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About those child opera singers: here's the deal
http://dropera.blogspot.com/ ^ | 2/2/2012 | Glenn Winters

Posted on 08/12/2015 9:41:16 AM PDT by Borges

I'm going to let all you music-lovers in on a little secret: we professional musicians don't have much use for the phenomenon of the Child Prodigy. Six year old violinists playing Mendelssohn; ten year old pianists playing Rachmaninov; and especially *shudder* twelve year old girls belting out operatic arias... or country music... or whatever... on national television? Yeah, it's impressive. Sort of. You can keep 'em; I have no interest, especially when it comes to the miniature singers.

You know that NPR program "From The Top", featuring adolescent or pre-adolescent performers stunning us with their "maturity" and precocity?

I am not a devotee of that program.

If you are, that's swell for you. Enjoy. But most professionals in the classical music arena look askance at pint-sized virtuosi. So many reasons...

For one thing, the great majority of child performers will eventually crash and burn attempting to make the transition from intuitive tot to analytical adult. There was once a centipede who was asked, "When you walk, in what order do you move your many legs?" The poor bastard had never thought about that, and became so self-conscious he never walked again. This syndrome is the norm for talented kiddies. Child pianists memorize intuitively, by ear; adult professionals memorize in the framework of an analytical system. Children who have been learning complicated masterworks without really knowing how they were doing it can fall into a similar state of paralysis.

Furthermore, that "unusual musical maturity" you think you detect in the oh-so-polished phrasing of a Chopin Nocturne or Paganini Etude is not organic maturity at all. It's apery; it's mimicry; it's the result of carefully imitating some adult's interpretation, be it from the teacher or some recording. Musical compositions which express profound insights about love, loss and life are beyond the ken of a nine year old and that's just how it is. Having a good ear is not the same thing as musical insight.

Another problem relating to emerging from the prodigy stage: child stars become accustomed to being the most successful performer wherever they are. They win the competitions; they receive the adulation; they are Number One, baby! They are able to play difficult compositions eighty percent perfectly with little effort. That in itself poses a problem: when such young musicians go on to major in their instrument at the college or conservatory level, they are too often content to continue achieving 80% perfection with 40% effort. It's not unusual that they find, to their bewilderment, that they are surpasssed by less gifted students who achieve 95% perfection with 110% effort. It's the old Hare-vs-Tortoise story applied to the piano. A few of you may remember a child prodigy of some twenty years ago, a Greek pianist named Dmitri Sgouros. He made a sensation performing on the "Tonight Show" and playing the Third Piano Concerto of Rachmaninov at age ten or eleven. My wife knew one of his teachers in America and was privy to the following anecdote: At age eleven, Sgouros played through the Brahms Piano Sonata in F Minor, a five-movement beast to play, at sight. He then played through it a second time and pronounced the piece memorized and ready for performance. Wow! Gee! Gasp! Why, he's another Franz Liszt!

It's now 2012 and Dmitri Sgouros is a musician in this thirties. Is he the greatest living pianist? Does he perform to sold-out houses in New York, Chicago and L.A.? Will he go down in history? And was his performance of the Brahms F Minor Sonata a performance for the ages?

No, no, no and no. He's got a website; plays in Greece and so forth--that's nice, I suppose. See, the reality is that for every Yehudi Menuhin (prodigy who became an all-time great artist), there are one hundred Dmitri Sgouros's whose bright flame dims with age. (I know that statistic is accurate because I just made it up.)

But as much disdain and eye-rolling weariness as I feel for instrumental prodigies (and I've actually taught a few in my teaching career), it's nothing compared to the scorn I feel for Children Who Sing Opera.

As Joan Rivers would say, can we talk? Let's get something straight: opera is to singing as neuro-surgery is to medicine. No pre-adolescent children should ever do it, and few teen-agers should do much of it. Yes, yes, I know all about Roberta Peters having made her Metropolitan Opera debut at age sixteen. Big whoop, don't care. Until their hormones have finished percolating, children should sing (duh) music written for children: in a children's choir, in school, in church, heck - even in an opera, providing it's a role written for a child. with a child's limitations in mind.

Let me explain. The best metaphor for allowing children to sing adult operatic literature is found in Little League baseball. A responsible Little League coach ensures that a ten-year-old pitcher will throw the ball easily, with a fluid, non-stressful pitching motion. Some specimens in the coaching community, however, can't resist the urge to teach kids to throw trick pitches: curve balls, sliders, screwballs, and so on.

The problem, of course, is that these pitches place a high degree of stress on bones, muscles and tendons. However, the muscular-skeletal system of a baseball player in middle school is still a work in progress and, as such, incapable of tolerating such stress without inducing inflammation at best and serious injury at worst.

It's the very same scenario with children singing opera. The fact is that many college-level voice majors are kept away from the music of Puccini, Verdi and such composers until they enter graduate school.

But here's the worst thing, the thing that really drives me NUTS: when I try to explain this to non-musicians, NO ONE EVER BELIEVES ME! ARRRRGGGGHHHH!! Here are the standard responses I can expect to hear:

"Really? Well, it sounded fine to me..."

"Oh, you and your doctorate. You just aren't accustomed to working with younger children, I expect."

"Well, I don't see any problem; he/she certainly seems to enjoy it."

"What's the matter, Glenn - feeling a little jealous?" (Oh yes, how perceptive of you: I'm eaten up with envy that I shall never appear on "America's Got Talent". *snort*)

"Well, I know the teacher, and that teacher is supposed to be really good. I'm sure it's okay in this case."

NO! No it isn't! Not for an eleven year old girl singing Musetta's Waltz or "O mio babbino caro"! Not okay, not okay! That teacher is either delusional or a hack! Stop singing opera! Stop singing opera! The vocal folds which produce musical tones are a highly delicate, extremely fragile, easily damaged organ. Adult opera singers are at risk of incurring injury from over-use; what chance do you think Shirley Temple Junior has? Think about it. That Tweenie girl singing opera is writing checks her body can't cash, even though, yes, it might sound perfectly lovely to YOUR amateur's ears. You don't get to hear her ten years later when her instrument has degraded to the point that a career in the opera field is no longer an option.

And my objections aren't limited to the vocal hazards. Putting a child on television to sing, be it a local, regional, or national audience, is no way to raise a kid. It's even worse when the TV program is in the format of a competition. You do understand that a child with an unusually mature voice still has a child's emotional maturity, don't you? A youngster who has been always been praised for her beautiful voice is swimming with sharks once a Career In Show Business has been launched. Regardless of how much cash is earned, regardless of the fan letters received or the pride felt by the pushy stage-parents, here's what the child faces: Hurtful, snide criticism by the Simon Cowells of the world. Losing; losing competitions, losing recording contracts if sales aren't up to snuff; and public rejection for everyone to see, perhaps with TV cameras trained on their faces as someone else's name is announced as the winner, following the trail of tears rolling down their cheeks. Losing an election for class president is a valuable experience; losing a damn singing contest on TV at a young age is traumatic. Being regarded as a freak by other children their own age The pressure of doing what they're doing so as not to disappoint the adults in their lives: ambitious parents, the teacher who may be fixated on the vicarious thrill of a student's success; adults with whom they spend most of their time interacting instead of with their chronological peers. I know there are highly-educated, well-intended private voice teachers out there in your community who "specialize" in the vocal training of children and likely come with any number of glowing endorsements and recommendations. Here's my recommendation: if your ten year old daughter has a nice voice, do her a favor and let her take piano or guitar lessons. Then she'll have the solid musical foundation and musicianship skills that will pay dividends when she reaches the age Mother Nature intended for serious vocal study to begin. If that highly educated private teacher gives her simple songs to sing with a modest range, asking her to perform only in studio recitals, you may just scrape by without doing permanent damage.

I mean, what's your hurry, anyway? Children sing in church, home and school. Leave the stage and the recording studio to the big bad grownups. Thanks.


TOPICS: Music/Entertainment
KEYWORDS: music; musicalprodigies; prodigies
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To: dfwgator

Charlotte Church turned into a fat slut who doesn’t heed her mother.


61 posted on 08/12/2015 10:46:44 AM PDT by T-Bone Texan ('Zionists crept into my home and stole my shoe' - Headline)
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To: T-Bone Texan

She was an ‘opera singer’ like Sarah Brightman.


62 posted on 08/12/2015 10:48:00 AM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges
Did you get that crap about Mendelssohn from the clown who wrote this article?

Many of the greatest musicians in history would be interested to learn that Mendelssohn's 'Italian' Symphony, his Trio in D minor for piano and strings, his Octet, his Variations Seriouses, his Songs Without Words, his On Wings of Song, his Rondo Capriccioso etc

are not worthy of music 'expert' Borges tastes.

63 posted on 08/12/2015 10:48:03 AM PDT by MarvinStinson (Mendelssohn Rondo Capriccioso)
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To: MarvinStinson

I like them just fine. The fact still remains that the two pieces I mentioned are his two most highly regarded.


64 posted on 08/12/2015 10:49:35 AM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges
Beethoven admired Clementi's Piano Sonatas.

You don't know a note of them.

65 posted on 08/12/2015 10:50:27 AM PDT by MarvinStinson (Mendelssohn Rondo Capriccioso)
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To: Borges

Yes


66 posted on 08/12/2015 10:50:36 AM PDT by stephenjohnbanker (My Batting Average( 1,000) (GOPe is that easy to read))
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To: MarvinStinson

Sure I do. Horowitz’s recording of them is wonderful. Beethoven also mocked them with the first movement of the 25th sonata. And a lot of great composers admired other composers who weren’t that great or important in retrospect. Beethoven also admired Cherubini. Schumann loved William Sterndale Bennett.


67 posted on 08/12/2015 10:53:11 AM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges

Most of it.

firstly, there is a distinction between a performer and a prodigy. Yes, most of Mozart’s pre Vienna music is not up the his last stuff, but who knows how good a performer he was as a kid?

Secondly, just sour grapes; I’m sure the author is a fine musician, probably much better than this old R&B/Rock/Prog whore is or ever will be, but it reeks of envy.

Thirdly, without accurate quantification there is no evidence to back much of it up- few musicians stay at the top for long regardless of the age when they first start to gain notice and professional acclaim. There is a difference between not caring for Lang Lang and not acknowledging that he fills the seats wherever he goes- the first is merely opinion, and like rectum’s everyone has one and they usually stink, the second is a fact and I really doubt that the author of this article headlines wherever they go. For me, I simply do not criticize or care about those who do musicians of ANY genre who can make a living in this ‘long plastic shallow money trench...”

I could go on, but I’ve got to get back to my day job; I might gig 5-10 times a month (playing ATP) but that does not pay the bills.
:-)


68 posted on 08/12/2015 10:53:12 AM PDT by RedStateRocker (Nuke Mecca, deport all illegal aliens, abolish the IRS, DEA and ATF.)
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To: RedStateRocker

Well he names Sgouras for one. Who was a huge name in the 80s. Again he isn’t criticizing the idea of child prodigies but how they are treated and developed.


69 posted on 08/12/2015 10:55:30 AM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges

Well, I don’t know much about opera, but I do remember the tremendous voice of Andrea McArdle in the Broadway show “Annie” as the original Annie.

She never really turned into anything, having to finally play Miss Hannigan in a revival decades later.


70 posted on 08/12/2015 10:57:06 AM PDT by Dr. Sivana (There is no salvation in politics)
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To: Borges

I knew a guy who wrote a magnificent 5 movement symphony when only 2 years old and later became the best plumber in 5 counties!


71 posted on 08/12/2015 10:57:31 AM PDT by Drawsing (Fools show their annoyance at once, the prudent man overlooks an insult. Proverbs 12:16)
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To: Dr. Sivana

She’s a successful musical theater and cabaret performer. Which is what she wanted to be.


72 posted on 08/12/2015 10:57:46 AM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges

Child prodigy’s are a tricky road to maneuver throughout the changes which occur in their age development....not just how their specific talent “matures” but as they do themselves. What talent distinguishes them when young may very well not develop as anticipated. Which is why they are “featured” while young.

Parental controls on when and where, how often etc. are critical to preventing “burn out”. Some “agents” will ‘milk it’ early and thus burn them out quickly. So parental involvement is critical IMO.


73 posted on 08/12/2015 10:59:47 AM PDT by caww
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To: Borges
A lot of the ‘tricks’ his father had him perform could be done by any musically gifted child.

More cluelesness.

Mozart was sent by his father when he was a young child to Padre Martini to study Fux' Gradus ad Parnassum (the classic study of strict counterpoint which forms the basis of all classical composition). Bach praised Fux' Gradus, Haydn studied it repeatedly over a period of YEARS, Beethoven studied it with Haydn and Albrechtsburger and kept his notebooks on it to the end of his life, Brahms used it.

No one absorbed it as young as Mozart did.

When Mozart was in his early teens he wrote the best canons ever written--and lots of them.

His mastery of counterpoint was phenomenal at that age.

Only the clueless with a complete ignorance of what counterpoint is would write

A lot of the ‘tricks’ his father had him perform could be done by any musically gifted child.

74 posted on 08/12/2015 11:02:02 AM PDT by MarvinStinson
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To: Drawsing

But was he a good tap dancer?


75 posted on 08/12/2015 11:03:39 AM PDT by MarvinStinson
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To: MarvinStinson

I’m well aware that he was as natural a musician as has ever been.

I was talking about the tricks he did for royalty...playing piano with a the keyboard covered with a blanket. Playing stuff backwards, sight reading, naming notes due to absolute pitch.


76 posted on 08/12/2015 11:04:12 AM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges
Terrific piece.

Yes it certainly is. Very informative. Thanks for posting it. :)

77 posted on 08/12/2015 11:05:57 AM PDT by EveningStar (Donald Trump is a pretender. Ted Cruz is the real thing.)
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To: Borges
Beethoven also admired Cherubini.

You don't know a note Cherubini wrote.

Every new post you make outs you further.

78 posted on 08/12/2015 11:06:05 AM PDT by MarvinStinson
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To: MarvinStinson

I’ve heard Médée. It’s less than scintillating.


79 posted on 08/12/2015 11:07:54 AM PDT by Borges
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To: MarvinStinson

But keep up with the baseless personal attacks. You’re bound to hit something substantial with one of them at some point.


80 posted on 08/12/2015 11:10:10 AM PDT by Borges
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