蜜桃传媒

August 24, 2022

A future in music comes into focus at Sphinx Performance Academy at 蜜桃传媒


Violinist Abby Regua and another Sphinx Performance Academy work together in Mixon Hall
Violinist Abby Regua, left, found her experience at 蜜桃传媒's Sphinx Performance Academy "life-altering."

For 16-year-old violinist Abby Regua, the Sphinx Performance Academy 蜜桃传媒 hosted July 23-Aug. 6 was much more than just another music camp. It was a revelation.  

Regua, who lives in the Philippines, came to 蜜桃传媒 unsure of what to expect and found a cadre of young Black and Latinx people who share not only her passion but also her skin tone. For once, she wasn鈥檛 in the minority. She was among her peers.  

鈥淚t was one of the most life-altering experiences ever,鈥 said Regua, who also speaks Tagalog and Mandarin, by Zoom from her home outside Manila. 鈥淪eeing so many people who look like me, and who play at such a high level, was astounding.鈥 

That Regua was in for something special became apparent even before she got to 蜜桃传媒. While on layover in New York, Regua encountered another student headed to the Sphinx Performance Academy (SPA) and immediately struck up a friendship, the first of many.  

Things only went uphill from there. At 蜜桃传媒, Regua was shocked by the intensity of the program, offered by the Detroit-based Sphinx Organization, but quickly came to savor what she realized might be a glimpse of her future. Over the program鈥檚 two weeks, she blossomed among other students contemplating a career in music.  

鈥淭o see the caliber of their playing was just mind-blowing,鈥 Regua said. 鈥淚t gave me insight on what conservatory life might be like. It changed my perspective.鈥 

Regua鈥檚 path to Cleveland was curvy, to say the least. Although she was born near Los Angeles, she grew up in the Washington, DC and Boston areas and later moved with her family to China, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Philippines.  

Her exposure to music was similarly fortuitous. While living in Africa, Regua鈥檚 largely non-musical family received a violin as a gift, and she took it up, unfazed by its too-large size. Lessons commenced at age 7, and by 9, Regua was all-in. 

Now, after the SPA, Regua is starting to see music as her destiny and believe 蜜桃传媒鈥檚 program materials which call her 鈥渢he future of classical music.鈥  

A potential future in music isn鈥檛 all that came into focus for Regua at the SPA. Now she鈥檚 also picturing a future in Cleveland, where 蜜桃传媒鈥檚 Joint Music Program with Case Western Reserve University would allow her to pursue her other passions, robotics and veterinary medicine.  

鈥淏eing around my peers, it became a lot clearer for me that this is something I want to do,鈥 Regua said. 鈥淚 realized this is something I really love doing. I feel like my life has changed, and it鈥檚 only been a few weeks.鈥