VocalEssence

VocalEssence
  • Who We Are
    • About VocalEssence
    • Performing Ensembles
    • Staff
    • Collaborators
    • Board of Directors
      • VocalEssence ¡Cantaré! Advisory Council
      • VocalEssence WITNESS Advisory Council
    • Advancing Inclusion, Access, and Equity
  • What We Do
    • Why Sing?
    • Concerts and Events
    • Celebrating Black Excellence
    • Musical Moments with Philip Brunelle
    • Learning and Engagement Programs
    • Contests and Awards
    • Commissioning and Recording
    • Accessibility
  • Stories & Results
    • #vesotashareshope
    • COVID-19 Updates
    • GPS & Friends
    • Inclusion Access and Equity
    • Musical Moments
    • Performing Ensembles
    • Schools & Education
    • Take 5 with GPS
    • Together We Sing
  • Get Involved
    • Donate
      • Bridge to the Future Campaign
    • Engage a Choir
    • Sing with Us
    • Join the Board
    • Volunteer
    • Work at VocalEssence
  • Login
  • On Demand
  • Buy Tickets
  • Donate
Search
More...

In the Media

MPR News: Cantare! brings Mexican culture, music to Burnsville High School

Editor’s Note: This piece by Nikki Tundel is part of a series called Minnesota Mix. Minnesota Mix is a project of Minnesota Public Radio News that examines the way youth and ethnic diversity are influencing Minnesota arts.

BURNSVILLE, Minn. — It’s said that music is the language of the soul. But for composer Jorge Cozatl, it is also the key to hearing and understanding another culture.

Cozatl, a native of Mexico City, is an artist-in-residence at Burnsville High School, where he works with choral students on timbre and pitch. But his main mission is to teach the students about his homeland.

“This is a huge opportunity to share not just music, but culture, too” said Cozatl. “I want to tell them about my country. And I’m doing that with songs.”

A cultural ambassador for Mexico, Cozatl came to Minnesota for Cantare!, Spanish for “I will sing.” The year-long project, the brainchild of conductor Philip Brunelle, artistic director and founder of the Twin Cities-based choral group VocalEssence, pairs Mexican composers with student choirs to create works that bridge cultures.

Brunelle said he started the program because he was frustrated with the media coverage of Mexico, which he said too often focuses on the U.S.-Mexico border and the illicit drug trade. He wanted to offer Minnesota students another view of Mexico — one that showcases its cultural and musical traditions.

“I’m hoping that, through this program, Vocal Essence can make just a little dent in helping people to have a very favorable and positive idea about our neighbor country to the south,” Brunelle said.

On this spring day, Cozatl leads the Burnsville High School concert choir through rehearsal. At the end of his stay, his students will perform the original choral work in Spanish.

A big hurdle for the young Minnesotans is pronunciation — especially mastering the different vowel sounds. Cozatl frequently returns to the fundamentals, sounding out their constant equivalents in Spanish: ah-ay-ee-oh-oo.

“Since he’s not from around here, he knows that in Minnesota we say our o’s like two separate letters,” said Nick Nelson, 18. “It really was fascinating to have him come in and say, ‘Oh. You guys are saying that weird so you should say it this way.’ “

Performing a song in Spanish is a new challenge for Nelson, a senior who studies German. But he knows that singing in the composer’s language is essential to capturing the essence of the song.

“Learning it in this different language, it seems more real,” he said.

Classmate Zach Zambrano, 18, agrees.

“It’s more pure in that way,” he said. “You know, if it’s a song about Mexico or whatever it is, it’s gonna be more impactful in that other language even though you might not understand every word that they’re saying. But just thinking this is the Hispanic culture, this is the Mexican culture, it hits more at your heart, I think.”

Besides learning to sing in Spanish, students are also learning about Mexico and its mixed heritage. The song they’re working on depicts the ancient Aztec view of the afterlife.

“It speaks about the place where dead people go,” said Cozatl, who composed the piece for the project. His goal was to offer Americans a different way of looking at life — and death. The students are still processing the nuances of the work.

“It goes, ‘Que, que dura de mi?’ ” explains student Kristina Butler, 16. “The phrase means, ‘What will become of my body after this happens?’ “

For another student, Nick Armstrong, 18, the song is about renewal.

“It’s talking about more of a lifecycle — and then actually dying and becoming one with the earth,” he said. “We tend to think of death as grave and sad, where in Mexican culture it’s like a rebirth.”

The final piece speaks to that.

“It’s so glorious,” Nelson said. “It’s like, you’ve reached it and now here’s paradise kind of thing. Oh, I love that last piece.”

The members of the Burnsville High School choir work their way through the sections of their new song.

For some students, the collaboration with Cozatl has changed the way they look at the world. Nelson said he’s become much more interested in what happens beyond the borders of Burnsville.

“Everybody needs to see other kinds of cultures,” he said. “Will you look at a country and be like, ‘OK. That’s, like, weird. What are they doing over there? ‘ But now you can say, ‘Oh, now I understand why they do this. OK. Cool.’ “

The Cantare! project will culminate with a concert for the community. The students will perform May 22 at the Burnsville Performing Arts Center.

« Back to In the Media

Recent Stories

  • Bridge to the Future Meets Goal March 24, 2023
  • VocalEssence Radio Special—Song of Joy: The Mendelssohns on YourClassical MPR March 24, 2023
  • VocalEssence Singers Of This Age Perform at WCCO Holiday Tree Lighting December 22, 2022
  • VocalEssence Holiday Programming 2022 December 15, 2022
  • Thank you for your support at the VocalEssence 2022 Gala! November 4, 2022
  • About Us
    • About VocalEssence
    • Press Room
    • Annual Report
    • Financial Information
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
    • VocalEssence COVID Protocols
  • Get Involved
    • Donate
    • Sing with Us
    • Volunteer
    • Work at VocalEssence
  • Connect
    • Email Sign Up
    • Contact Us/Location
    • Chorus Connection
    • VocalEssence Board Login
  • VocalEssence
  • 1900 Nicollet Avenue, Minneapolis, MN 55403
  • Phone: 612-547-1451
  • Fax: 612-547-1484
  • info@vocalessence.org
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2023 VocalEssence. All rights reserved.

https://www.vocalessence.org/pressrelease/mpr-news-cantare-brings-mexican-culture-music-to-burnsville-high-school

This website uses cookies for necessary functions and to enhance your browsing experience.

Accept & Continue