The Tenerife Orchestra brings music to hospitals and prisons in the "Música abierta" project.

The Tenerife Orchestra brings music to hospitals and prisons in the "Música abierta" project.

Source: Diario de Avisos

The Tenerife Symphony Orchestra has launched the "Open Music" season with masterclasses and concerts in hospitals, prisons, and rehabilitation centers to make culture more accessible and improve people's emotional well-being.

The Tenerife Symphony Orchestra is launching a new season of the "Música abierta" project – their most open program, which brings music to unexpected places. Musicians, along with the team, will conduct master classes and concerts in hospitals, rehabilitation centers, and even prisons. This way, they want to make culture more accessible and improve people's mood.

This project is supported by the government of Tenerife. José Carlos Acha, who is responsible for culture on the island, says that the orchestra is not just musicians, but also an important part of society. They use music to bring together people who usually do not have the opportunity to go to concerts. "Música abierta" shows how culture can positively influence emotional state, learning, and mutual understanding.

This year's program is called "Cuerpos al viento" – something like a sensual experience that combines movement, body, and music. Together with creative people such as Ana Hernández Sanchís and Antonio Quiles, the orchestra will create a space where everyone can feel part of the art.

Ana Hernández explains that master classes help people experience classical music in a new way, express themselves through it, and communicate with others. And the orchestra's musicians, in turn, gain a unique experience by sharing their music with those who need it.

Antonio Quiles adds that the combination of live music, body, and movement has a great impact on people. Music awakens emotions, memories, and makes us more alive and human.

The "Cuerpos al viento" program will feature works by various composers, such as Amy Beach, Tom Johnson, Ferenc Farkas, and others. All of them are selected to evoke vivid emotions and memories.

The project is implemented with the support of various organizations and has already started with master classes in hospitals and social centers. In the near future, the musicians will visit other institutions, such as a center for the elderly and a correctional colony.

The program includes master classes where people can experience music through movement and body, as well as concerts where everyone can participate.

"Música abierta" shows that the Tenerife Symphony Orchestra is not just a cultural institution, but also an organization that cares about society. They do everything possible to make culture accessible to everyone, improve people's emotional state, promote learning and social cohesion.

This project is a modern approach to culture, where people are the focus. It encourages joint creativity, unites organizations, artists, and ordinary citizens.