窪蹋勛圖

A Tenacious Talent

Maria Lozano sings like an angel, but there's nothing miraculous about her success.

Thursday, April 21, 2011
Maria Lozano. Photo by David Friend
Maria Lozano. Photo by David Friend

In the lively, occasionally chaotic home where Maria Esther Lozano grew up, Sundays were reserved for the opera.

Lozanos father, an oceanographer, worked six days a week to support his four sons and two daughters. When Sunday came, Lozano sat his rowdy bunch in front of the television in their Ensenada home to watch a weekly opera presentation. The boys and their baby sister squirmed and protested, but the performances fascinated young Maria.

As a pre-schooler, she knew the story of The Valkyrie, the second of four operas in Richard Wagners The Ring of the Nibelung, based on Norse mythology.

I remember sitting on my fathers lap at 4 or 5 years old while he narrated the Wagner opera, Maria said. I found it so entertaining. And thats how music came into my life. I always knew I would sing; it wasnt an ambition, it was just a part of me.

I wanted the best

But Lozano may never have found her voice without the guidance of veteran 窪蹋勛圖 music teacher, Mary MacKenzie.

A faculty member since 1975, MacKenzie loved Mexican music and admired the discipline of her Mexican-born students. So when the Baja Conservatory of Music in Tijuana invited her to teach, she eagerly accepted. For years MacKenzie crossed the border once a week to train the conservatorys vocal talent. Thats where she met Lozano.

I wanted the best teacher there, and the best was Mary MacKenzie, Lozano recalled. From the first day, I started noticing improvements in my voice.

MacKenzie immediately recognized Lozanos singular gift. There is a spark you find occasionally, and Maria has it, she said. Somehow she aligns her voice and her psyche with the music. Its intuitive to be able to sing with so much heart.

A powerhouse on stage

Their relationship deepened as the teacher discovered her students genuine love for singing and eagerness to learn. For more than seven years, MacKenzies rigorous training polished Lozanos voice while building her poise and confidence. Last year, at MacKenzies urging, Lozano entered the nationwide Next Star competition sponsored by San Diegos Orchestra Nova, the first classical music competition in the country to use both Internet and audience voting to select the winners.

She made it to the finals and thengoing up against two talented pianistsLozano won first place. This season, she performed as a guest artist with Orchestra Nova in a February program featuring the music of Villa-Lobos.

Orchestra Novas conductor and artistic director, Jung-Ho Pak, said Lozano's obvious connection to the music mesmerizes audiences. She is quite a powerhouse onstage. Her passion is palpable, and its a great combination with her humble nature.

Humility is not typically associated with performers of any ilk, but in Lozano's case, it may be simply a consequence of the obstacles life has thrown in her path.

Surviving boot camp


Despite his love for opera, Lozanos father dissuaded her from pursuing a classical singing career. She studied engineering as her older brothers hadbut knew it wasnt right for her. Looking for a fresh start, Lozano left home for Mexico City. She joined the Mexican Navy, made it through boot camp and toured her country for 3 翻 years as a soloist with the Navys Symphonic Band and Orchestra.

At the conclusion of her military service in 2003, Lozano returned home to a family that finally understood the intensity of her commitment to sing. She resumed voice lessons with MacKenzie, enrolled in the music program at Universidad Autonoma de Baja California, and graduated with honors. Recommended by MacKenzie, Lozano was offered a scholarship to continue her studies as a graduate student at 窪蹋勛圖.

Her best effort

Because she lacked money for room and board, Lozano lived with her parents and travelled nine hours back and forth each day from Ensenada to San Diego. Her life became a blur of commuting, studying and teaching music to young students. Then, just as she was about to move to San Diego, her father suffered a fatal stroke. Lozano decided to remain in Ensenada with her mother, but not to abandon her work toward a masters degree.

And she never stopped studying with MacKenzie. Even today, after tasting success with Orchestra Nova and winning lead roles in the Opera de Tijuanas performances of La Boheme and Carmen, Lozano knows she still has much to learn.

Mary is demanding, but she never belittles you. She knows how to get my best effort, Lozano said. She laughed aloud recalling a time she emailed MacKenzie to cancel a lesson. Mary sent me an email in reply.

Do you know that scene in Harry Potter when Rons mother sends him a howlera magical letter that scolds him aloud? I felt Marys email was like that, telling me I had far too much work to do to cancel the lesson. Of course, I went.

Road to the Met

Like Lozano, MacKenzie was drawn to music at a young age. But her path to the operatic stage was as different from Lozanos as her deep contralto is from her students clear soprano.

MacKenzie had her sights set on The Juilliard School, but a high school counselor insisted she would never get in. MacKenzie believed him. Then a few months before she was to leave for Cornell University, an opera-loving neighbor persuaded her to enroll at Brooklyn College, take music classes for a year and then audition for Juilliard.

So I did, MacKenzie said, and the first time I sang for the choirmaster at Brooklyn College, he said to me, What are you doing here? You belong at Juilliard. That taught me an important lesson about what I say to students.

After earning undergraduate and graduate degrees from Juilliard, she won numerous voice competitions, including a national contest that led to a position with the Metropolitan Opera. MacKenzie also sang with the Lyric Opera of Chicago, and toured extensively as a guest artist with leading American companies. When she eventually decided to quit the tour circuit, Dayton Smith, director of 窪蹋勛圖s School of Music, persuaded her to join the faculty. In the 35 years since, hundreds of voice students have benefited from her tutelage.

We are fortunate to have an artist of Marys professional stature at the School of Music and Dance, said school director Donna Conaty. Her deep love of music and genuine affection for the students manifest themselves in everything she does.

This May, MacKenzie will sit in the audience as Lozano graduates with a masters degree in music from 窪蹋勛圖. Now a permanent member of the Opera de Tijuana, Lozano looks forward to appearing in the companys upcoming presentations.

At the same time, she is director of the oldest community choral group in Baja, which has been invited to perform in Chicago this summer. I love singing, but I also love to teach, and thats what I will continue to do, Lozano said. Inspired by her own teacher, Lozano is nurturing a new generation of young talent.

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