Kids trained through our programs.
Who We Are
Music and service for our community.
Ohmoworld was founded to bring two things together that we believe belong side by side: music education for young people, and hands-on support for the communities we call home.
Music Training
Summer and Winter programs that give kids real musical skill and a stage to grow on.
Community Service
Outreach, mentorship, and relief programs that bring real support to our neighborhoods.
Kids Trained
Through our Summer and Winter training programs
Events Hosted
Concerts, showcases, and community events
Active Volunteers
Giving their time to our outreach programs
Community Partners
Organizations we work alongside
For Artists
How we support artists.
Talent Scouting
We discover and nurture emerging talent, connecting them with the right opportunities to showcase their skills and grow in the industry.
Branding
We craft a strong and unique brand identity that sets artists apart, ensuring they leave a lasting impression on their audience.
Music Promotion
From digital marketing to playlist placements, we ensure that your music reaches the right audience and gains the attention it deserves.
Mission & Vision
What drives everything we do.
Ohmoworld started as a small group of volunteers running weekend music sessions for local kids. Today we run structured training programs alongside community outreach initiatives that reach families across the city.
- Music Training
- Artist Support
- Neighborhood Outreach
- Youth Mentorship
- Volunteer Programs
- Community Events
To give young people access to quality music education while strengthening the communities they grow up in — because talent and support should never be out of reach.
Accessible Training
Structured Summer and Winter programs open to kids at every skill level.
Real Community Impact
Outreach programs designed around what neighborhoods actually need.
A city where every young person has a path into music, and every neighborhood has a network of support behind it.
We measure our success not in numbers alone, but in the kids who keep making music years later, and the neighborhoods that grow stronger because people showed up for each other.