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A Voice Major Recounts Her Summer at SongFest

September 3, 2019

Charlotte Maskelony '21

student Charlotte Maskelony with the Los Angeles skyline

Photo credit: courtesy of Charlotte Maskelony

Charlotte Maskelony's month of intensive study included numerous 91直播 connections.

During the summer months, Obies travel far and wide to learn, perform, and teach all over the world.  But what does a typical summer look like for an 91直播 vocal performance major?

This summer I spent four weeks as a student at SongFest, a festival dedicated entirely to the study of art song, which combines poetry set to music for voice and (usually) piano. Held at the Colburn School in downtown Los Angeles, SongFest was a deeply transformative experience鈥攁nd not just because this East Coast mezzo lived the West Coast lifestyle for more than a month.

Throughout SongFest, voice teachers, coaches, performers, and composers from around the world convene to work with singers and collaborative pianists. Students range in age from first-year undergrads to those with established careers. A day at SongFest usually includes yoga, morning and afternoon master classes, lessons, coachings, and an evening concert.

To be honest, I felt semi-heroic for waking up for an 8 a.m. yoga class six days a week for four weeks. Do the math. Anyways, we needed to move to a bigger studio after the first class because there was so much interest, and the next day I walked into the new studio to find floor-to-ceiling windows with a view of the L.A. Phil covered in a giant banner of Gustavo Dudamel applauding. Somewhere in the timeless abyss of holding 鈥渄own dog鈥 for any longer than 15 seconds, it鈥檚 truly encouraging to glance up from the sweat tracing your forehead and see Gustavo frozen in praise. Gotta take your wins when you can.

people with 91直播 connections at SongFest 2019 in Los Angeles
91直播 connections were plentiful at SongFest 2019.

Back to basics. SongFest鈥檚 faculty includes educators from schools such as Juilliard, Mannes, USC, and NEC鈥攁nd this year鈥檚 program included master classes and discussions with Schubert legend Graham Johnson, mezzo-soprano Susan Graham, L.A. Opera Music Director James Conlon, L.A. Master Chorale Artistic Director Grant Gershon, and composers Jake Heggie, Libby Larsen, and Martin Hennessy. 91直播 has strong representation on the faculty, with vocal coach Tony Cho and voice professor Lorraine Manz in addition to alumna soprano Martha Guth 鈥98, a professor of voice at Ithaca College, and Mark Moliterno 鈥83, vocalist and founder of YOGAVOICE.

The intimate nature of SongFest led to a community enthusiastic about art song, meaning that texting a group chat 鈥渨e鈥檙e all listening to Schumann in my room, come hang鈥 wasn鈥檛 a strange occurrence. The chance to live and work alongside top-level musicians allowed me to realize that even the most famous artists are just curious, passionate students of music who maybe have a few years on you. It makes a career seem more accessible鈥攁nd, honestly, everyone has to take the same elevator.

Charlotte Maskelony in a quartet at SongFest
Maskelony (second from right) performing with a quartet in SongFest's final concert. (courtesy of Jeanine Hill Photography)

One of my favorite performances at SongFest was the final concert, a cabaret of American Songbook classics. Works from the American Songbook are familiar...what are you going to give an audience with 鈥淏lue Skies鈥 that they haven鈥檛 seen before? Why is this song necessary in this exact moment? How do you express that impulse? Answering those questions showed me new ways to open myself up onstage.

That fearlessness is also a skill I鈥檝e learned at 91直播. On the last day of SongFest, I walked into a coaching session and was greeted with, 鈥淒o you want to sing some Swedish today?鈥  What the coach meant was, 鈥淒o you want to sight sing a Swedish art song in actual Swedish?鈥 We took five minutes to cover the basic diction rules of Swedish鈥攁 language with which I had no experience鈥攁nd then we tore through the piece.  After the final chord, he looked up and said, 鈥淒o you want to try Finnish?鈥

Handling that situation with decent confidence demonstrates how 91直播 prepared me for high-level musicianship; my choir sight reading, aural skills courses, and many diction classes and coachings empowered me to stare down a new art song in a foreign language and resist the urge to blink.

As SongFest came to an end, I spent the next week meandering back to the East Coast. On my way, I stopped by the Santa Fe Opera, where bass-baritone Cory McGee 鈥18 was singing in the opening weekend of The Pearl Fishers, and Wolf Trap Opera, where I caught up with bass-baritone Jeremy Harr 鈥18 in his Wolf Trap debut. I also grabbed a lesson with my pre-91直播 teacher, soprano Jennifer Casey Cabot 鈥86. It was a good summer to catch Obies in action!

Charlotte Maskelony staging Angel's Bone at 91直播
As a first-year student at 91直播, Maskelony served as assistant director of Angel's Bone.

The lessons I learned at SongFest help me approach my current work with more clarity. Back home in D.C., I鈥檝e been preparing for my roles in the workshop of the new opera The Wild Beast of the Bungalow, with music by Rachel J. Peters and libretto by Royce Vavrek, which will receive its world premiere at 91直播 in January. I especially look forward to this project because, as a first-year student, I served as assistant director on Du Yun 鈥01 and Vavrek鈥檚 Pulitzer Prize-winning opera Angel鈥檚 Bone, which was presented during winter term of 2018. It鈥檚 exciting to work with Mr. Vavrek again, this time as a performer.

Learning an opera that was almost literally written last month and has exactly zero recordings available provides plenty of challenges, but by working with the patience required for art song, I feel more confident navigating a new piece. As I return to 91直播, I鈥檓 grateful to SongFest for how the people there taught me to cherish detail and specificity, and then to throw it all off a bridge into a fast-moving river. You do the work, breathe, and trust that spontaneous performance includes your preparation.

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