CADENZA MARCH 2022
UTSA DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC Opus 3 6
A MONTH FULL OF ART New music springs into view!
CONTENTS
03 04 06 10 12 16 18 21
WELCOME A word from Department of Music Chair, Dr. Tracy Cowden
ALUMNI SPOTLIGHT Esteemed alumna Dr. Peggy Dettwiler shares about her time with #UTSAMUSIC
CELESTIAL COMPOSITIONS: NICOLE RUSSEL A former roadrunner and distinguished conductor return back to the hall
TMEA-HOORAY! #UTSAMUSIC students perform in the renown statewide convention
SGS 2022 Delve into the celebration and world of classical guitar
MOB HAS REVOLVED UTSA Underground is returning back and stronger than ever
C4SE GRANT ENRICHES STUDENTS YET AGAIN Dr. John Zarco wins UTSA COLFA grant for the betterment of his students
ONE OF SIX A Music Education student earns prestigious choral conducting opportunity
CONTRIBUTORS: Rolando Ramon - Cadenza Editor-in-Chief Dr. Jourdan Laine Howell - Graphic Designer/Editor Rebekah Alegria - PR Assistant/Editor Jason Guzman - Graphic Designer Micah Rosenstein - Graphic Designer
Welcome to
CADENZA
Showcasing UTSA Music
FRIENDS, Welcome to the March 2022 issue of Cadenza! The concert season is in full swing, and we have lots of events to share with you this month. We hope to see you in person or through our livestream, and are grateful for your support of our student and faculty performers. We begin March with the multi-day New Music Festival, spend the middle of the month hosting the Southwest Guitar Symposium, and finish the month with the Lyric Theatre production of Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte. And there are many wonderful events this month to explore! In this issue, you can read more about these events, as well as stories about student and faculty accomplishments that highlight our dedication to excellence in education. We are also very proud to feature Dr. Peggy Detwiller as our Alumni Spotlight this month. As we move closer to spring, we are excited to announce UTSA’s second Giving Day on April 19-20, 2022. Please save the date to help us #buildthenest and support Friends of Music, the Spirit of San Antonio Marching Band, and Mariachi Los Paisanos! Stay tuned for more information about our hopes and goals for this year’s Giving Day. Please keep an eye on these pages and our online event calendar for upcoming concert information. And share Cadenza with your friends and family outside of San Antonio; our performances are livestreamed on our department Facebook page. As always, we hope that all of you will take this opportunity to follow us on social media, where we post fun features on our students, faculty, and staff, link to our livestreams, and share photos and video clips of all that is taking place in the Department of Music. Are you interested in having live music at your own event? You could hire a student group! Our Gig Service link is live on the department website! And as always, we invite our alumni to submit your news and reconnect with your UTSA Music friends by sending an update to music@utsa.edu. We look forward to seeing you soon at upcoming UTSA Music events! Tracy Cowden Roland K. Blumberg Endowed Professor in Music and Chair
ALUMNI SPOTLIGHT: DR. PEGGY DETTWILER Now and forever, you are a roadrunner, no matter where you go. With about 50 years of all around professional experience, from being a director of choral music at a church to making her big debut as a conductor at Carnegie Hall, Dr. Peggy Dettwiler has achieved more in half a century than most do in their entire lifetime. From her time as a Choral Conducting Masters student at #UTSAMUSIC to her current position as Professor of Music and Director of Choral Activities at Mansfield University in Mansfield, Pennsylvania, Dr. Dettwiler has shown what it means to be a highly cultivated, polished musician, and one of America’s finest choral directors.
What inspired you to obtain your Master of Music in Choral Conducting from UTSA? Madolyn Fallis (from San Antonio, now deceased) was a guest organist at the church in Madison where I was the director of music. I mentioned that I was looking for a conducting masters degree program and she told me about John Silantien and UTSA. Within two months, I was there and studying! Though I do have degrees from three other institutions, it would be hard to rank each of them. UTSA was the right place at the right time and singing in the Chamber Choir with graduate students was a highlight. How did your time as a masters student with UTSA Music prepare you for obtaining your prestigious Doctor of Musical Arts Degree in Conducting from the Eastman School of Music? My UTSA degree led to my appointment at St Mary’s University as their choral director. After three years teaching at a university, I knew that I needed a doctorate degree in order to move forward in my career.
Did you have a role model or positive influence in the department that helped you achieve your goals as a masters student? Of course, John Silantien and Madolyn Fallis were the greatest influences. Madolyn was a wonderful organist, a graduate of John’s program, and a dear friend. Between your career as a Professor of Music and Director of Choral Activities at Mansfield University in Pennsylvania, do you have time for other hobbies or creative ventures outside of the workplace? My husband and I adore our five cats: Lucy, Lenny, Leo, Luna, and Lana. And we enjoy traveling. I have taken the Mansfield University Concert Choir on eight European concert tours, and am trying to get them abroad again this May. I am also very involved with leadership activities in the American Choral Directors Association. My love of horses continues but I no longer own any of them like I did when I lived in San Antonio. If you have any advice for current UTSA students and those seeking education past the undergraduate level, what would it be and why? Never stop learning!!! When a door closes on one of your goals, look for an open window and keep moving forward!
Giving Day 2022 is all about giving our students opportunities to shine! On April 19-20, make a gift of any size to UTSA at givingday.utsa.edu and watch us #buildthenest. We will be launching three campaigns: Friends of Music, the Spirit of San Antonio Marching Band, and Mariachi Los Paisanos. Your gifts help us impact students from across the university who participate in the SOSA Marching Band and Mariachi Los Paisanos. And when you give to Friends of Music, you are creating transformative opportunities for music majors as they advance their skills through scholarships, participating in competitions, presenting research at conferences, and giving premiere performances of works commissioned through this fund. When you give, our students can boldly pursue their dreams! - Tracy Cowden, Department Chair
WE CULTIVATE ARTISTS
Celestial Compositions: Nicole Russell UTSA Music welcomes back a Charles Ives Award-winning composer and Roadrunner alum who’s set to have her works featured in the fast-approaching New Music Festival on campus Written February 22nd, 2022 by Rolando Ramon
Source: www.nicolerussellmusic.com
We’ve rolled into March with a relative preservation of order and, dare I say, the most delicate enthusiasm for what’s to come this month. Kicking off the next four weeks is our annual New Music Festival, where modern works by living- yes, that means currently alive and not buried somewhere in Vienna- composers are performed by various artists. Featured among these composers is the New York based award-winning composer and UTSA alum, Nicole Russell. Hailing originally from Austin, Texas, Nicole graduated from UTSA in 2020 with a Bachelor of Music degree in Composition. Upon completion of her undergraduate studies in San Antonio, she traveled across the country to attend New York University in NYC, where she continues her career as a composer, pianist, vocalist, teacher, and music producer. In February 2022, Nicole was named by the American Academy of Arts and Letters as a recipient of the prestigious Charles Ives Award in Music Scholarship. Like the award’s namesake,
Russell’s compositions challenge the standard conventions of harmony and explore the depths of her mind, as well as the world around her. Russell’s submission that garnered her the award, a piece that will be performed at New Music Festival, is titled “on fluidity.” It was the first composition that she wrote upon moving to New York. The change in setting from her native Austinian/San Antonio background and the culture shock combined with the global pandemic served as inspiration for the work. She identified her exposure to new elements and feelings in her life, as well as the eventual acceptance of life being in a state of constant transition, as the main themes behind the piece and its title. “My thoughts are constantly changing, unable to be defined, conformed, or put into a box…I have started to fully understand and feel comfortable with the meaning of fluidity, and I have begun to abandon my search for ‘meaning’ and be happy existing in the blurred lines,” as quoted from Russell’s program notes on the piece.
“Celestial Abstraction,” another one of Nicole’s compositions, was commissioned by Dr. John Zarco and will be performed by the UTSA Symphonic Band at New Music Festival. The work was composed partly as a reminiscence to Russell’s time in San Antonio. It draws inspiration from a painting by Texan artist Dorothy Hood titled “Extensor of the Sky.” The work was on display at some point in the McNay Museum of Art in San Antonio, Texas. Figure 1 Hood, Dorothy. Extensor of the Sky. 1973. The McNay Art Museum. https://collection.mcnayart.org/objects/2590/ extensor-of-the-sky
“This massive abstract work, with paint and color flowing in all directions, looked like something from another world…For Celestial Abstraction, I wanted to transport the listener off the ground and into the atmosphere of this painting,” says Russell on “Celestial Abstraction” and “Extensor of the Sky.” The preview provided to us by Nicole not only excites us for her work to be performed at NMF, but even more so for what she has yet to accomplish in what is still a very young career in music. Anyone who’s made, or attempted to make music their life knows that the path of a musician is never cut and dry, requiring hours of hard work, determination, and sheer grit. She looks forward to graduating from NYU this semester with her Master’s in Music Theory and Composition, as well as to continuing on with her career composing and working with various ensembles in NYC as she makes a name for herself in the Big Apple.
Nicole will have her work “on fluidity” performed by Dr. Kassandra Keeling on March 8, and “Celestial Abstraction” will be performed by the UTSA Symphonic Band on March 10. New Music Festival will run from March 6 - 10 and will host all of its events in the Recital Hall located inside the Arts Building at UTSA’s Main Campus. For more information on New Music Festival, visit www.music.utsa.edu/newmusicfestival. To see more of Nicole’s works, visit www.nicolerussellmusic.com.
Source: www.nicolerussellmusic.com
The Texas Music Educators Association Convention/Clinic has always been a spectacle for San Antonio, drawing thousands of musicians and educators from all over Texas to the home of the Alamo. This year, the convention took place in the Henry B. Gonzales Convention Center from Wednesday, February 9th through Saturday, February 11th.
Pictured left to right: Keith Beene, Isaiah Valdez, Gracie Hende, Ansleigh Cook
Among the various activities and events occurring during the half-weeklong convention, the UTSA Quartet’s performance with the All-State on Saturday night stood out among the most notable presentations.
The quartet consists of Keith Beene (violin), Gracie Hende (violin), Ansleigh Cook (viola), and Isaiah Valdez (cello). On Saturday night of TMEA week, they performed Norwegian composer Ola Gjeilo’s “The Ground'' with the Texas Two-Year College Choral Directors Association (TTCCDA) All-State Choir in the Stars at Night Ballroom. They were also joined on stage by UTSA alum Angel Hernandez on percussion. The All-State choir was conducted by Dr. Stephen Gusukma from Baylor University. Department Chair Dr. Tracy Cowden shows her school spirit at UTSA's TMEA booth
The Department of Music also continued with its traditional appearance at the TMEA Convention this year, sporting a booth with graphics designed by Dr. Jourdan Laine Howell. UTSA Music Faculty were at the convention from Tuesday morning through Saturday, interacting with prospective stude as well as current students and students alumni in attendance of the convention.
SOUTHWEST GUITAR SYMPOSIUM 2022 UTSA’s annual Southwest Guitar Symposium is set to kick off mid-March with an exciting line-up of fun and enriching events celebrating classical guitar music and its community. Written February 24th, 2022 by Rolando Ramon
BUILDING ON A LEGACY Whether you’re a guitar player or admirer, or simply looking for a unique experience to attend, the Southwest Guitar Symposium has become a traditional annual attraction for all within the Department of Music at UTSA and San Antonio. Essentially functioning as a three-day festival, SWGS boasts a wide variety of events centered around classical guitar that include high school and collegiate level competitions, a luthier, masterclasses, workshops, and live performances from several world-class guitarists. The Symposium’s artistic director and acclaimed guitarist, Dr. Isaac Bustos, seeks to have a successful return to in-person activities for what is only the 3rd year of the festival’s current incarnation. However, the Guitar Symposium’s roots can be traced back more than a decade ago when former UTSA professor Dr. Matthew Dunne created the Southwest Guitar Festival in 2009, which at the time was the largest acoustic guitar festival in the United States (1). The former also hosted a competition featuring some of the top guitar students in Texas, as well as performances from some of the best international classical guitarists. Since Dunne’s retirement from the university in 2018, Dr. Bustos has continued to build on what his predecessor created while also revamping the festival’s branding and events.
Dr. Isaac Bustos, Artistic Director, Head of Guitar Studies at UTSA
(1) Rodriguez, Kris. “UTSA hosts Southwest Guitar Festival, Feb. 4-8.” [Online]. The University of Texas at San Antonio, 2009. www.utsa.edu/today/2009/01/swguitarfest.cfm
“IT’S ALL ABOUT COMMUNITY” The Southwest Guitar Symposium promises an experience like no other with the level of immersion into the world of classical guitar that it offers. It has always been a unique spectacle for its audiences. However, Bustos stresses that “These events are more than just people coming to a concert. It’s really about the community that it builds around the guitar as a focal point…we’re so isolated nowadays, having events like this provide a relief from that.” All the featured guests at the festival, such as Gohar Vardanyan, Mark Cruz, and Alejandro Montiel, were colleagues and friends of Dr. Bustos at some point in his life. Many of these he met through his career as a guitarist and teacher, others he met by attending concerts and events. “You never know if you’re going to be a colleague of someone…it’s important to go places and observe.” The result of fostering these relationships is that now, he’s able to bring them all together to create something with the potential to impact many in the span of only 3 days. It can be powerful to experience the energy and hopes that may radiate from everyone being able to come together again after such a long time in isolation. This can impact not just all who attend the events, but the guest artists themselves, as well the students competing for the 1st place prize of a paid performance at next year’s fest. It is in this sense, that the depth of the Guitar Symposium extends beyond the music in its conception and, like an outstretched open hand, seeks to gently guide the people out of the darkness to re-embrace a familiar sense of togetherness; to remind us that we truly live in this world together.
UTSA Guitar Ensemble
ABOUT SOUTHWEST GUITAR SYMPOSIUM 2022 Southwest Guitar Symposium will be held inside the Arts building located UTSA’s Main Campus from Friday, March 18th through Sunday, March 20th. Featured guests include Gohar Vardanyan, Mark Cruz, Alejandro Montiel, Dr. Thomas Echols, Johnny Peña, Dr. Kurt Martinez, Dr. Matthew Bishop, Dr. Stephanie Westney (violin), Dr. Rachel Wolf (flute), and the UTSA Guitar Ensemble. For a full schedule and more information on participating/attending any of the events in the Southwest Guitar Symposium, visit the official website: www.music.utsa.edu/swgs.
for more information visit: music.utsa.edu/newmusicfestival
Musicians of Business at Best Fest, October 15, 2022
THE MOB IS BACK The masterminds behind UTSA Underground look forward to what could be a very promising semester and a return to form for the student organization, as well for the popular on-campus festival Written February 23, 2022 by Rolando Ramon It would be an understatement to say that for almost all musicians, the safety protocols and venue closures brought by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 made life very different. Before then imagining Texas without live music was sort of like imagining, well, Texas without live music. The UTSA Department of Music wasn’t spared in the worldwide cancellation of in-person events, nor were the student organizations that it housed, such as the Musicians of Business, known affectionately as the MOB.
live art and music.
The MOB is known for hosting live music events on campus, such as open mic nights, live performances, music marketing seminars, and their signature annual music and arts festival, UTSA Underground. As the festival’s name would suggest, it was held on campus throughout the tunnels located beneath arts and sciences buildings. Year after year, MOB would put together Underground and bring in hundreds of people seeking to enjoy
Come 2022, live music and in-person events have made a fierce comeback, roaring back into a society that has longed for them since they disappeared. And with that, MOB is ready for a return to classic form. And as if the resurgence of live music wasn’t enough to signal what’s to come for the student organization, two grants they received earlier this year could be considered somewhat of a godsend.
The pandemic effectively forced the organization to quickly scrap all current planning for an in-person event and, in an effort to salvage the hours of work that had already gone into the festival, convert the event to be exclusively streamed online. Despite its success, it remained clear that the organization’s future within this new world born into isolation was in question. There would be no Underground the following year in 2021.
In January, the organization received a grant from the COLFA Center of Student Excellence and another from the Student Affairs Wellbeing program. “It honestly helps us out a lot, especially after everything we’ve been through, this brings us closer to bringing our plans for this year to fruition,” says MOB’s President, Anna Madewell.
to learn more about the music industry or grow their network to attend their open meetings, which are held at 4pm every Wednesday at the Study Space located on UTSA Blvd. She believes it’s the sense of fellowship amongst its members and their desire help each other grow as musicians that has allowed the group to be successful in the past and will continue to do so
As of now, and with the organization’s blessing, we can confirm that the highly anticipated return of UTSA Underground is officially set for May 3rd 2022. More information on official times and artist submissions is expected to be announced soon by organization. We can also confirm that the organization will host a “Flash Mob” event set for April 12th and 14th this semester, with a location to be announced soon. The event will feature an original song written and recorded by the organization’s musicians titled “Mí Gente.” The song is a collaboration with audio engineer and San Antonio Sound Garden’s director of operations, Joey Berrios. The song incorporates a mixture of various contemporary Latin music styles that perfectly capture the Hispanic culture and identity of UTSA and all of San Antonio. The event will also be a collaboration with Moonlight Dance Company, who is creating the choreography. The organization is currently seeking more volunteer dancers to help lead the Flash MOB. Musicians of Business is always open to new members of any major who have an interest in music. Anna Madewell encourages anyone seeking
“We help each other, bring each other up, and we share the energy. We’re just a group that makes things happen”
Follow the Musicians of Business on their social handles below and stay up to date with all their upcoming events!
@utsa_mob
@utsamob
C4SE Classroom to Career Grant John Zarco
L
ifelong soul musician Robert Rice Jr. once said, “An entrepreneur without funding is a musician without an instrument.” It also reigns true that a musician without funding is one who does not have the resources to teach music. After hearing word of a university-sponsored grant previously received by #UTSAMUSIC’s very own Assistant Professor of Violin, Dr. Nicole Cherry, Dr. John Zarco, Director of Instrumental Ensembles and Associate Professor of Music, decided that he should try his chances of obtaining the grant as well. Countless social media posts by Dr. Cherry expressing her gratitude for the grant and its ability to bring in guest speakers for her string instrument students inspired Dr. Zarco to apply for the grant with its potential benefits for wind and percussion students in mind. As soon as he could, the determined maestro began to put together a proposal.
The purpose of the COLFA Classroom to Career Faculty Curriculum Grant program is to support COLFA faculty members seeking to develop classroom experiences that provide a fuller understanding of practical applications of classroom learning and engage in the exploration of career pathways in COLFA related fields of study. “I felt strongly about including and inviting guest speakers of minority backgrounds and with specialties in different areas of music.” stated Dr. Zarco. Thus began the tedious task of filling out an online form describing how the grant would benefit the students of #UTSAMUSIC, outlining a proposal for which musicians he would like to bring in, along with allocating a specified budget. After putting in the effort in hopes to receive UTSA COLFA’s C4SE Classroom to Career Grant for the betterment of his students, Dr. Zarco was awarded the revolutionary grant. With this award, he had the opportunity to bring in two speakers to meet with the bands virtually. “Any time you have a chance to bring in great colleagues who are the best professionals in your field and interact with them, it’s a good thing. Part of why Prof. Ellis and I love having these guest speakers is because their early stories aren’t necessarily so different than the ones our students are experiencing now. They often bring an inspiring message that helps our students (and us, as faculty) gain new perspectives in what we do.” exclaimed Dr. Zarco. The first speaker, Mr. Burt Hara, spoke to the students of Dr. Zarco this past February. Not only was he Associate Principal Clarinet of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Mr. Hara was also Principal Clarinet of the Minnesota Orchestra for 25 seasons; Dr. Zarco met when he was a doctoral student at the University of Minnesota. As described by Zarco, Mr. Hara is an amazing musician, absolutely worldclass. On April 25th, the students will have the pleasure of meeting with Dr. Cynthia Johnston Turner, who is Dean of the Faculty of Music at Laurier University, in Ontario, Canada and was previously the Director of Bands at the University of Georgia. Dr. Johnson Turner is also a highly anticipated guest for Dr. Zarco and his students in the coming months. Almost as an homage to the early days of virtual learning, the C4SE Classroom to Career Grant and the resources it brought incorporate the great things that came from the pandemic. “When Prof. Ellis and I adjusted instruction for our fully online fall 2020 semester, we brought in weekly guest speakers to meet with the bands. We brought in many of our friends working in the professional world. These meetings were so energizing and insightful that we said we’d like to continue facilitating these kinds of experiences as much as possible moving forward.”
One of Six
UTSA Music Student Earns Prestigious Opportunity
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very other year, the Southwestern American Choral Directors Association (SWACDA) offers a conducting masterclass exclusive only to a select number of undergraduate and graduate students during the SWACDA Region Conference in Little Rock, Arkansas. One #UTSAMUSIC student had the guts to apply and audition for the highly selective program, choosing two pieces of repertoire with contrasting styles to display her choir conducting and teaching for 10-12 minutes. With the limited time given, Emma Madalina, Music Education ‘23, diligently practiced what points in the pieces she wanted to shape within the music and was able to create beautiful music with the help of the #UTSAMUSIC Chamber Singers. All of Emma’s hard work and dedication paid off. She was chosen as one of the six elite undergraduate students to perform in the choral conducting masterclass during the Southwestern American Choral Directors Association Region Conference in Little Rock, Arkansas from February 28th to March 3rd, 2022. Though evidently gifted in the choral craft, Emma auditioned with the intent of gaining experience and challenging herself to do something different with no actual belief that she would be considered, let alone selected. “When the news came I was shocked and didn’t even know the extent of what I signed up for - it was definitely the highlight of my year to say the least!” exclaimed the upcoming music educator. The audition process to be one of the six selected was not one for the weak. Many excellent conductors across the southwest auditioned for the distinguished honor of attending and conducting at the SWACDA, but Emma stood out brighter than the rest. Being the choral conductor at her local Romanian church for almost three years, the young chorister has mastered the basics of how to work with a group of people to create beautiful melodies and to use what she has learned at #UTSAMUSIC as a tool to grow as a conductor every week during rehearsals. Every up and coming musician has an inspiration to be the best that they can be, and for Emma, it is Dr. Muhn, Director of Choral Activities at #UTSAMUSIC. Dr. Muhn has set the precedent of a confident, professional conductor that Emma has always and will always desire to be each time she steps in front of a choir. “From my first audition to rehearsing the repertoire for the Masterclass, she has done one-on-one lessons with me, giving her wisdom and expertise to do the very best I can. I will go up there in honor of her for all that she has done for me.” stated Emma. As Emma takes on this huge milestone in her personal career and as a representative of #UTSAMUSIC, she looks forward to participating in this esteemed event, taking in whatever constructive criticism is given to her to learn from it and challenge herself each and every day. The department takes pride in cultivating artists and musicians of the highest caliber and are honored to call Emma Madalina a member of the #UTSAMUSIC family. “I am extremely thrilled to witness how Emma shares her talent among other students from all different schools in the region. This once in a lifetime opportunity will definitely help broaden her perspectives on not only choral conducting but also in music education as well.” expressed Dr. Muhn.
Choral
CAVALCADE
UTSA Chamber Singers Concert Choir University Chorus Friday, March 11 at 7:30PM UTSA Recital Hall
Conducted by: Dr. Yoojin Muhn and David Waterland Mary Lowder - Collaborative Pianist
MARCH
DATES
01 PERCUSSION STUDIO 7:30 PM | UTSA Recital Hall
02 STUDENT RECITAL Anotnio Rodriguez 5:30 PM | UTSA Recital Hall
02 STUDENT RECITAL Diana Maldonado 7:30 PM | UTSA Recital Hall
03 GRADUATE RECITAL Emily Myers 7:30 PM | UTSA Recital Hall
04 GRADUATE RECITAL David Waterland 7:30 PM | UTSA Recital Hall
06 VAS CONCERT Spanish Songs 5:00 PM | Live via Facebook
06 FACULTY RECITAL Rachel Woolf 7:30 PM | Live via Facebook
07 NEW MUSIC FESTIVAL March 7th - 10th See music.utsa.edu for more info
08 STUDENT RECITAL Jorge Perez 5:00 PM | Live via Facebook
09 STUDENT RECITAL Kyree Harrison 5:00 PM | UTSA Recital Hall
11 CHORAL CAVALCADE 5:00 PM | Live via Facebook
18 GUITAR STUDIO 7:00 PM | UTSA Recital Hall
18 SGS 2022
March 18th - 20th See music.utsa.edu for more info
24 DIE ZAUBERFLÖTE Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte March 24th - 27th
28 GUEST RECITAL Kyle Jones 5:00 PM | Live via Facebook
28 STUDENT RECITAL Matthew Settles 7:30 PM | UTSA Recital Hall
29 BOOM SQUAD Tuba & Euphonium Recital 5:00 PM | Live via Facebook
30 MUTE FEST Tuba & Euphonium Recital 7:30 PM | Live via Facebook
31 STUDENT RECITALS Carlos Cruz - 5pm UTSA Recital Hall Kainoa Valdez - 7:30pm Live via FB
MARCH 2022 STAY UP TO DATE WITH THE LATEST INFORMATION ON THE UPCOMING SEMESTER AT UTSA MUSIC MUSIC.UTSA.EDU FOLLOW US! @UTSAMUSIC