This project grew from years spent both in the classroom and in the community. I've had the privilege of working with students whose stories, challenges, and strengths have shaped not only how I teach, but why I teach. Young musicians, returning adult learners, first-generation college students, and aspiring educators have all reminded me that music is more than a subject, it’s a doorway. Again and again, I’ve witnessed how music invites empathy, evokes memory, and fosters a deep sense of belonging. I wrote this text to honor that power.
Each chapter in this book was written to center music as a lived experience, something created by people, shaped by stories, and carried through community. You’ll meet griots and gamelan players, mariachi musicians and maqam improvisers. You’ll follow music through moments of joy and resistance, migration and memory, ceremony and celebration. Instead of dividing traditions by Western categories or isolating instruments from their meaning, the chapters are shaped by regions and themes that honor music’s role in human life. Along the way, you’ll find listening activities, reflection questions, and space to think critically about issues like cultural identity, appropriation, and justice, not as abstract ideas, but as lived realities that music helps us navigate.
This book is not just about what music is, it’s about why it matters.
Thank you for being here. Whether you’re reading this for a course, your teaching, or your personal growth, I’m grateful you’ve chosen to listen alongside me. Let’s explore how music continues to tell the human story, across borders, across generations, and across time.
With warmth and gratitude, Denise Apodaca
Denise Favela Apodaca is a Master Instructor in the School of Music, Theatre, and Dance at Colorado State University, where she has taught for over a decade. With more than 30 years of experience in music education, she brings deep passion and purpose to her teaching, whether she’s guiding undergraduate musicians, mentoring graduate students, or designing inclusive, culturally responsive courses in world music, piano, and music appreciation.
Her work bridges classrooms and communities. Denise has led early childhood music programs, chaired piano departments, directed nonprofit youth orchestras, and served as Director of Student Success and Executive Committee Founder for Colorado State University’s Graduate Center for Inclusive Mentoring. A bilingual educator and certified wellness coach, she is committed to equity, healing, and human connection through education.
Currently completing her Doctor of Education in College Teaching at Teachers College, Columbia University, Denise’s research explores the intersections of music, identity, memory, and belonging. Her teaching has been honored with awards for excellence, service, and mentorship, but what matters most to her is the trust her students place in her, and the shared belief that music can change lives.
Outside the classroom, Denise finds joy in traveling, and spending time with her three children, to whom this book is lovingly dedicated.