Mexican composer Manuel María Ponce Cuéllar and his great-grandson, Houston pianist Omar Herrera

IN ALEX ROSS’ otherwise excellent book The Rest Is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century, the history of Latin American classical music is scant, save for a page describing Aaron Copland’s invitation in 1932 from composer Carlos Chávez to visit Mexico, which in turn inspired Copland to compose El Salón México. It’s another example of the blind spot many Anglo classical music writers have when it comes to the history of music south of the border. Houston pianist Omar Herrera is hoping to change this by enlightening the public to the extensive repertoire of Latin America’s modern composers through his organization The Ponce Project, which takes its name from the Mexican composer Manuel María Ponce Cuéllar, Herrera’s great-grandfather. On Sunday, May 1, at MATCH, the Ponce Project presents “Mexican Chamber Music,” featuring Ponce’s piano trio Trío Romántico and José Rolón’s challenging piano quartet Cuarteto Romántico, both performed by pianist John Noel and members of the Axiom Quartet.

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Preservation Hall Jazz Band (photo by Danny Clinch)

NOW HEAR THIS! As of April 12, the Society for the Performing Arts shall be known as Performing Arts Houston. The organization revealed the new name at its April 2 gala, The Kaleidoscope Ball, which raised close to $600,000 to support its education and community engagement programming and always high caliber concert multi-genre performance series. The rebranding, which pointedly drops the unintentionally contentious word “Society,” is meant to reflect the range and quality of the now 55-year-old organization’s vision as well as the “depth and breadth” of its upcoming 2022/23 season.

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THIS WEEK IS your chance to check out artist, DJ, and historian Tierney Malone’s installation, The Jazz Church of Houston, on view through April 2 at the Houston Museum of African American Culture. It’s a dynamic and meticulous exhibition of vintage photographs, videos and historical ephemera selected and carefully presented to illuminate the profound contributions Houston has made to the art of jazz. It’s also one of Malone’s most personal installations to date.

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