The Otis Redding Foundation is celebrating the one-year anniversary of its Otis Redding Center for the Arts (ORCA) this month. The momentous occasion was formally recognized with an open house (April 11), attended by Redding’s widow Zelma Redding and R.E.M. bassist/composer Mike Mills, 2025’s recipient of the Otis Redding Spirit of Community Award. In tandem with the celebration, registration for upcoming summer sessions of Otis Music Camp (June 1-20) and Camp Dream (July 20-31) was announced.

Named after the soul icon behind classics such as “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay” and “Respect,” ORCA offers music and arts programs to students ages 5-18. In addition to the aforementioned camps, the multipurpose space provides private lessons and workshops. Its curriculum covers the creative and business sides of the music industry through content creation, performance, entertainment law, engineering, graphic design and touring. The 15,000 square-foot facility also houses the O3 Recording studio and the Zelma Redding Amphitheater.

In comments emailed to Billboard, Ms. Redding explained why it’s so vital to continue paying it forward to the next generation of industry creatives and executives:

There’s something different about walking into a space that carries your family’s name — your family’s work, your family’s spirit. At the Otis Redding Center for the Arts, that feeling is everywhere. It’s not just pride — it’s responsibility. The kind you feel in your chest.

Otis Redding Center for the Arts.

Leah Yetter

Maintaining a center like this, especially as part of the Otis Redding Foundation, is deeply personal. This isn’t just about programs or schedules. It’s about legacy. It’s about honoring the life and vision of Otis Redding — not only the music the world knows, but the man who believed in giving back, in lifting others up, and in creating opportunity where it didn’t always exist.

For our family, the arts have never been just entertainment. They’ve been a pathway to confidence, expression and possibility. So when we talk about maintaining this space, we’re really talking about protecting that pathway. Making sure a young person can walk through these doors and feel like they belong here, whether they’ve grown up around music or are just discovering it for the first time. Students finding their voice. Families finding community. Artists pouring into the next generation. That’s what turns a building into something meaningful. That’s what makes it feel alive.

Legacy doesn’t take care of itself. It requires intention, care and a willingness to keep growing. What Otis started, and what the foundation continues to build, is bigger than any one moment. For me, this work is about making sure that legacy keeps reaching forward. That it stays open, accessible and real. Because if we’re doing it right, the Otis Redding Center for the Arts won’t just reflect where we’ve been … It will help shape where we’re going.

More information about the Otis Redding Center for the Arts and its programs is available here.