Last night I sang at a Christmas dinner function. I
was scheduled in between the main and dessert. Perfect timing really – the
guests have had enough wine to be slightly merry and expansively forgiving of
any minor slip-ups, but not so much food they’re going to sleep and you have to
studiously ignore the man at the second table with his head resting on his side
plate, snoring in the key of E♭.
Actually it wasn’t really me they wanted.
Originally the organiser rang my teacher Rebecca Ryan, but she was unable to do
it, so she recommended me. With any luck no-one told the dinner guests that they
were getting second choice and a very distant second at that. Like three miles
astern. When I was discussing the details with the organiser he said that they
wanted a ‘serious’ singer. This tends to be a non-singer’s term for ‘person who
sings very loudly, with a lot of vibrato and in a foreign language and
therefore must be rather good’.
It’s always interesting choosing repertoire for
performances. You may have just put the finishing touches on a
technically-challenging 20th century aria with more accidentals and
time signature changes than should ever be crammed into 5 pages, but it’s most
likely going to fall flat with a bunch of Rotarian’s at their Christmas party
looking to be entertained. Oh they’ll politely applaud and look impressed but
will they enjoy it? Probably not. So serious, but enjoyable was required.
I started with the short but very sweet Quilter
song ‘Music, when soft voices die’, just to give them a dose of ‘serious’. This
seemed to be appreciated i.e. thank heavens you’re singing in English and it’s
short and tuneful. And then I combined ‘serious’ with ‘entertainment’ and let
rip with Flanders and Swanns’ ‘A Word on my
Ear’. If you’ll forgive my lack of
modesty, I had them at ‘Hello, I am the great operatic diva Dame Edith
Huntington-Smythe-Jones-Smythe’ and it was all smiles, laughs and applause from
there. A girl could really get used to that. I’ve sung this several times now
and I’m at the point where I can relax and really get into the acting side of
things and not sing it through strictly adhering to the time/bar lines/rests
etc. Of course the accompanist is very much an intergral part of not just the
music, but the acting in this one and mine was with me every step of the way.
So that’s the last pre-Christmas performance and
with three weeks holiday starting from Friday next week, plenty of time to
start getting my teeth into new repertoire. ‘King David’ here I come….
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