Chad Herzog, executive director of Arizona Arts Live, rolled out Arts Arizona Live on Thursday to UA Presentsโ€™ nearly 100,000 patrons, outlining the organizationโ€™s inaugural season and artistic philosophy.

UA Presents celebrated its 25th and final year with its 2019-20 season.

On Thursday, the University of Arizona arts presenter got a new name โ€” Arizona Arts Live โ€” and new mission.

Arizona Arts Live is throwing out the UA Presents template that included a mix of classical, pop and world music, dance, and comedy presented in Centennial Hall on campus.

In its place, it is presenting events that engage the community, including a play where audience members are active participants and an interactive art exhibit that shines a spotlight on Tucsonโ€™s unsung heroes.

The season also includes a concert series, โ€œSounds From the Sonoran Desert,โ€ at Arizona Stadium that was created to provide international students with a โ€œclassโ€ at a time when President Trump was threatening to ban those students from returning to the U.S. if their schools were only offering online classes.

โ€œSounds From the Sonoran Desertโ€ will โ€œmeetโ€ over the course of several weeks, offering students โ€œan in-person opportunity to learn about and experience the music of Southern Arizona.โ€

The six-concert series is open to students and the public and will include performances by D. Faktion Nyne, Mariachi Luz De Luna, RyanHood, Diluvio AZ, XIXA and Orkestra Mendoza.

Guzheng player Jing Xia was among the Tucson musicians featured in The Tucson Studio virtual concert series.

Also planned: a socially distanced outdoor concert series โ€œInside/Outโ€ that builds on Arizona Arts Liveโ€™s The Tucson Studio, a series launched last spring that featured local artists performing in area parks including the Tucson Botanical Gardens.

The performances were filmed and broadcast on the organizationโ€™s YouTube channel (youtube.com/user/uacfa).

โ€œInside/Outโ€ will feature socially distanced live audiences that will be offered wireless headsets to allow them to hear the music from as far away as 300 meters from the stage in keeping with COVID-19 pandemic restrictions.

The headphone idea was part of the plan long before the pandemic as a way to allow the audience to participate in remote locations including a desert setting, said Arizona Arts Live Executive Director Chad Herzog.

Herzog, who took over the organization in August 2019, rolled out Arts Arizona Live on Thursday to UA Presentsโ€™ nearly 100,000 patrons, outlining the organizationโ€™s inaugural season and artistic philosophy that Herzog described as a โ€œrenaissance.โ€

โ€œWhat is Tucsonโ€™s renaissance (post-pandemic) going to look like? Now is our time to really answer that. I want Arizona Arts Live to play a part in Tucsonโ€™s renaissance,โ€ Herzog said.

The philosophy behind Arizona Arts Live and its umbrella organization, Arizona Arts, is to serve as a gateway to the UA College of Fine Artsโ€˜ visual and performing arts assets, experiences and educational programs, said Andy Schulz, the universityโ€™s vice president for the arts.

Though most of the programming for the inaugural Arizona Arts Live season is in response to COVID-19, rather than follow the lead of arts organizations nationwide that are offering only streamed events, Arizona Arts Live wanted to go beyond that, Herzog said.

โ€œThat alternate setting isnโ€™t just watching a video in a Zoom room. Itโ€™s being a part of theater,โ€ he said.

Mariachi Luz de Luna is part of Arizona Arts Liveโ€™s inaugural season. The ensemble will perform in the โ€œSounds From the Sonoran Desertโ€ series at Arizona Stadium.

THE INAUGURAL SEASON

Hereโ€™s what the inaugural Arizona Arts Live season will look like. For more information, visit arizonaartslive.com.

XIXA โ€” from left, Bryan Sanders, Gabriel Sullivan, Brian Lopez, Jason Urman and Frank Bair โ€” will be part of Arizona Arts Liveโ€™s Arizona Stadium concert series.


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Contact reporter Cathalena E. Burch at cburch@tucson.com or 573-4642. On Twitter @Starburch