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The Mexican Music Festival comes to Scottsdale – Scottsdale.org

The Mexican Music Festival comes to Scottsdale – Scottsdale.org

MUsic in Mexico is much more than Mariachi, folkolorica and estudian.

Mexicans enjoy a very diverse repertoire of music and representative musicians from their brighter interests come to Scotsdale.

The diverse nature of the music used by Mexicans is illustrated by the popularity of the annual Alfonso Ortiz Tirado (FAOT), which attracts an annual visit of 100,000 and is the largest music festival in the Northwest Mexico.

This annual festival is held in Alamos, Sonora, who is the sister city of Scotsdale.

Three award -winning musicians from the festival will appear at 7 pm Thursday, February 13, at ASU Kerr in Scotsdale. Tickets are $ 35 for open seats and $ 55 for reserved small table seats and can be found by searching for “Faot” on Ticketmaster.com.

This will be the only expansion of the festival outside Alamos and is organized by the organizers of it (the Sonoran Culture Institute), the City City of Scotsdale and Scottsdale.

Tenor Christopher Rolddan, Soprano Rosa Maria Davila, along with concert pianist Emmanuel Sabas, have been selected by the Institute for performance in Scotsdale.

“They will share their awarded votes as they fascinate Scotndale’s audience with love, popular and classical music,” said Scottsdale spokesman Sister Cities Max Rumbdo.

In 2011, the Faot Rold was awarded the Youth Revelation Award, and the following year he emphasized the closure of Faot, accompanied by the Sonora Philharmonic. He is part of the show, the “3 International Tenors” in the United States and has provided music to the Mexican Consulate in Arizona.

In addition to his professional singing career, he also provides vocal coaching to the director of the singing company of Tecnológico de Monterrey Campus Sonora Norte.

Davila, Mexican soprano, received several awards and recognitions, including the Faot 2020 Young Talents Award. He has a specialty of music from the University of Sonora and achieves his studies at the Opera Sinalo workshop.

She has also participated in the Bellas Artes Opera studio and the Palau de Les Improvement Center and debuts in the International Debut in the Palau de Les Arts in Valencia, Spain.

Sabas will accompany Rolddan and Davila. He is a student of Claudia Cordova and Elena Podzharova and has participated in various theaters and festivals in Mexico and the United States, such as the International Festival of Cervanthino, the Hall of Manuel Ponce of Palacio de Belass Artes and the Pima College College.

He has a diverse discography ranging from concert songs to jazz, as well as to project the music of Sonoran’s indigenous population. “His productions have earned him recognition from the art community and the general public,” Rumbo said.

Scotsdale and Alamos have been nursing cities since 1969. In addition to the exchange of culture, there are 55 years of student, fire service, elderly citizens and the exchange of leadership in the city.

Information: www.scottdalesistercities.org.

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