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Opera, Art & Music

I had the privilege when I was 20 years old of learning from the stupendous Dame Joan Sutherland. She was a vocal titan, but in person remarkably grounded in an earthy, no nonsense Australian diva kind of way.

I would start to sing a phrase and she would interject with probably the most valuable piece of advice I have ever received -

“Stop. Think of the note before you sing it.”

So, before I even started to make a sound, I would focus silently on the quality of the sound I wanted to make, the way I wanted the vowel to be shaped in my mouth, and the intention behind the words I was about to sing.

The difference this advice made to me as an artist and as a person was profound. When I followed her advice,  I felt strong. More in control, of my voice and my craft. It was not about me so much anymore, but about the music and the responsibility I had been blessed with – to do it justice, to make it sing, to move people.

Can you sense why that’s a BIG shift? continue reading…

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A Singing Video Post!

So. For the very first time on this blog, I am finally posting a video of me singing!
(Whatever happened to breaking myself in gently by posting a vid or two of me just speaking first??!!?)
Part of me totally wants to share this with you. My blog is, after all, called The Tiny Soprano for a [...]

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The Creativity Myth: Why Anyone Can Be An Artist

OK. You heard it here first, baby.
I can offically announce that opera is now the new rock and roll.
I’m sure it all started when I had a tweet from the lovely Reese (web designer extraordinare) in January, who confessed that she had almost gone into singing (I hope she won’t mind me sharing):

reese  January 22, 2010

@thetinysoprano [...]

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Can Art Afford To Ignore An Audience?

Ah the wonders of the interwebs…
Two days ago I chatted for almost three hours (!!) with my new Twitter friend and future musical muskateer @HelenKim. (We have some very exciting plans in store for our readers over the coming months…) Being a former whizz with a cello, Helen and I have a lot in common [...]

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How To Start “In The Breath”

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In any endeavour, how you start is crucial.
But I would go even further and say it is not the start itself but the quality of the intention that precedes it.
For example, when I start to sing, the performance doesn’t begin with the first note. It begins with the intention, and it is the intention [...]

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Chris Brogan, Hype and Prima Donnas

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Chris Brogan posted the fifth video in his Overnight Success series yesterday, and it really got me thinking about the idea of belief systems and how people get sucked in to the story of their own hyped-up greatness.
You see, coming from the opera biz, I know a lot of people who appear to be huge [...]

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Why “Safe” Doesn’t Move People

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Have you ever watched a politician make a speech that sounded like it should have moved you, but it just left you cold? Or a sports player who is technically brilliant but really doesn’t “do” it for you?
I see this all the time in opera – excellent singers who are great at hitting all the [...]

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Talent Vs Hard Work – Are They Both Overrated?

“What mankind wants is not talent; it is purpose.” ~ Edward G. Bulwer-Lytton.
There is a general consensus that talent alone does not make you a success. You also need application and the right kind of hard work. You need the skills to analyse the results you get, and the perseverence to continue where others give [...]

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