Palm Desert, CA Concert - Nov 16, 2012
Nov 16, 2012 16:04:11 GMT
Post by sylvester88 on Nov 16, 2012 16:04:11 GMT
Images courtesy of Chuck Yates...
www.mydesert.com/article/20121112/LIFESTYLES0101/311120029/Evancho-sing-McCallum?odyssey=nav|head&nclick_check=1
So far in her young singing career, 12-year-old Jackie Evancho has made her mark singing the decidedly adult style of classical crossover music.
That doesn’t mean she hasn’t encountered some people who wanted to steer her toward more of a pop style of singing. Considering Evancho’s age, pop might seem like the more obvious style for her to pursue.
“Sometimes record producers say they want this (different thing),” said Evancho, who will perform Friday at The McCallum Theatre. “A lot of them want more of a pop sound. But that’s not me.”
What feels right, Evancho said, is classical crossover.
“I don’t know why it’s my natural way of singing. It just kind of ended up being that way,” she said. “I guess it’s because it’s the type of music that they performed in ‘The Phantom of the Opera,’ the movie, and I just loved it so much and still do. And classical crossover music to me is very unique. It’s different and that’s why I love it so much. I love very unique things, plus my vocal sounds awful in pop.”
The film version of “The Phantom of the Opera” indeed was a life-changing experience for Evancho. After seeing that film at age 7, Evancho decided she wanted to sing.
That started her on a journey that has taken her to a place where she now has released her second full-length album, “Songs from the Silver Screen,” and is starting her second major tour in which she performs with local orchestras in cities across the United States.
“Songs from the Silver Screen,” along with her first full-length album, “Dream With Me,” and her 2010 holiday EP, “O Holy Night,” have all topped the classical chart, and Billboard magazine ranked her as the top classical artist of 2011. Her PBS specials, “Dream With Me In Concert” and “Jackie Evancho: Music of the Movies,” have been popular programs that have gone on to be re-aired during pledge drives for that network.
It’s obviously more than Evancho ever envisioned for herself when she saw “The Phantom of the Opera” and decided she had to sing in a classically rooted style.
In fact, even today Evancho is anything but boastful about her talents.
“I never really thought that I had a good voice, but when I did sing I thought that I had some potential,” she said. “I didn’t think I was amazing and I didn’t think I was good enough to sign a record deal and sing on CDs and stuff and be on TV more. I never really thought that I had that.”
But that’s what happened after Evancho’s parents submitted one of their daughter’s performance clips through YouTube to the NBC show “America’s Got Talent.”
Evancho was selected to compete on the show’s fifth season. She finished second, impressing judges and audiences with her unusually rich soprano voice and poise as a performer that was way beyond her years.
That was enough to net Evancho her deal with Columbia Records, and her career was off and running.
“Songs from the Silver Screen” looks like it will be another major success. It still holds the top slot on Billboard’s classical album chart a month after it was released.
“We kind of liked the idea and we loved that we could bring some songs that older crowds liked,” Evancho said of the concept. “So we kind of thought it was a good idea, me meaning my mom, my dad and the record company.”
The album features Evancho backed by a full orchestra, singing songs from across several eras of film. Producer Humberto Gatica’s approach to the songs kept “Songs from the Silver Screen” very much in the classical vein, even though most of the songs (such as “Pure Imagination” from “Willy Wonka And The Chocolate Factory” and “My Heart Will Go On” from “Titanic”) would not be considered classical pieces.
Whether that was a good move is debatable. Every song essentially features a similar gentle tempo and a syrupy mix of strings, piano and woodwinds, which makes the album feel a bit homogeneous and causes the songs to blend into each other.
But the initial success of “Songs from the Silver Screen” suggests this is exactly the kind of music Evancho fans want.
Evancho’s live shows, naturally enough, will emphasize material from “Songs from the Silver Screen.”
“I’m going to be singing songs from my new CD, and I’m going to be singing some of my favorite songs from my old CD as well,” Evancho said of her live show.
Evancho said she has come to enjoy performing in the orchestral setting.
“It was really fun and refreshing to have sung with an orchestra (on the ‘Dream With Me’ tour) and to have the live sound,” she said.
“I’m more used to performing on television with the backing tracks, so it’s really nice to perform with an orchestra.”
www.mccallumtheatre.com/show_details.php?id=584
www.mydesert.com/article/20121112/LIFESTYLES0101/311120029/Evancho-sing-McCallum?odyssey=nav|head&nclick_check=1
So far in her young singing career, 12-year-old Jackie Evancho has made her mark singing the decidedly adult style of classical crossover music.
That doesn’t mean she hasn’t encountered some people who wanted to steer her toward more of a pop style of singing. Considering Evancho’s age, pop might seem like the more obvious style for her to pursue.
“Sometimes record producers say they want this (different thing),” said Evancho, who will perform Friday at The McCallum Theatre. “A lot of them want more of a pop sound. But that’s not me.”
What feels right, Evancho said, is classical crossover.
“I don’t know why it’s my natural way of singing. It just kind of ended up being that way,” she said. “I guess it’s because it’s the type of music that they performed in ‘The Phantom of the Opera,’ the movie, and I just loved it so much and still do. And classical crossover music to me is very unique. It’s different and that’s why I love it so much. I love very unique things, plus my vocal sounds awful in pop.”
The film version of “The Phantom of the Opera” indeed was a life-changing experience for Evancho. After seeing that film at age 7, Evancho decided she wanted to sing.
That started her on a journey that has taken her to a place where she now has released her second full-length album, “Songs from the Silver Screen,” and is starting her second major tour in which she performs with local orchestras in cities across the United States.
“Songs from the Silver Screen,” along with her first full-length album, “Dream With Me,” and her 2010 holiday EP, “O Holy Night,” have all topped the classical chart, and Billboard magazine ranked her as the top classical artist of 2011. Her PBS specials, “Dream With Me In Concert” and “Jackie Evancho: Music of the Movies,” have been popular programs that have gone on to be re-aired during pledge drives for that network.
It’s obviously more than Evancho ever envisioned for herself when she saw “The Phantom of the Opera” and decided she had to sing in a classically rooted style.
In fact, even today Evancho is anything but boastful about her talents.
“I never really thought that I had a good voice, but when I did sing I thought that I had some potential,” she said. “I didn’t think I was amazing and I didn’t think I was good enough to sign a record deal and sing on CDs and stuff and be on TV more. I never really thought that I had that.”
But that’s what happened after Evancho’s parents submitted one of their daughter’s performance clips through YouTube to the NBC show “America’s Got Talent.”
Evancho was selected to compete on the show’s fifth season. She finished second, impressing judges and audiences with her unusually rich soprano voice and poise as a performer that was way beyond her years.
That was enough to net Evancho her deal with Columbia Records, and her career was off and running.
“Songs from the Silver Screen” looks like it will be another major success. It still holds the top slot on Billboard’s classical album chart a month after it was released.
“We kind of liked the idea and we loved that we could bring some songs that older crowds liked,” Evancho said of the concept. “So we kind of thought it was a good idea, me meaning my mom, my dad and the record company.”
The album features Evancho backed by a full orchestra, singing songs from across several eras of film. Producer Humberto Gatica’s approach to the songs kept “Songs from the Silver Screen” very much in the classical vein, even though most of the songs (such as “Pure Imagination” from “Willy Wonka And The Chocolate Factory” and “My Heart Will Go On” from “Titanic”) would not be considered classical pieces.
Whether that was a good move is debatable. Every song essentially features a similar gentle tempo and a syrupy mix of strings, piano and woodwinds, which makes the album feel a bit homogeneous and causes the songs to blend into each other.
But the initial success of “Songs from the Silver Screen” suggests this is exactly the kind of music Evancho fans want.
Evancho’s live shows, naturally enough, will emphasize material from “Songs from the Silver Screen.”
“I’m going to be singing songs from my new CD, and I’m going to be singing some of my favorite songs from my old CD as well,” Evancho said of her live show.
Evancho said she has come to enjoy performing in the orchestral setting.
“It was really fun and refreshing to have sung with an orchestra (on the ‘Dream With Me’ tour) and to have the live sound,” she said.
“I’m more used to performing on television with the backing tracks, so it’s really nice to perform with an orchestra.”
www.mccallumtheatre.com/show_details.php?id=584