From Deseret News archives:

Bilingual singer 'great' in many music genres

BYU student sings on CDs — including one of her own

Published: Saturday, July 15, 2006 5:43 p.m. MDT
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Rebecca Lopez has learned early one of life's important lessons: What doesn't happen to you can be as defining as what does.

Lopez grew up loving music, and in high school she was taking classical voice lessons. Lopez decided that was what she wanted to be, a classical-music teacher.

Then she got to Brigham Young University, and when she auditioned for the classical-music program, she was not accepted into the major. "At first I didn't know what to do. But I decided to just go on getting my general requirements filled. Then I heard about the media-music major, and I realized that was perfect for me. I love singing classical music, but I also love pop and gospel and other genres. I hated to stick to just one kind."

So, she tried out for the media-music program — and she was not accepted.

She tried out again the next year. Again, "all I could do was keep working on my generals. But in March I was told I was on a waiting list, and in June they said they thought they had a spot for me."

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Perhaps the struggle to get there made it all the sweeter, but "it has been so exciting," says Lopez, who is now a junior and in her second year in the program. "I've really come to understand what singing is. It's all about expressing myself. I don't sing just to sing. I sing in all different ways to express myself in all different ways and reach all different sorts of people. It has truly been the answer to my prayers."

Since then other doors have opened for Lopez, including her latest project, a CD titled "When You Believe," a bilingual disc produced by Sounds of Zion.

Lopez was born in Mexico City to a Mexican father and an American mother. Her parents have since separated, but she grew up with a cross-cultural background, speaking — and singing — both English and Spanish.

"I got to know Jessie Clark (another artist who records with Sounds of Zion)," Lopez said, "and at her wedding I think it was her dad who told me that he'd heard Janice Kapp Perry (who had recently returned from an LDS mission in Chile) was looking for artists to sing on some Spanish CDs."

She was introduced to Steve Lereud of Lakeview Studios, "and we did a demo that they gave to Janice." Before she knew it, Lopez was singing at Perry's Spanish firesides.

"Then I met Greg Hansen," she said, "and he asked me to be on a Spanish CD for young women they were doing." Other songs on other CDs followed. She also began traveling around the country to sing at musical firesides. And then the next logical step was a CD of her own.

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Rebecca Lopez, daughter of a Mexican and an American, sees a demand for LDS songs in Spanish.

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