Wednesday, January 26, 2011

But this is how I sing it...

I recently read a quote on the “book of faces” posted by a friend that went like this: “"If I'm going to sing like someone else, then I don't need to sing at all." ~ Billie Holiday. So many singers work with people who innocently say “try this phrase like so and so does it,” or “here’s where (insert artist of the past,) would do a crescendo then descrescendo,” or “If you can’t sing it like famous diva, then you shouldn’t be singing it.” Many of those in the opera business are there to offer their expertise as they have worked with the “greats,” but at some point we as artists have to say this is how I sing it. (I chose “artists” over the word “singers” because I believe that with the tools we are given-the score, the language, the stories, the advice from the teachers, coaches and conductors, our technique and our own voices, we truly do create soemthing beautiful, memorable and amazing.)

We go to undergrad and sometimes grad school with a handful of information as we begin to explore how to make our voices into the instruments that opera lovers (and company heads) want to pay to hear. It is a long process of putting the voice, text and acting together as each thread is important. In the beginning we need many ears to help us learn the sounds and release the fears that keep us in check. Once we leave school we still try and make our way and hold onto the title “young artist,” sometimes for MANY years, in an effort to let people know that we are still putting the pieces together. At some point, however, we have to say “All right. I have all this information, the tools, the network and the freedom to create.” It’s our chance to become all the things that make us a great opera singer. It’s an exciting and scary place to be as we get to take full responsibility for our performances. We ultimately become the ones who make the decisions and sometimes asserting that can be tough, but it is necessary.

With recordings, videos, DVDS, YouTube, bootleg/pirated 8-tracks and all the other media out there it is possible to be overwhelmed with the number of ways that singers can sing a role, an aria or a phrase. But the one thing that makes all of those interpretations valid is that those artists did something so special that it’s still remembered for years and years (or months, or weeks or days depending on whether the artist is still performing.) Our goal as opera singers is to tell the great stories of opera with our voices. As a performer we want to put our personal stamp on it and make it something so amazing that people will be talking about it for days, weeks, months or years.

One day some young singer will be in a coaching and that coach will say: “Sing it like (insert your name here.)” So with that knowledge in mind we are able to take it with a grain of salt when someone tells us to sound more like singer X or do it like singer Z, because in the end the only way we can do it is by singing with our own voice and ideas. The greats knew that and that is what makes them someone we want to listen to over and over again.

Peace,

Eric

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