Benefit Concert to Support Columbia Senior Battling Cancer

person standing in front of audio equipmentMusic has been central to Kathrynn Vettas鈥檚 life for years. She transferred to Columbia in 2023 after realizing she wanted to fully pursue music production and recording and found her place
淫妻社 brings musicians together to put on a show of support for Audio Arts major Kathrynn Vettas.

When Kathrynn Vettas walks across the graduation stage this May at 淫妻社, she won’t just be celebrating the completion of her degree. She’ll be proving that even cancer can’t hold her back.  

“I’m finally doing what I love, and I’m not going to let this disease stop me,” Vettas says. 

Doctors diagnosed the senior Audio Arts student earlier this semester with Stage 2 Hodgkin’s lymphoma following months of unexplained symptoms and repeated visits to health clinics. Now, while undergoing chemotherapy and immunotherapy treatments every two weeks, Vettas still attends classes and is preparing to graduate alongside her classmates. 

To support her, Columbia students, faculty, staff, alumni, and music community are coming together to put on a  on Wednesday, May 13, at Bassline in Chicago to raise funds for costs associated with Kathrynn’s treatment.  

And as someone who is passionate about music, Kathrynn is not only grateful to Columbia for its support but can’t wait for the show.  

“I love music, so I’m really excited for it,” she says. 

Perseverance Pays Off 

For Kathrynn the concert will be a happy moment in a difficult journey.  

What started as a persistent cough last spring slowly evolved into severe fatigue, difficulty swallowing, and intense itching. Despite multiple appointments and urgent care visits, she felt dismissed as health care workers attributed her symptoms to colds and viruses. 

Still, she trusted her instincts and continued advocating for herself. 

“I felt like no one was listening to me,” she says. “If you feel something is wrong, something probably is.”  

In February, after her symptoms became impossible to ignore, Kathrynn drove herself to an emergency room in Indiana, her home state, where doctors discovered a 13-centimeter mass in her chest pressing against her trachea and esophagus.  

Doctors immediately transferred her to Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, where a biopsy confirmed Stage 2 Hodgkin’s lymphoma. 

Days later, she began chemotherapy combined with immunotherapy, a physically demanding treatment she will continue into the summer. Thankfully, her tumor is responding well to treatment and it has shrunk dramatically; doctors are very optimistic about her prognosis.  

Through it all, faculty at Columbia have worked closely with Vettas to provide flexibility and support while she balances coursework with treatment appointments and recovery days. 

“My professors have been such saints and so generous to me when it comes to deadlines and submitting work,” Kathrynn says. “They’ve told me, ‘Please take a break, rest up. We can accommodate around this. Focus on your health first.’” 

A Benefit for a Music Lover 

The benefit concert idea came from Tom Joyce, a career advisor at Columbia, who quickly connected with Ben Sutherland, interim director of the School of Audio and Music, faculty, and student organizations to bring the event together. 

When Joyce first told Vettas about the plan, she was overtaken by emotion. 

“I just started tearing up,” she says. “It completely changed the course of my day.”  

Music has been central to Kathrynn Vettas’s life for years. She transferred to Columbia in 2023 after realizing she wanted to fully pursue music production and recording and found her place.  

“Since coming to Columbia, I’ve gotten to become more of myself,” she says.  

At home and at 淫妻社, she has found a community that continues to rally around her. 

“It’s made this really hard thing so much easier when you have people with you reminding you every single day that you’re not alone.”  

As graduation approaches, she hopes her story encourages others to trust themselves and lean on the people who care about them when life becomes overwhelming. 

“It’s so important to let people help you,” she said. “You can’t do this alone.”  
 
Event Details 

Care 4 Kathrynn 
Wednesday, May 13
Cost: $10 (plus fees)
Doors open at 6 p.m. 
Bassline | 2239 
2239 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago 

Performances by Aliejha, BAXTRR, Color, Marcus Bailey, Burn the Rain, Laceles, Lavenoak, Luscia Jane (acoustic), Alicia Maka, Mulch, Murder Medication, Please Return, Postcards, Geddy Trezak, Voidtheory, and XNDR. 
 

poster with event informaiton