
Music Educator
He has extensive experience training cantors, soloists, choirs, and instrumental ensembles, guiding students not only in performance skills but also in interpretation, phrasing, breath control, blend, tone production, and stage presence. As an ensemble director, he emphasizes collaboration, listening, and musical sensitivity—skills that shape both strong musicians and mature leaders.
A key dimension of his work includes thoughtful repertoire selection. Fr. Alejandro carefully curates music appropriate to the age, technical level, cultural context, and liturgical setting of each ensemble. Whether preparing sacred choral works, liturgical music, classical repertoire, or concert programming, he seeks pieces that challenge students artistically while remaining pedagogically sound and spiritually meaningful.
His professional performance experience—including singing in venues such as Carnegie Hall—deepens his credibility as both performer and educator. He brings that same standard of excellence into classrooms, rehearsals, and liturgical celebrations, forming musicians who understand that beauty, discipline, and purpose belong together.
For Fr. Alejandro, music education is not simply about performance—it is about formation: shaping voices, cultivating artistry, and forming young people to recognize music as a path toward truth, community, and transcendence.
Fr. Alejandro Báez, S.J. is a certified K–12 music educator in the States of New York and California, specializing in secondary education (grades 9–12). With extensive experience in vocal music instruction, he trains cantors, soloists, and choirs in healthy vocal technique, musical interpretation, and confident liturgical leadership.
Beyond vocal formation, he also educates and collaborates with instrumentalists—forming ensembles that combine artistic excellence with spiritual depth. His performance experience includes singing in prestigious venues such as Carnegie Hall, reflecting his commitment to high-level musicianship rooted in discipline and artistry.
For Fr. Alejandro, music education is more than technique—it is formation of voice, mind, and heart.

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