Olsen
Professor of Voice, Solo Track Faculty Co-Director
Caitlin Lynch
Assistant Professor of Voice, Solo Track Faculty Co-Director
Eugene Rogers
Associate Professor of Music and Director of University Choirs
A two-time Michigan Emmy Award winner, a 2017 Sphinx Medal of Excellence recipient, and a 2015 GRAMMY® Award nominee, Eugene Rogers is recognized as a leading conductor and pedagogue throughout the United States and abroad. Dr. Rogers is the founding director of EXIGENCE. Recently, he was named as the fifth Artistic Director of the two-time GRAMMY® Award-Winning Ensemble, The Washington Chorus (Washington, D.C.). At the University, Rogers leads the graduate choral conducting program, conducts the chamber choir, and administers the program of over eight choral ensembles. His choirs have toured throughout China, South Africa, the United States, and have appeared at national and regional conferences. In 2016, Rogers’ passion for issues of social justice and music was featured in the award-winning documentary Love, Life and Loss which highlights Joel Thompson’s powerful Seven Last Words of the Unarmed, and in 2013, he co-managed the production of the joint CD Ye Shall Have a Song with the Michigan, Yale, and Harvard Glee Clubs, a collaboration celebrating America’s three oldest collegiate choirs.
Stanford Olsen
Professor of Voice & Opera, Solo Track Faculty Co-Director
Distinguished American tenor Stanford Olsen joined the faculty of the University of Michigan School of Music, Theater & Dance as professor of voice after 15 years as artist-in-residence and holder of the Shelfer Eminent Scholar in Music chair at Florida State University. One of this generation’s most successful and versatile artists, his career spans more than 1,200 performances on five continents over the course of 30 years. Since his professional operatic debut there in 1986, opposite Dame Joan Sutherland in Bellini’s I Puritani, Stanford Olsen has performed more than 160 times with New York’s Metropolitan Opera. Olsen has been heard throughout the world at venues such as San Francisco Opera, Houston Grand Opera, Miami Opera, La Scala di Milano, Landestheater Stuttgart, Theatre du Chatelet, Teatro Bellini di Catania, Theatre La Monnaie, Australian Opera, Deutsche Oper Berlin, Nederlandse Oper, Tokyo Opera City, and most other significant opera companies in the USA and Europe. His recording of the fiendishly difficult role of Argirio in Rossini’s Tancredi (Naxos/Alberto Zedda) netted a GRAMMY nomination.
Caitlin Lynch
Assistant Professor of Voice & Opera, Solo Track Faculty Co-Director
Highlights of Lynch’s 2025-2026 season include her role debut as Carlisle Floyd’s Susannah, in Patricia Racette’s production at Opera Omaha, and the 3rd Norn in Götterdämmerung at Atlanta Opera. She also returns to the Metropolitan Opera to cover Micaëla in Carmen, and will be seen on the company’s stage during the 2026-2027 season.
Ms. Lynch joined the Metropolitan Opera during the 2024-2025 season for two Mozart titles: singing the First Lady in the company’s cherished family production of The Magic Flute, and covering Contessa Almaviva in Le nozze di Figaro. She also returned to the Grand Teton Music Festival as the soprano soloist for Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, led by Sir Donald Runnicles. During the summer, she created the title role of Siddhartha, She, a new scenic oratorio composed by Chris Theofanidis and conducted by Robert Spano, at the Aspen Music Festival.
The soprano’s 2023-2024 season began with the highly-anticipated world premiere of Jake Heggie and Gene Scheer’s Intelligence at Houston Grand Opera, in which Caitlin sang the leading role of Callie Van Lew. She subsequently returned to the Metropolitan Opera as both the First Lady in The Magic Flute and covering the role of Clarissa Vaughan in The Hours. Ms. Lynch concluded the season with The Washington Chorus, as the soprano soloist in Mendelssohn’s Elijah, and with the Grand Teton Music Festival as the First Lady in Die Zauberflöte, conducted by Runnicles.
Lynch studied at the University of Michigan and the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM) before training with the young artist programs of Houston Grand Opera, Seattle Opera, and the Glimmerglass Festival.
Eligibility & Audition Requirements
Eligibility
The MPulse Vocal Arts Institute is open to students entering grades 9 (nine) through 12 (twelve) in the Fall of 2026.
Audition Requirements
Applicants must upload two videos in contrasting styles, one of which must be from the Classical repertoire, one of which could be in a language other than English.
MPulse Scholarships
Merit Awards
A limited number of scholarships are available for extremely talented students based on Faculty discretion. Consideration for these scholarships is automatic for applications received by the priority application deadline.
Need-Based Awards
A limited number of need-based scholarships are available to families with an Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) of $125,000 or under in the previous calendar year, or with special circumstances due to the pandemic. To be considered you must upload your financial aid materials by the application deadline as part of your application. This includes:
- Monthly Expenses
- Previous Year’s Tax Return
- Statement of Need
Watson Scholarship (For Michigan Residents Only)
In the spirit of the life of a graduate of the University of Michigan Medical School (1942) and Michigan physician, the Watson A. Young Scholarship promotes academic excellence and college aspiration among students with financial need. These need-based scholarships support middle and high school students’ participation in summer opportunities at U-M that seek to develop students’ interests and abilities in academic disciplines and expose students to the experiences and possibilities provided by higher education. More information about the Watson Scholarship.
Housing Accommodation Information
High school-aged participants are required to live on campus and stay in the Bursley Hall dormitory. Programs that include adult students (18+) may elect to live on campus, and will stay in the Baits II dormitory. Both buildings are on the University of Michigan’s North Campus and are a short walk from where most classes and events will be held. Participants should be aware of the following information regarding the dorms:
- Neither dormitory has air conditioning in the dorm rooms.
- Rooms are double occupancy. Bathrooms are shared between hall-mates in typical dorm style. Roommate requests can be submitted to [email protected].
- Linens / pillows / toiletries are not provided. Participants should be prepared to bring all necessary items to live in the dorms. The bed size is Twin-XL for purposes of securing bedsheets. Room & board are included in the price of tuition.
Meal Information
Participants will receive meals in Bursley Dining Hall located in Bursley Hall, a short walk down from Baits. Participants can access Bursley’s daily menu via the link provided.
Contact Us
MPulse Summer Performing Arts Institutes
Office of Engagement & Outreach-Youth & Adult Programs
University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance
Stearns Building │ 2005 Baits Drive │ Ann Arbor, MI 48109
Phone: 734-936-2660
Email: [email protected]
Emails and phone lines are monitored at the following times
Monday – Friday, 9:30 am – 4:00 pm EST
