This magnificent story was researched and written by ACG intern Micaela Creo. Who said: “As a rising junior at Wake Forest University I attended an inspiring talk called Art, Money, and Community Service by ACG Executive Director Dr. Matthew Hinsley. Ecstatic about each story I heard, I became an ACG intern in hopes of playing a part in building community with music.”
Micaela interviewed three of fifteen students who traveled to Spain in June as part of ACG Youth Orchestra’s 10-year anniversary tour. ACGYO is directed by ACG Artistic Director Joe WIlliams. We would like to say a special thank you to Alhambra Guitars, who generously gave the group 15 guitars to play for their week in Spain, as well as more than thirty donors who helped make it possible for all to participate. For a compilation of some trip highlights, see the ACG blog, Special Moments: ACGYO Goes to Spain!.
A Life-Changing Trip to Spain
In June, to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Austin Classical Guitar’s Youth Orchestra (ACGYO), a group of 15 young artists brought their wide smiles and remarkable talents across the Atlantic, to Spain! As an ACG summer intern, I was invited to interview several members about the trip. I expected a simple recap of architectural sites and trips to beautiful beaches. But I got so much more.
My interviews uncovered the unintended yet unforgettable impact this trip had on the relationships these musicians have with each other, with music, and with themselves.
As a Wake Forest University student I’ll be studying abroad amidst the rich and historic culture of Madrid this upcoming semester! I got some wonderful tips about beautiful sites to see, but the bigger lessons I received surrounded togetherness, presence, and belonging.
Here’s what I learned from ACGYO members Jianna Zamora, Teddy McCoy, and Kian Mitchell.
Togetherness
All three musicians have spent 2 years playing and growing with the YO. In these years, Teddy claims the group has played an integral role in both his personal and musical growth. Last year, the group’s trip played a pivotal role in his membership.
“I have found my fellow members to be adept players and good people, having gotten to know them in more detail on the trip we took to New Mexico my first year in the group. That experience helped assure my adhesion as a member of a thing larger than myself, and that was a lot of fun to do.”
This year’s trip to Spain took that growth to new levels.
Newness and uncertainty led the students to embrace the people they created these memorable moments with. When asked how he was personally changed by the experience, Teddy shared this beautiful sentiment,
“Often, in periods of change, we develop a stronger relationship with the elements (or people) that remain constant in the transfer. That is really how I have changed in my time in Madrid. In seeing wonderful, foreign things, with the natural instinct to stand next to the people a little less foreign to you. To see it all together. And what an experience that is. It turns an ensemble into a real group, strangers into friends, and music made simultaneously into music made together.”
Wow.
Even when they weren’t gawking at beautiful landscapes and architecture, the young artists found a surplus of joy in the simple moments that drew them closer together. Kian reminisced,
“We’d have our own little practice sessions just for fun, we would play cards and it just felt like that bond had really started to grow, that we never got that opportunity during our weekly practices back in Austin.”
My heart warmed as Jianna referenced these same moments when asked about her trip highlights. She experienced the group’s personality shine through in their nightly UNO matches, their laughter complimented by the bustling sounds of the Spanish nightlife from the street below.
“We were all so competitive that that was probably the highlight of the fun things that we did. It was just fun getting to hang out with each other,” said Jianna.
Another simple but impactful memory she shared with me was the group’s bus rides through the mountains in between cities. As they talked to each other with the windows open, she recalled the prettiest sunrises and sunsets she’d ever seen, and gorgeous scenery they wouldn’t see within the cities.
“We’d just randomly see some castle ruins just driving by in the mountains and it was so awesome.”
Their growth as a group reflected in their performances, too. Jianna highlighted,
“Spending so much time together in a social setting without our guitars, we were able to connect so much more when we were performing. I think that really made a difference.”
Reflecting on this, I’ve become more aware that music weaved its way to my most relevant childhood friendships and memories. In elementary school, my best friends and I would have an absolute blast rehearsing for our annual three-woman performance in the talent show, where we all sang accompanied by my guitar. Playing violin together, we giggled together through practices, and eagerly awaited the orchestra’s annual trip to compete at Dorney Park to ride whichever roller coasters we were tall enough for, growing closer to our peers outside the auditorium or classroom.
Moving into college in North Carolina, far away from my life in New York, I longed for friendship and certainty, clinging to my randomly-paired roommate and my new friends on the cheerleading team with me. At our first meeting with the girls on our floor, a shared love for music sparked one of my longest running college friendships, when our resident advisor asked each resident to introduce themselves with an album that started with our initial, and my friend Ella correctly said evermore. The next day, at a freshman orientation event, I frantically searched the crowded field of over a thousand freshmen for any of the few people I knew, when Ella rescued me by calling me over. That whole first year, we grew ever closer to each other, assisted by our shared passion. We shared the most special moments singing together, her lending me her guitar from down the hall, or sharing with me her newest song she wrote. These moments were pivotal in deepening our love and understanding of each other.
Presence
Back in Austin, the freshly finished 2023-24 season focused on the theme of presence, a concept Kian believed aligned perfectly with their experience abroad. To him, presence meant,
“having fun but also focusing on practicing and refining and enjoying the music. It was really about … doing what we love to do with each other.”
After performing some of the season’s pieces centered around presence, the young musicians would walk around the city, soaking in the beauty around them, as well as the role of presence in Spanish culture. In Southern Spain, it’s common to live slowly, being deliberate and intentional in the pace of daily activities. I think the immersion into that culture brought the belief into action.
“Presence was incredibly important in those experiences we had in Spain. It allowed us to enjoy those moments we had together, being present in those moments, active, and engaged with each other,” Kian elaborated. “I think we should all remind ourselves we should be present in our life and we should enjoy the ability to engage with one another in those relationships. We should definitely always be reminded of the importance of families and groups like the ACGYO.”
In my own family, music is a bonding agent. In my earliest memory, my father is serenading my twin brother and I with his guitar, which was bigger than the two of us combined. When my dad was seven, he attended classical school for concert guitar in his home country, Argentina, and the instrument remained fundamental in his life ever since. Once my delicate arms could reach around my small, cheap guitar–also around age seven, but in Long Island, New York– he became my instructor, nurturing my early obsession with music and with Taylor Swift, who dominated my listening.
My love for guitar grew with us, singing my favorite songs on my guitar with him while we bonded over our love for playing and listening to music. I doubt my music taste would’ve ended up quite as great without him training my ear in classic and Argentinian rock. When I’m far away at school, picking up my guitar feels like a hug from my dad, and he loves receiving surprise videos of my dorm room performances. My connection with the instrument also keeps me present in the quiet, simple moments in my empty room. After all, what’s a dorm without a guitar?
Belonging
To know a nation’s music is to engulf in the cultural capital they have to offer. As a daughter of Argentinian immigrants, I can personally tell you a lot about the role of music in cultures. Whether it be tango, rock, or canciones de cancha (passionate soccer chants), Argentinian music draws me closer to my culture and my family abroad. When months or years have passed without me visiting, I know I can keep in touch with my cousins Lucia and Valentina about Taylor Swift’s latest easter egg, or receive great rock music recs from my cousin German. When Argentina won the World Cup, my dad, brother and I celebrated with hundreds of Argentinian strangers in the streets of Miami, from around noon, when the game ended, to past midnight, the crowd had a life of its own. Chants and percussion filled the air, and fans cycled through the multitude of chants for the team. Vamos, Vamos… Argentina! The music was both a product and a producer of intense joy. Music’s magnetic force is a cornerstone of modern and classic cultures, its history running hundreds to thousands of years deep.
In Spain, the classical guitar has an extensive and esteemed history that the young musicians got to learn from and feel a part of as they explored, from watching flamenco performers to performing in the Museo de la Guitarra in Almeria on the southern coast. They even toured Casa-Museo Antonio Torres, where the famous 19th century guitar maker lived and designed guitars that heavily influenced today’s modern guitar. Jianna told me,
“In that guitar museum, seeing the progression of how far stringed instruments have come, it was so cool to see the history… It was so inspiring to just see hundreds of years of people that have been inspired by music to where we are now, it’s the music that brought us to Spain.”
In the midst of these foreign experiences, the music created by the group bridged the familiar and unfamiliar cultures. A Spanish speaker, Kian avoided the language barrier, but discovered the cultural barriers of being in a new country. The overlap?
“Being able to connect with people who live in an entirely different culture, those barriers we overcame through music. Being able to travel through the lens of a musician was really unique for me and I felt like I was able to connect with that important part of Spanish culture.”
To those who didn’t speak the language, the shared music was the language that connected them with the locals who stopped to listen.
To describe the time spent with one another, ACG Executive Director Matt Hinsley called the trip a “masterclass of relationships.” At the beginning of the trip, there was no way of knowing what would happen next, and yet the uncertainty yielded its most beautiful moments. In my conversations with the young musicians, there was no doubt that one extremely special performance stood out from the rest. An unplanned, yet unforgettable, concert on the steps of the Catedral de Granada in the Plaza Pasiegas stuck with the group, and surely with the people who stopped to listen. Jianna was in awe of the passerbyers who tuned in to the impromptu performance, drawn to the beauty created by this young orchestra.
“It’s just so cool to see people stop and take time out of their day to listen to us play without having planned for it. That’s the beauty of music in general, that it can just catch people’s attention and bring people together.”
According to Kian,
“There were even people in their homes up in their patios that were looking down and listening. That was really eye opening to me and inspired me to want to further continue my path of becoming a better musician so I can share and create the same exact environment.”
He gushed about the Granada cathedral as his favorite place, praising the surreal moment the group created together.
“The privilege to play the classical guitar in Granada, even playing a piece called Granada in front of that cathedral, was really amazing. It really helped me personally to connect with everyone that I traveled with, ACGYO members, their parents, and also Matt, Joe, and Alex. I felt a lot closer to them after that experience.”
Teddy also chose to highlight the particular energy on the steps of the cathedral. To emphasize its unique environment, he noted,
“The lack of formality of the performance juxtaposed with the grand location made it one of our most memorable performances. And an informative one, or really I think the word I am looking for is enlightening. Enlightenment in the sense that music is not created in a vacuum, but in the world, and in a place, and foremost, by people.”
Looking Back and Looking Forward
Overwhelmed with excitement and discovery, it’s clear the artists are forever changed by this exceptional trip. As their faces lit up describing their travels, they looked to the future, and examined the changes they felt both musically and personally. While experiencing a rich culture with such old history, it is fresh and new in the eyes of the young beholders, bearing a large influence on them.
Jianna remarked,
“Just getting to see people’s reactions to us playing, and experiencing the music we’re creating together, it’s definitely inspiring, it makes you hungry for more, to be better–be better for the group and be better for yourself, too.”
Kian shared,
“The experience reminded me that playing my guitar is not just about my growth as a musician, but it’s also about what I can share with other people and the sounds and the emotions that I can create for other people to experience. And that trip, being able to watch flamenco players and being able to play the guitar for other people and seeing everyone’s reactions, it reminded me that it’s about everyone in the room, not just about the people performing.”
Kian’s selfless perspective is right, that music is an exchange and a shared experience rather than that of a sole performer. Even in a country where no one knew him or shared prior experiences, that music could bring together strangers.
After these interactions with such bright young minds, I’m left inspired by all they shared with me. I am excited for the future of the ACGYO, and hopeful for the future of each talented musician impacted by the extraordinary trip. It’s crucial we nurture our future artists and create environments that guide them to flourish independently, continuing to make beautiful art to share with the world.
My final takeaway? A Spain bucket list! When I asked Teddy, Kian, and Jianna for a place they thought I absolutely needed to see, I got one answer: Granada, Granada, Granada. Teddy specified,
“It would have to be that Alhambra–forgive me for being so plain. I just can’t help it. It was beautiful and I have never seen anything close to it: the walls covered in writing, and the geometry.”
As of right now, I have no idea what exactly will come of my own travels to Spain, or how my takeaways will compare to those of Teddy, Kian, and Jianna. What I do know is that such uncertainty leaves room for the most thrilling possibilities and new discoveries.