VIDEO: KC startup BAM supplies soundtrack to LEANLAB’s education mission
November 6, 2018 | Austin Barnes
The mission of Base Academy of Music (BAM) is clear –– help kids in Kansas City’s urban core reach their God-given potential, one note at a time, said Clint Velazquez.
“Music is what got me through school,” Velazquez, founder of the academy said. “I became a music teacher later in life. Working in the suburbs, living in the city, I started looking around and said, ‘Hey where do kids in my community learn?’”
Keep reading below the video.
When the social entrepreneur realized the city was void of music and art opportunities for kids in low-income areas, he immediately knew he had to do something, he recalled.
Cue the launch of BAM in 2012. The non-profit now is a member of the current LEANLAB Education cohort, which is set for its 5:30 p.m. Nov. 8 Launch[ED] Day celebration at Plexpod Westport Commons.
Click here for tickets to and more info about the 2018 LEANLAB Education event.
“[BAM] is a long term commitment — a long term relationship — where we’re coming in every week and we’re [telling kids] ‘I see you, I hear you, you matter,’” Velazquez said passionately.
Not only does BAM provide kids with fewer resources the chance to indulge in music, the program has helped students who experience behavioral issues, constructively channel their extra energy, Velazquez explained.
“[One student] was in his music class, on the drum, going in and this kindergartner comes into the room and is super distracting,” he said. “This is a kid who used to be distracted by everything else — sat him down and started having him participate in the drum lesson.”
Such a change in behavior has left teachers astounded, Velazquez added.
As the success of BAM crescendos, Velazquez has been growing within LEANLAB, a local accelerator program for early stage founders working to transform public education, explained founder Katie Boody.
Click here to learn more about the members of the LEANLAB cohort.
“When [Velazquez is] with us on site, there’s rigorous content,” Boody said of LEANLAB’s role in BAM’s work. “He meets with relevant mentors and potential funders, we coach him through that process.”
BAM will be front and center during Thursday’s Launch[ED] Day event, which is designed to showcase the work of the cohort’s members.
Excited, Velazquez is optimistic the event will push the community wide impact of BAM even further, he said.
“We need to take this thing that [parents] want for their kids — that they find valuable and that gives them meaning and excitement, and [find more ways to] bring it to them,” he said.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Three fathers bring Whizz Bang potty-training game to market through Make48, Handy Camel
The Whizz Bang gamifies potty training and saves the bathroom floors of all parents, said Amy Gray. The device, which hooks on the underside of a toilet seat lid, emits a LED light target at the bottom the bowl. Once hit, the device plays musical praise, said Gray, the head of sales for Handy Camel,…
Reconciliation Services hopes to heal trauma in the heart of stigmatized Troost corridor
Commanded by Scripture, David Altschul journeyed into parts unknown, said his successor, Father Justin Mathews. In the mid-1980s, a philanthropic pull tugged at the heart of Altschul — a white, insurance salesman from Johnson County — and eventually led him into the distressed, history-rich neighborhoods that lined Troost Avenue on the east side of…
Thelma’s Kitchen cooks up pay-what-you-can cafe concept to preserve community
Twenty people once filled the kitchen of Thelma Gardner’s apartment in search of their next meal. Their hunger for food fueled her hunger for humanity, recounted Father Justin Mathews as he sat sipping coffee in the newly opened Thelma’s Kitchen. The pay-what-you-can restaurant — located inside of the Reconciliation Services building at 3101 Troost Ave.…
Operation Breakthrough bridge over Troost symbolizes ‘real community’ at an intersection
With reflection in his voice, Alvin Brooks paused. “The city has to be a partner,” the Civil Rights activist and veteran Kansas City Police Commissioner said as he spoke of the redevelopment of Troost Avenue — the well known racial dividing line, that has long isolated the east side of the Kansas City metro from the…

