The Museum of Music witnessed a moving violin and piano recital, in which children, youth, and adults, students of the Municipal Arts Center, said goodbye to the current school year by sharing with family and friends the results of their effort, passion, and dedication in the classroom.
Under the guidance of teachers Pablo López Mejía and Víctor Alonso Osuna, the students offered a varied program filled with artistic sensitivity, demonstrating significant progress in technique, musicality, and stage confidence.
Under the direction of maestro Víctor Alonso Osuna and accompanied on piano by maestro Pablo López, Mía Isabella García Rosales performed Lightly Row, a traditional piece she performed with tenderness and precision.
Constanza Mejía Pineda brought Benjamin Cutter’s Little March to life, followed by Ian Escobedo Lavalle, who enthusiastically interpreted C. W. Krogmann’s March.
Mía Isabella Salas Torres’s performance with C. M. von Weber’s Hunter’s Chorus stood out for its rhythm and dynamism, while Diego Rafael Valdez Vázquez successfully took on the challenge of performing O. Rieding’s Concerto in B minor, Op. 35, in its three movements: Allegro Moderato, Andante, and Allegro Moderato, demonstrating discipline and technical development.
The program continued with Brenda Salazar Sánchez, who performed the first movement of D. Kabalevsky’s Concerto, Op. 48, conveying firmness and clarity of sound. Aretcia Pineda Enríquez introduced the recital with A. Corelli’s La Folia, a work of great emotional intensity that she performed with elegant mastery.
The recital culminated with Alma Gabriela Gómez López, who maturely performed Beethoven’s Sonata No. 8, Op. 13 – Pathetique, followed by Manuel M. Ponce’s delicate Intermezzo.
The performance of these pieces demonstrated not only mastery of the classical repertoire but also a profound understanding of its expressiveness.
The diversity of ages and levels reflected the inclusive nature of the music training program, which allows people from different stages of life to approach art as an experience of learning and expression. With this recital, the CMA reaffirms its commitment to comprehensive artistic training, cultivating vocations and strengthening the cultural fabric of the city.