Breaking Opera's Rules | OI Insights Q&A with Claudillea

 

(Santa Fe, NM) - We discovered London-based artist Claudillea Holloway by accident. Like many things these days, it started on Instagram. While scrolling through the stories of friend and tenor Elliott Paige, a video of Claudillea performing an operatic cover of The Rolling Stones’ Paint It Black appeared. Given OI’s love of all things that move the dial for opera, we literally fell out of our chair, screaming. Elliott shared that he and Claudillea are friends from their time together at Manhattan School of Music and that she was a contender in 2020’s The Voice UK, originally with Meghan Trainor but whisked away by the one and only Will.I.Am. An online introduction ensued, lots of DMs and even the generous opportunity to hear some of Claudillea’s new music, which we think could change perceptions of opera in popular culture; how classically trained voices can and should be seamlessly integrated with contemporary pop and dance music. 

We recently spoke with Claudillea via WhatsApp, which was an opportunity to learn more about her process, her approach to music and how hard she had been working to prepare for the release of Habanera. As of this writing, in association with Black Box Los Angeles, her Habanera video has captured over 98K views in just three (3) weeks, with organic YouTube search placing her version of one of opera’s greatest pieces at #4 – a huge accomplishment in itself!

OI Insights wanted to spotlight Claudillea as an emerging crossover artist who’s moving the dial for opera, as well as creating important connective tissue between the business of opera and popular music globally. 


OI: We’re thrilled with how Habanera is being received on YouTube and undoubtedly via streaming, too. Based on our recent chat, you’ve long had ideas about how to transform opera from both the inside and the outside. Regarding the latter, we see your Habanera is an homage that invites both opera and pop music fans to join you in a brand new place with, we might add, a signature sound. Your thoughts?

CH: Firstly, thank you so much James and OI for your continued support and encouragement- it is incredibly humbling. When working on Habanera, it was important to me that we respected what Bizet created 147 years ago, but also messed with it just enough to bring it into the 21st century. I think most people who are not used to listening to Operatic voices, often find the vibrato a little startling and then tune out from listening to it again, and so I wanted to blend classical and pop timbres together, to make it a little easier on the ears for a non-classical audience, whilst also hopefully whetting their taste just a bit for more Opera and Operatic vocals. I’ve always admired artists who seamlessly blend different genres together, creating new sounds, and I myself listen to an array of genres, so why not put electronic trap music - which I love - with one of my favourite arias?  I would love people to listen to something like Habanera and realise the beauty of these old works, in that they are timeless, and speak of things we still talk about and deal with today. Opera was the pop music of it’s day!

OI: We’ve long said that opera singers are brands. How would you describe brand Claudillea? Your brand identity, the ethos – or spirit, vibe – that you’re trying to create and make your own?  How does your concept of OPPOP play into it?  

CH: I’m trying to start an Anti-Box revolution! That’s my “brand.” I don’t want to play by anyone’s rules (just as Carmen did not). In almost all aspects of life, we have to check which box we fit into…from gender to sexuality to race to fach. I’m technically a coloratura soprano, so it’s almost sacrilegious to sing a mezzo aria, but why the hell not? During my studies, I wasn’t encouraged to explore the lower, darker sides of my voice, and I find that a real shame because as humans and singers we all have different colours with which to play. And that extends out to persona and music. As a whole, my music is extremely different, and I want to be able to wake up and choose whomever I want to be on that particular day. I also want to exude a strong feminine energy, almost Sasha Fierce-like, because I’ve spent my whole life being “the good girl”; through my music and branding, I will stand in my own power. In regards to OPPOP, I was debating going down the route of using “popera,” but I felt like the term was somewhat stuck in the past, and our current crossover genre needed a bit more fire and edge, hence OPPOP. I guess the vibe is Rebel Without a Cause?! (laughing).

Watch the Habanera video.

OI: Let’s talk about the video. Typically, opera videos are live performance-related, usually as a recital, concert or live opera performances. There have been exceptions like Joyce DiDonato’s landmark work with James Darrah and others, but we’re hard-pressed to think of an opera-infused video that also looks and sounds like Dua Lipa, Kylie or Gaga could walk out at any moment. We’d love to hear about any technical aspects or technological highlights we should know about, as well as how video is a powerful tool for you when working to change perceptions.

CH: Gosh, I’m obsessed with Joyce’s video, and honestly everything she does, she’s a massive inspiration for me - I’ve always stanned her! While Rebekah (Habanera’s amazing director) and I were discussing the concept of the video, I was adamant that we created a video that you’d never expect from or associate with Opera. I wanted it to have urban elements, and we achieved that through LED lighting, styling and the use of dance. Dance is so heavily involved in pop music culture, so it was really important to me that alongside the production, the movement was something that people could also relate to. Video is such a powerful medium. We live in a visually-dominated world and YouTube, in particular, is global. Whereas audio streaming platforms can varyfrom territory to territory, YouTube has uniform, global presence and accessibility. So, as an artist, I believe it’s a must to have a presence there and to use it as a (primary) vehicle to build global audience.

OI: Two things in your biography jumped out at me: “Originally from Cambridgeshire, but raised in Borneo, Malaysia, Claudillea’s multicultural upbringing gave her global perspective and a sense of limitlessness.” Also: “For me, the opera world actively excludes certain demographics, and I want to help make it more accessible. Bring it into 2021.” Lots to unpack there, but also not, in our opinion! We agree that opera’s lack of diversity and, in some cases, lack of vision for reaching new audiences is understood - so much so that even non-opera people recognize and label it. This is why OI Insights recognize Habanera and other cuts on your forthcoming album as powerful tools to shock the system i.e. the “limitless” opportunities to change the culture and introduce new people to operatic voice in a format they understand and find relatable. Could you expand on how a global perspective specifically influences your approach to musical innovation ?

CH: I was fortunate to grow up in Malaysia which is such an amazing multicultural society; my friends growing up, came from all different walks of life. Whilst within my family, we also have a big blend of cultures -my dad is South African by way of Lebanon and Italy while my mother is English by way of the Seychelles. This I believe, informed my perspective that there are no limits. It can be as simple as the many different flavours in different cuisines, you don’t have to like just one in particular, you can enjoy Indian, Italian, Chinese, etc. - one cuisine isn’t reserved for one group of people. I sometimes found it disappointing that while I was studying in New York, I’d go to The Met to watch various Operas, and the same demographic was usually in attendance. While there is some innovation around this and people/companies are striving to make audiences more diverse, I honestly didn’t think there was enough at the time. We still have opera houses doing the same works over and over again, with little to no change, generally without removing barriers to entry for certain demographic groups to attend. Unfortunately, (opera) still has this very elitist veil over it, which is a shame. I believe it should be enjoyed by everyone. I do think fear plays a massive role when it comes to the lack of innovation around audience development i.e. the fear of upsetting people. Fear of damning a sacred piece of art. Fear of the unknown. Perhaps if people exposed themselves to new worlds, cultures, music and so on, fear would dissipate. Because then, everyone would realise there are no limits except the ones we place on ourselves individually or as a society.

OI: Thanks for connecting with us, Claudillea. We don’t toss the term opera innovator around loosely, but we think you’re the absolute definition. Brava and much continued success!

CH: That literally means the world to me, thank you. And thank you for all you are doing for the Opera world - it desperately needs you!!


Visit claudilleaholloway.com

Habanera and other cuts from Claudillea’s “Chaos is My Friend,” her 2022 EP, now on the Opera Innovations Playlist.


 

OI Insights | Q&A with Award-winning Scenic and Costume Designer Leslie Travers

 
Award-winning Scenic and Costume Designer Leslie Travers. Photo via Linkedin.

Award-winning Scenic and Costume Designer Leslie Travers. Photo via Linkedin.

 

(Santa Fe, NM) - Here at Opera Innovation HQ, there’s one production of Salome by which all others are compared (and we’re not even talking about the artists on stage or in the pit, as incredible as they were). Santa Fe Opera’s 2015 production, designed by Leslie Travers and directed by Daniel Slater, happened to be my introduction to Richard Strauss’ one-act opera. Travers and Slater brilliantly constructed their Salome inside the pre-WW1 world of Freudian-infused Viennese high society, with a revolving set that took this opera goer on psychological journey we’ll never forget. Mr. Slater’s direction was critical to the success of this production, but Mr. Travers’ visual storytelling, fused with Strauss’ music and Hedwig Lachmann’s libretto, made Salome absolutely indelible for us.

I didn’t have the opportunity to meet Mr. Travers until a few years later, but we’ve stayed in touch across social media, and early last year I was thrilled for his upcoming 2020 Rusalka with Ailyn Pérez (we’re hoping Santa Fe will reschedule).

 
 

We’ve shared the global equalizer of COVID together, but our individual experiences remain our own. For far too many, it’s been a terrifying or, sadly, deadly experience. Almost exactly a year ago, the pandemic already sweeping the world, I happened to catch one of Mr. Travers’ first tweets about recovering from this disease. It was a terrible shock since I hadn’t yet personally known anymore who’d been exposed or was ill. I sent a message of support and received a positive message in return, as I watched him continue to work as he recovered through the summer, something we explored further during a phone conversation in early January 2021, with the intent of creating this Q&A. We’re convinced that as terrible as COVID was for him, Travers has undoubtedly emerged an even more dedicated and inspired artist. JM


OI: Based on our conversation in early January, my takeaway then and now was that you've moved to a more powerful place as an artist, a creative. Even after experiencing the terror and unknowableness of COVID-19, I heard fortitude and a sense of excitement in your voice. You mentioned how at the beginning of the pandemic, you'd quickly pivoted to remote with assistants working in Lebanon and Chicago, staying flexible, even as declination letters began to pour in. That, in your words, this beginning of loss was eventually followed by a letting go of what was, creating space for discovery and new ways to move forward and stay active. Depending upon where each of us lives, how 2021 will play out for opera and the population at large remains an open question. How are you approaching the next several months to a year? Any predictions?

LT: Undoubtedly this time had been challenging but I feel highly optimistic.  I have been much more closely involved with companies as they explore the way ahead. Being adaptable and flexible as well as helpful absolutely work best at the moment. I think we will have an uplift of creativity. Look at history.  In the meantime anything we can do to make sure our industries survive is worth pursuing. 

“Art is so much more than an entertainment, it is survival and it gives acceptance of the inevitable. I listened to music when I felt at my most ill and it was a total experience. I lived it.”

OI: I nearly fell out of my chair when you said that you designed a show for La Scala when you were feeling most ill. Many of us have probably wondered  how we'd cope if we were isolated at home, ill with COVID. And then you went and answered that very question - you created, you challenged your situation and did your best to stay on course. Not to embarrass you, but that example of artistic determination is something I'll always remember when faced with difficult challenges, professional or otherwise. You mentioned how this has all positively impacted your creative process, given you greater awareness, insight on how to "be kind to yourself," and the ability to work and produce in a calmer way. Could you speak to these profound personal and professional discoveries?

LT: COVID-19 is a mysterious and brutal illness. You can’t fight it, it does what it wants with you. I was extremely aware of that at the time. In my moments of lucidity within the illness the thought of work gave me some vibrancy. Art is so much more than an entertainment, it is survival and it gives acceptance of the inevitable. I listened to music when I felt at my most ill and it was a total experience. I lived it. That time has left a mark on me in a positive way. I feel enormously happy to be here and to continue with my work. 

“I have had a lot of time to work on process, to look at how I extract or uncover the visual world from an opera. I am cursed, or blessed, with a lot of nervous energy.  Even in lockdown work has  remained a thrill ride of exploration. I guess you channel the attributes you have.” - Leslie Travers

OI: The UK was mostly in lockdown when we spoke, but you mentioned how returning to your London studio was a joy i.e. re-engaging your creative process in a more thoughtful way; that you loved the "layering" of this process i.e. building theoretical and then physical environments for singers to inhabit, interact with and then bring to life through story and music. You also mentioned how "the design process is isolating, not sociable" while the onstage element (presumably in a city or urban area) is the exact opposite, with multiple, one to one and one to many opportunities to listen, interact and collaborate. For years, I've gotten lost in your beautiful Facebook photos of the coast and sea taken from your home in Ballycastle, County Antrim. You actually brought it up when you mentioned how this "rural focus" allows you to concentrate more on the dramaturgy of a given work, "looking at the music in deeper, more concentrated ways with less distraction." You also mentioned how 2020 made this all the more apparent for you, and has changed your work in "a positive way." Would love to hear more about this rural / urban dichotomy, and how it continues to help you in new and perhaps improved ways. 

LT: I like the contrast of working in both environments. The “rural focus” is intense and open. I can ask the big questions of the work here in North Antrim and think freely and playfully. London is executing the work, making models and drawings. I will divide my time between the two places and to explore how this influences and how it enhances my work. 

“Work in progress in the studio. #design #theatre” | Follow Leslie Travers on Twitter.

“Work in progress in the studio. #design #theatre” | Follow Leslie Travers on Twitter.

OI: Having literally survived 2020, the new year is here, as is the potential for better things ahead. What’s happening in your world?

LT: I have been working with the Israel Opera. I’ve delivered a production and I haven’t even been to Israel yet. I feel that I’ve gotten to know the (Israel Opera) staff in a much more personal way. Even over Zoom!  It’s been a joy. I’m also looking forward to opening Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg in Wagner’s home town of Leipzig. It’s a thrill to do Wagner in Germany. I’m also on an exciting adventure with Bartók for Greek National Opera and exploring working in film, but in the right way for me. Right now, I can say that I’m working with a filmmaker in the United States who has a liberating and joyously abstract view of the world.  

 

Read Leslie Travers’ recent interview in The Scenographer magazine.

Follow Leslie Travers on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

OI Insights | Why Santa Fe Opera’s New Hire is Seismically Good News

(Santa Fe, NM) - On February 12th, The Santa Fe Opera announced that it had hired The Dallas Opera’s David Lomelí as its new Chief Artistic Officer, consolidating the roles previously held by Artistic Director Alexander Neef (now leading Opéra de Paris) and Director of Artistic Administration Brad Woolbright, who retired in December 2020.

Lomeli.jpg

Santa Fe Opera Appoints Chief Artistic Officer

By Mark Tiarks for The New Mexican (13FEB2021)

Lomelí’s years of artistic and artistic administration success, which includes a robust, globally-recognized singing career and the founding and exponential growth of The Dallas Opera’s wildly successful, YouTube-based TDO Network (boasting 28 weekly shows and 90 million views) is complimented by international marketing and computer science engineering degrees from Spain and Mexico, respectively. A seismic new hire, in our opinion. Lomelí, a quadruple threat rarely seen in opera, arrives in Santa Fe at a pivotal and eventful moment in the company’s history.

Santa Fe is a unique house with a unique story. A summer festival that functions more like a full-season, A-level house, we branded Santa Fe as the Davos-Sundance of Opera, based upon where it sits, literally and figuratively, in the global opera universe. For most opera companies and professionals, 2020 was a shared annus horribilis. But, Santa Fe punched well above its weight, pivoting to a hybrid, digital summer apprentices program, as well as the Songs from The Santa Fe Opera series, which celebrated 2020’s five (5), originally scheduled operas from its high desert stage with remote performances and interviews from around the world, notably before Metropolitan' Opera’s Met Stars Live debuted.

In the fall, stunning Opera For All Voices programming arrived. “Is This America,” a film showcasing Chandler Carter and Diana Solomon-Glover’s “This Little Light of Mine,” a one-act opera portraying key events in the life of voting rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer, screened in partnership with CCA Santa Fe just before the November election. In February, OFAV’s Key Change, one of the country’s best podcasts, began its third season exploring the development of new OFAV works while keeping a finger on the pulse of social justice, immigration and the state of our union (more on this breakthrough podcast soon).

With an eye to the coming summer season, General Director Robert K. Meya shared that Santa Fe Opera is heavily invested in a COVID-safe 2021 season, having created a new position - COVID Compliance and Safety Officer - to manage new protocols developed with CHRISTUS St. Vincent, partnering with Production Safe Zone “to conduct testing and help maintain performer and worker social distancing protocols.”

Santa Fe Opera is effectively in the process of creating the world premiere of a proprietary, safety-first opera brand experience - a thrilling business, health, science, performing arts and human interest story like no other, and just in time for Mr. Lomelí’s arrival. We’ve no inside information on Mr. Lomelí’s full Chief Artistic Officer responsibilities or his specific plans, but OI Insights would like to the first to highlight some clear, additional business wins. Full disclosure: we’ve not yet had the opportunity to formally meet Mr. Lomelí and these thoughts are based upon publicly available information.

Optics

I’m hard pressed to think of another US-based, Latinx person at Mr. Lomelí’s level of artistry, artistic leadership and experience in the business of opera (this Mexican-American cheered when he heard the news). Santa Fe Opera is an increasingly diverse place to work, especially when fully staffed during the season, but leadership positions haven’t always been as representative of multicultural New Mexico. Given this, Mr. Lomelí’s arrival is right on time; he will not only build upon his success at The Dallas Opera and abroad, but bring critical diversity insights and best practices with him. Per Opera News:

“His tenure at The Dallas Opera marked the first time in the history of an American opera company that a Latino has held a top position at a Level 1 opera company. Lomelí serves as a Strategic Committee Member with OPERA America’s ALAANA (African, Latinx, Arab, Asian and Native American) Steering Committee and is committed to enhancing opera and the opera industry through increased diversity and equitable practices.”

- Opera News, February 12, 2021

Mr. Lomelí’s standing in the industry as a Latinx person, coupled with the aforementioned OPERA America service, it would not be a stretch to say that he could be Santa Fe Opera’s de facto Chief Diversity Officer. At the very least, he will be able to provide fellow members of Santa Fe leadership, his Human Resources colleagues (as well as board members and staff) with on point guidance, based upon his experience with these best practices in the opera space, which every American company worth its salt must actively engage, embrace and grow.

Expertise

As detailed in various articles written about Mr. Lomelí’s impending arrival, he brings a diversified portfolio of experience, credentials and business success to the table. But no two companies are the same and Santa Fe Opera presents unique opportunities.

Over the course of his career, Lomelí appears to have taken calculated risks and forged new paths. Based upon his use of TDO social media, he’s effectively become one of its most recognized faces, and his clear understanding of public relations - his use of personal PR as well as a publicist - demonstrates the importance he places on telling a compelling, real-time story not only for himself but for his brand. Applying this to TDO Network’s raison d’être, the initiative was born due to a lack of substantial TDO video archives and a reluctance to begin creating expensive digital opera. Given these realities, Lomelí and his team ideated and executed a programming vision that not only employs talented creatives, many of whom are out of work opera singers, but also creates real-time space and conversation around some of opera and American culture’s hot button topics - equity, inequality and race - during one of our nation’s most hot button times (cue the OFAV Key Change synergies).

Shockingly, there are only a few other regularly-seen ‘face of the brand’ individuals in opera. Some who come to mind are San Francisco Opera’s Matthew Shilvock, Fort Worth Opera’s Afton Battle, Glimmerglass Festival’s Francesca Zambello and a certain gent in New York City. As General Director, Mr. Meya appeared throughout 2020’s digital programming and is regularly identified as Santa Fe Opera’s chief executive. However, given Mr. Lomelí’s regular #FOTB appearances across the TDO Network and his deft use of social media and public relations for himself and his brand, SFO is almost certainly considering how to harness the success of this opera world influencer, recreating and growing the global digital success first born in Dallas .

Even with high-dollar investments in a COVID-safe SFO brand experience this summer, there’s every reason for the company to also invest in its digital capabilities now that the pandemic has forever changed how we consume - and accept - alternatives to live performance. Leveraging Lomelí’s global network, SFO could digitally introduce itself into new homes, regions and spheres of influence (i.e. global business), elevating itself to the worldwide omnimedia prominence and resonance it deserves, while still remaining place-based and fully associated with The City Different. If, of course, Santa Fe Opera wants this, as we stated in our 2019 blog. The results could be on par with TDO Network and Met Opera, making Santa Fe Opera a Top Five, globally-recognized opera brand with the ability to monetize its prominence (today’s Scott Galloway-esque prediction). We’re hoping SFO is audacious enough to consider and make it a reality.

Vision

Continuing in the spirit of the last section and based upon his reported global consulting, Mr. Lomelí undoubtedly sees the world as his operating environment, not just New Mexico, the Southwest or even the United States. Santa Fe Opera has been steadily building its working relationships with Europe since Mr. Meya became General Director, which has been exciting to watch and critical to the growth of SFO’s global footprint. In addition to key European relationships, Mr. Lomelí’s ready access to and standing in the Spanish-speaking opera, business and cultural worlds means that Santa Fe Opera could become The Americas’ most influential opera company. A thought: Monocle Magazine’s annual soft-power issue ranks “how well countries project themselves abroad.” In the same way, with a bilingual digital network, Santa Fe Opera could create indelible velocity of message, projecting its own brand of soft, multi-cultural power around the world, but specifically across North and Latin America, becoming a unifying force for American opera and, more critically, Opera in the Americas. Our recent, frank assessment of this country’s flagship opera company makes this a strategic objective worth considering and most certainly a goal that’s within reach. If I was formally advising the company, this would be the hill I’d jump up and down upon.

Mr. Lomeli from a recent ABC News article, speaking to opera generally and The Dallas Opera Network:

"It's a business that doesn't have a lot of clues on how to do this," Lomeli said. "We debunk myths, and a lot of people who are following us are around the globe…singers or people who are just starting (to watch)."

Mr. Lomeli probably recognizes that the opera world is watching and studying his particular approach to opera innovation (as they should), while he continues to write the book on building a dominant, glocal brand, perhaps even beyond opera-world recognition. As suggested above, the bilingual or multi-lingual expansion and exportation of Santa Fe Opera’s one of a kind ethos, with emphasis on multi-cultural New Mexico, could power connection through bold performance, pop up experiences, brand partnerships and omnimedia, scaling the brand to new and dizzying heights.

A clue: how do national tourism efforts work in the global travel market?

JM for OI Insights