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<div>Musica Sacra, Latin for "sacred music," Chorus and Orchestra performs sacred choral masterworks. It is the ensemble-in-residence at Rockhurst University, presented under the auspices of The Center for Arts and Letters and led by musical director and conductor Dr. Timothy L. McDonald. The fall 2023 and spring 2024 performances will take place in person in Arrupe Hall auditorium.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>noi e la musica 4 pdf download</div><div></div><div>Download File:
https://t.co/L8z5jtPdPe </div><div></div><div></div><div>Cirque Musica Holiday Wonderland is an unforgettable musical journey for the entire family to enjoy a world-class circus experience infused with the holiday classics we all love. Treat your family and create memories you will cherish forever at Cirque Musica Holiday Wonderland!</div><div></div><div></div><div>Scott Carroll is a proud educator and stage director working in opera and musical theatre. He currently serves as the Artistic Director for the Lyric Theatre of Leadville as well as the Director of Music & Theatre Activities at Lake County High School in Leadville, Colorado.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Lauren Emerson is a pianist and music educator in the Eagle County School District. Originally from California, she began piano lessons at age 4 when her parents discovered she had perfect pitch. She started accompanying live musical theater at age eight, and has performed with a variety of choirs, ensembles, soloists and churches throughout California. Lauren graduated from the University of California, Santa Barbara with a BA in music, piano emphasis. She started teaching private piano lessons at age 17 and acquired a studio of 42 students per week in Santa Barbara upon college graduation. In 2021 she accepted a position teaching class piano at a high school, during which time she obtained a full teaching credential. She currently teaches classes for Bravo! Vail in addition to private piano lessons and general music at Brush Creek Elementary School and Red Sandstone Elementary.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Jeff Herring is a guitarist, composer, and teacher living in Vail, CO, since 2022. Jeff grew up in Montgomery, AL, where he began his musical studies at the age of 11. Jeff completed a Bachelor of Music in Guitar Performance at the Florida State University, where he also began teaching privately and in small groups. At the University of Denver, where Jeff earned his Master of Music in Guitar and Composition, he was awarded a Teaching Assistantship for Guitar, and a separate assistantship for Music Theory.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Sue Reid is a vocalist, pianist, voice, and piano instructor and is in her second year of teaching music at Gypsum Elementary School. She is from the midwest (Wisconsin, Ohio, and Michigan) and has lived in Colorado for over three years. Sue played piano by ear at a very young age and started formal studies at 11. Sue accompanied choirs, soloists, competitions, and musical productions throughout middle and high school. In addition, she began teaching piano lessons. Her studies took her to Hope College in Holland, Michigan, where she continued to study voice and piano, accompanying musicians on piano and singing in various vocal groups. Since college, Sue has taught piano and voice and performed with vocal groups and bands. She also traveled as a solo artist, which took her to Nashville to record at the Fireside Studio. In addition, Sue worked for many years as a Music Director for churches in Michigan and Colorado. She is married to David, and together we have four grown children.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>Through the process of urbanization, and due to increasing pressures to adapt to the dominant society, Tejanos incorporated aspects of Anglo-American culture, but they resisted becoming a totally colonized and absorbed people. They maintained a regional Texas-Mexican culture that is reflected in their musical styles. Little is known about the beginnings of m||sica Tejana. As settlement expeditions emanated from central Mexico in the 1700s and 1800s, Spanish, Creole, and mestizo soldiers and settlers brought their music and dances to the Texas frontier. There are many paintings and diary accounts of fandangos or dances held in San Antonio and South Texas through the 1800s, but they give little description of the sound of the music besides calling it "Spanish" or "Mexican." Small bands were composed of available local musicians who used whatever instruments were at hand. Violins and pitos (wind instruments of various types) usually provided the melody, and a guitar the accompaniment.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Historical information from the latter part of the century shows, however, that by the middle to late 1800s, Tejano musicians were playing Spanish and Mexican dance music less and were adopting a new European style that was trickling in from central Mexico. In the 1860s Maximilian, backed by his French army, ruled Mexico. In his court in Mexico City, and in garrisons throughout the country, the European salon music and dances of the time, such as the polka, waltz, mazurka, and schottische, were popular. These styles, disseminated from France, were taken up by the Mexican people in various parts of the country, but nowhere were they more enthusiastically embraced than in South Texas by the Tejanos. South Texas musical culture was similarly influenced by Germans who began immigrating to South and Central Texas in the 1840s. These German Texans also favored European salon music and dances. At times they would hire local Tejano musicians to play for their own celebrations. By the late 1800s, informal Tejano bands of violins, pitos, and guitars were almost exclusively playing European salon music for local dances. But taking root in this frontier area, far from its European and Central Mexican source, this music was being thoroughly adapted to the Tejano taste. At the turn of the century the locally performed polkas, waltzes, and schottisches could truly be called Tejano or "Tex-Mex" rather than European.</div><div></div><div></div><div>One of the most unusual styles of m||sica Tejana to begin its development at that time is m||sica norte|#a (music of the north), or "conjunto music," as it is often called. (Conjunto literally means "a musical group.") M||sica norte|#a embodied traits of Tejano music but also arose with the appearance of a relatively new instrument that was rapidly becoming popular among Tejanos on the farms and ranchos of South Texas. As a result, in the 1900s m||sica norte|#a has become identified with the sound of the German diatonic button accordion. This instrument may have been brought and popularized by the Germans and Bohemians settling in Central Texas or by the Germans working in the mining and brewing industries in northern Mexico. Newspaper accounts show that by 1898 Tejanos in rural areas of the South Texas chaparral were playing their Texas-Mexican polkas, waltzes, schottisches, mazurkas, and redowas on a one-row, one-key accordion.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Get ready to immerse yourself in the vibrant spirit of Latin American culture at Unidos en la Musica on May 4, 2024. This celebration promises an unforgettable experience with an incredible lineup of international, local, and regional musical talents. </div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>With Latin rock, salsa, cumbia, vallenato, modern beats, and folklore melodies filling the air, dancing will be irresistible. Join world champion salsa dancers for exhilarating performances and take part in their Salsa and Bachata Workshops. Be captivated by the folklore dance performances while DJs keep the energy high throughout the day, ensuring the party never stops. Treat your taste buds to authentic Latin American cuisine from 14 food trucks and explore the offerings of over 75 vendors, providing a delightful and diverse Latin American experience.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>Families will find plenty of fun activities for children, from games and sports like soccer and baseball clinics to Aztec ball games. Engage in the mural contest for a chance to win a painting and add to the cultural tapestry of the event. Unidos en la Musica promises an immersive celebration that will leave you with cherished memories and a deeper appreciation for the richness of Latin American heritage.</div><div></div><div> dafc88bca6</div>
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