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.


 

Opera Nabi Q&A: LA-Based Startup Where Anime, Opera & Stickers Meet, Beautifully

Opera Nabi Founder Kristen Choi: “I was inspired to make these fun creations through the worlds of opera and music, with anime and Manga. So, if you have an interest in any of those subjects, this is the Etsy store for you!”

Opera Nabi Founder Kristen Choi: “I was inspired to make these fun creations through the worlds of opera and music, with anime and Manga. So, if you have an interest in any of those subjects, this is the Etsy store for you!”

We’re beyond thrilled for Opera Innovation contributor Kristen Choi. Her recently launched Opera Nabi shop on Etsy is a small business / opera startup built on bridging visual and operatic art forms, as well as a multitude of cultures and cultural art forms (ps “nabi” means “butterfly” in Korean). Through Opera Nabi, Kristen’s operatic and illustration skills and knowledge are beautifully joined as a one-of-a-kind sticker shop. If that’s not “opera innovation” we don’t know what is! Just back from Italy, Kristen took time to do a quick Q&A with us. Links for Kristen’s Etsy shop and more work samples below, keep Opera Nabi in mind for Black Friday, Small Business Saturday and Holiday Stocking Stuffers. JM


Opera Innovation Q&A | Opera Nabi Founder Kristen Choi

OI: Could you tell us why this art form inspires and delights and how you arrived at the Opera Nabi small business concept?

KC: I've always loved anime, since I was a kid. The drawing style always attracted me and even more so the chibi style. I mean who doesn't love mini, cute versions of things? It's appealing! And just adorable. I decided to start (Opera Nabi) after tapping back into my old hobby of drawing. As mentioned, I love anime and manga, so I decided to pick up drawing and sketching again. Then, after drawing for a while, I decided to become even more creative with it. While in quarantine, I felt that it was time explore creativity in other places besides music and singing. That’s when I decided to bridge the opera world I miss so much with this revived hobby of sketching and doodling. By doing so, I could reimagine famous opera scenes and composers in the manga or chibi style. I decided to put a poll on Instagram just for fun, to market research the idea, actually getting some positive responses from friends and colleagues.

I also wanted the name of my store to reflect who I am. Of course, it had to be opera-related, so opera had to be a part of the name. I decided on ‘Nabi’ because in Korean it means ‘Butterfly.’ The opera, Madama Butterfly, also has a very significant place in my heart, becoming the main inspiration for my shop’s name. Also, if you know me, I'm a very social person and love meeting people and making friends, so there’s that word play, too. I also wanted to keep the name in Korean to reflect my cultural identity.

OI: Who is your customer and why? For instance if I'm an opera lover but not a sticker aficionado, how would you sell me on the idea of collecting and using Opera Nabi creations?

KC: Well, customers right now are mostly opera and music lovers. Stickers are super accessible and make amazing gifts for opening and closing nights of shows and are also cute accessories to decorate personal items. Singers can add some extra personality to their scores, notebooks, tablets, or waterbottles by putting a sticker on any of these items. I'm still in the process of ordering cards with opera anime scenes depicted, but I imagine they’d be beautiful gifts to give to people.

OI: The opportunity to "sell" opera to people already interested in these art forms is obvious. What are your thoughts for perhaps nurturing a greater interest in opera through the Opera Nabi imagery and products you're creating?

KC: Right now, anime is super mainstream, especially among younger generations. When I was a kid, it was considered nerdy or "dorky" to like anime, but now it’s considered to be a beautiful art form. I think by connecting the two and reimagining opera in this style, Opera Nabi could attract some anime otaku nerds and lovers.

Screenshot from Opera Nabi on Instagram.

Screenshot from Opera Nabi on Instagram.

OI: The Opera Nabi product line seems like a great new hobby. How are you approaching the holiday season? What are your business goals for the holiday?

KC: Honestly, I’m just trying to add more products to my store and pump out more designs that people have requested. Getting more followers and keeping traction would be good, but it's been kind of a hectic time for me traveling during COVID, so I needed to get back on track with the store and upcoming designs. A new batch of sticker design orders will be coming in, so I’ll definitely make a special offer for the holiday season. Keep on the look out for bundle orders and special discounts!

OI: How has the Etsy platform and technology made the Opera Nabi business concept better and/or easier to access?

KC: Etsy makes everything so easy to sell on their platform and since it's well-known, people come to it with built-in trust, ready to order from the site. I’ll probably get more traction as I add more products in the coming days and weeks. It's probably be a bit of trial and error, but so far, so great.

OI: What are your future plans for Opera Nabi? Have you considered special partnerships and collaborations with opera companies i.e. special sets for seasons or particular operas?

KC: I don’t have particular plans or projects, collaboration wise, with other companies as yet. But, I’m always open to collaboration, especially if a given project intrigues me personally and/or artistically.

If the Opera Nabi concept is of interest, I’d love everyone to please follow our Instagram. I promise to post more designs ASAP, and if people have ideas they’d like to share or want to discuss special commissions, please DM me. Happy Holidays to all, and please stay safe!

Stagetime Aims To Level Opera's Playing Field

 
Mobile and full-screen renderings for soprano Alexandra Smither’s Stagetime domain. Photo: Jennie Moser

Mobile and full-screen renderings for soprano Alexandra Smither’s Stagetime domain. Photo: Jennie Moser

(Santa Fe, NM) - In August, I came across an opera-singing friend on Instagram who was lauding a new platform called Stagetime, which she was proudly beta-testing prior to its public launch. Directed at opera singers, companies, agents and management firms, my initial assessment was a beautifully designed business ecosphere for opera industry individuals and entities (it’s actually more, but hold that thought). I also knew of Stagetime’s founder Jennie Moser and her graphic and website design achievements across opera. It took us a little while to connect, but when we did so last month, our chat was a delight. As hoped, Jennie was open to sharing her experience as the female founder of a VC-funded startup in the opera space. If contemplating your own startup or already on the entrepreneurial path, read on for insights and takeaways from an opera innovator forging her own path. JM


By Jennie Moser

My year at the intersection of tech startups and classical music has been exciting and strange. When I looked around for other female founders in the art, technology, and venture capital space, my pool of peers was pretty much nonexistent, which meant that the frame of reference when I walked into a room to pitch lent me no support. No investor looks at me and thinks, “ah yes, we saw an excellent financial return last time we invested in a young woman with a background and market of classical music. This pitch is going to be great.” Don’t get me wrong — they don’t want me to fail either, but imagine giving someone your grocery list and then realizing that they don’t even know what a grocery store is. I have about 30 seconds to make sure that instead of an ill-informed tech wannabe with music degrees and subpar Excel skills, I come across as an articulate, multi-disciplinary professional whose diverse background makes my case stronger, not weaker. 

My case - the case for Stagetime - was not born on a white-board in an MBA classroom. It came through the repetition of helping artists and arts organizations become digital by building their websites (which I’ve now done 126 times), a process that takes me and my team around 100 hours and costs our clients thousands of dollars, while the rest of the world has long been connected via LinkedIn at a nominal cost.

When we place the burden of large-scale digital problem solving on individual artists and regional arts organizations, we set the financial barrier to entry damningly high. When we cut artists and the arts out of the conversation about technology and data, a disservice is done to everyone. 

Innovation is creative at its core, and I know that my tech and entrepreneurial colleagues would only benefit from having creative minds contributing to the future of the technology that is shaping reality before our eyes. Similarly, I see firsthand how my artist colleagues have more time to hone and distribute their craft when technology has the ability to make administrative tasks quicker and easier. Automation and digitization are not the enemy here — they free up invaluable resources, time, and labor, so that the arts can focus on, well, the arts.

When the arts are reliant upon manual, in-person processes to build bridges from the arts to the rest of the world, and vice versa, we create an insular vacuum. Our primary task is to find a digital home that shows us at our professional best as individuals, so that we can spend more of our time leveraging that technology to establish professional relationships that become symbiotically beneficial — first within our own industry, but ultimately, with the rest of the digital, professional world, which determines the technology and consumer-driven products that increasingly shape our global future.

So, how do creatives join the conversation?

“Siri, what is ‘venture capital?’”

“Alexa, what is 0.67% of 1.5 million?”

“Google, can you teach me how to sing?”

One of these questions is not like the other. In a world where data is queen, I felt alienated walking into meetings heavy on tech lexicon and MBA slang. I’ve watched the Khan Academy videos on venture capital a truly embarrassing number of times, I’ve had to text advisors at 11pm to ask how a pitch deck is different from a super fancy powerpoint presentation (spoiler alert: it’s not), and my social media confidence plummets when I realize I should share a recent pitch competition win on LinkedIn because, well, I don’t really know how to use LinkedIn.

If we’ve been on a Zoom call in the past year, you can pretty much guarantee my right hand was out of frame writing down words I’d need to look up later. “They didn’t teach us this in music school,” I say, followed by a smile. This happens more than I’d like, but it tends to remind people that I’m not ill-prepared or naive — I’m just hyper-trained in something totally different.

More importantly, all of those things I just mentioned are attainable via Google, textbook, calculator, or Khan Academy video. Numbers and jargon are automatable, replicable, search engine optimize-able. The way that I learned to sing isn’t. The creative side of my brain can’t be replaced by Google. 

Securing venture capital is tricky enough and my particular profile as a female classical musician made my job even harder. After our first meeting, one investor texted a mutual colleague “I think the opera girl might be onto something.” I had to find ways to go from “opera girl” to “potential colleague,” so I spent a lot of time figuring out how to equate our experiences (we can talk about the 'girl' part of this in another article).

The first few months of my path to investment were spent endlessly explaining the music industry and gig economy to people who were “familiar” with something called “the arts.” In this context, I’ll define “the arts” as the subconscious action of reducing creative-driven careers that don’t fit a typical corporate structure into a lump sum commodity containing vague job titles, zany creatives, big personalities, and bohemians waiting to be “discovered”. I maintain that if you go to music school to become mainstream famous, you should perhaps try another line of work.

I remind the venture capitalists in the room that although I have degrees from the same institutions as they do, my career has never appeared in their LinkedIn feed.
Photo: FAYMOUS Studios / Fay Fox

Photo: FAYMOUS Studios / Fay Fox

My job was to become really good at painting a different picture for investors. My business pitch was mostly centered around my ability to provide context and draw parallels to the professional experiences of the investors in the room. “The arts” started to take the shape of opera and ballet companies with administrative and production staff. They had roles, titles, and pedigree just as structured as that of the investors in the room. It shifted from nameless singer/songwriters and piano lessons for their kids to a realization that, yes, there are indeed buildings where Chief Financial Officers and principal violinists do their work under the same roof, for the same organization. They were surprised to learn that a set designer was not a high school woodshop fanatic who jumped into the professional trade at 18, but someone with an MFA in Set Design from Yale.

That’s when the fun part starts. I remind the venture capitalists in the room that although I have degrees from the same institutions as they do, my career has never appeared in their LinkedIn feed. I remind them that although we’ve been discussing my pedigree and career for the better part of the hour, they still don’t know what I sound like - and how would they be able to glean that from my LinkedIn? Sure, I have a website, but how would they ever come across me in a professional context? They aren’t going home and stumbling across my website after some late night just-for-fun pre-professional opera singer Googling, I can promise you that. Pain points become apparent, and I go from “opera girl” to “colleague” with education and experience in an industry that is different than theirs, but that still has value.

www.stagetimearts.com

Our investments thus far have come from Elevate Ventures and the IU Angel Network who, once they had relatable insight into the arts industry, saw the value in investing in the arts via Stagetime. I win pitch competitions because Stagetime meets the requirements for technology, business model, market size, and financial projections, sure, but it’s also just...fun, and it looks good. The arts excite people. Whether it’s through their home city opera house or their favorite Netflix show, every one of my investors has a relationship to the product. Once they realize that, they start to feel an attachment to Stagetime, an emotional investment — and they like that. More than the capital, I’m excited that Stagetime has the resource of these investors’ experience in building viable, successful technology products. These are insights that are invaluable to the performing arts ecosystem, as the digital world is one where we have some undeniable catching up to do.

The best part about my job is that I don’t have to choose between the structure that makes a business successful and the subjective elements like attractive design and beautiful media — Stagetime is viable because both of those seemingly dichotomous things strengthen the product from opposite ends of the spectrum. I wouldn’t give up my music degrees or my financial models for anything. In fact, I’m really proud to have both sitting on my desk right now.

Learn more about Stagetime on Instagram and LinkedIn.

Visit stagetimearts.com

 

Pop Music & Opera thoughts from a K-pop dancing, musical theater and jazz-loving opera singer

 
Kristen Choi photographed by Kate Marley.

Kristen Choi photographed by Kate Marley.

(Santa Fe, NM) - The first time I encountered mezzo soprano Kristen Choi, she was onstage as Wowkle in The Santa Fe Opera’s 2016 production of La Fanciulla Del West. At the time, I didn’t realize Kristen was an apprentice artist in a principal role. It wasn’t until her second apprentice season that we properly met and became friends, Kristen having some of my fave musical moments (and 80-90s outfits) in the world-premiere of Mason Bates and Mark Campbell’s The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs.

It was a delight to get to know this incredible artist through her Instagram feed and DMs as she worked and traveled across the USA and Europe. In addition to operatic roles, Kristen joined the Lincoln Center Broadway Production of Rodgers and Hammerstein's The King and I as an ensemble member and Lady Thiang understudy; we were thrilled to see her June 20, 2018 performance of this classic in Albuquerque.

I was hopeful that Kristen would be interested in sharing her pop music and opera thoughts because in addition to opera, her Instagram account is my one-stop shop for all things K-pop - the latest hits regularly shared though dance videos of her original choreography (not to mention avid rock climbing, nature, food and family adventures). Authentic storytelling is the key, as you’ll see below. - JM


By Kristen Choi

(Los Angeles, CA) - “What could opera learn from pop music?” What a simple yet loaded question. Let me begin by introducing my background in music and the journey of my falling in love with opera and then pursuing it as a career.

I was a Disney kid who loved singing along to classic songs from Beauty and the Beast and Aladdin. Popular mainstream music was always on my playlist, too, along with boy bands, Britney Spears, musical theater and jazz in the mix. My musical tastes have always been eclectic, especially since I love dancing; I was no stranger to 90s and 2000s hip-hop.

In truth, I never really listened to classical music recreationally unless it was to help me practice piano or to focus while studying so, understandably, I wasn’t drawn to opera or exposed to it. However, I was always open to it. So when I was fortunate enough to go on school field trips to see an opera, I was always blown away. But opera didn’t really stick until I was older. I’d begun studying classical voice at university, but was still undecided on what career path to take. It wasn’t until I landed the role of Barbarina in a regional production of Le nozze di Figaro that I truly fell down the opera rabbit-hole. Maybe it was the power of Mozart, but something about telling this hilarious story in Italian captured my full and undivided attention. From that point forward, I was hooked. I’d had my “A-ha” moment and finally understood the big deal of this beautiful art form. 

So, what can opera learn from pop?

What it all comes down to is why “pop” music so appealing. As a K-pop fan, why is this genre garnering so much attention globally and in the United States? How did this South Korean Hallyu (South Korean wave) arrive and then go on to sweep the global music market?

I honestly don’t think opera must conform or change itself to sound more like pop. As librettist Mark Campbell said, it doesn’t need to be “accessible” in order to be successful. Pop music is popular music and right now that means an array of eclectic sounds and styles. Further to this point, artists are actively blending genres and styles. Fusion is most definitely “in”.

If fusion is a pop music trend, couldn’t pop music borrow from opera, becoming even more unique and exciting?

Just like when I was growing up, many people aren’t exposed to opera or their idea/impression of the art form, as a whole, is that it’s archaic, traditional, boring and elitist.

I do have a theory as to why K-pop became popular in the USA. One of the biggest K-pop groups is BTS - you’ve probably heard of them because their song “Dynamite” just hit Number One on the Billboard Hot 100, making BTS the first all-South Korean group to achieve this; they’ve pretty much taken over the genre and are a global phenomenon. But how did they achieve this incredible success? Their secret sauce is actually quite simple.

BTS uses their music and art to encourage healing, and to spread a universal message of self-love to people of all ages around the world.

This BTS fan knows that group members are heavily involved in the writing and production of their music, and that they consistently demonstrate how they care about their listeners and fans. Like opera singers, their art is genuine. Their storytelling is also genuine and feels that way, too. So often, it’s this genuine STORY-TELLING that gets lost in translation across so much of today’s popular art and music. BTS is different, though, and it shows up in their success and fan loyalty.

We also connect through stories in opera. The majority of us aren't in this industry just to make money or flaunt musical knowledge and/or our egos. And yes, I understand that not all operatic works tell a great or coherent story (ahem, Handel’s music or some Rossini operas), but the spectacle and virtuosic talent found in these works remain integral to the global, musical firmament.

Whether it’s K-pop, opera, musical theatre or pop music, we all benefit from genuine stories told through song.

Kristen Choi as Suzuki in Lyric Opera of Kansas City’s Madama Butterly (2018).  Photo by Julius Ahn.

Kristen Choi as Suzuki in Lyric Opera of Kansas City’s Madama Butterly (2018).
Photo by Julius Ahn.


Mezzo-soprano Kristen Choi has been hailed by Opera News as a “powerhouse in the making” for her portrayal of Suzuki in Madama Butterfly. Her 2019-2020 bookings included a house debut in this signature role, with performances at Opera Omaha. Kristen is set to make her Opera Philadelphia house debut in their 2022 production of Puccini’s masterpiece. Recent engagements also included a role and house debut with Opera Maine as the Third Lady in Mozart's The Magic Flute, as well as creating the title role in a brand new production of Murasaki's Moon, a completely new work in partnership with Onsite Opera and the Metropolitan Museum of Art (Wall Street Journal review here). Kristen Choi is represented by Stratagem Artists.

Visit Kristen Choi on Instagram | kristenchoi.com

 

Ascending Arts: Creating Opera's First Group Reiki Experience

 

(Los Angeles, CA) - Opera Singer. Reiki Master. Innovator. Maria Dominque Lopez is all of these and more. I met Maria in May 2020, two months into the pandemic. Connected by a friend through Instagram, it’s a pleasure to know her, as well as being one of her distance Reiki clients - an experience that opened the door to my own improved mental and spiritual health during these often dark and unprecedented times. It’s for all of these reasons that we were thrilled when Maria agreed to contribute some thoughts and reflections to Opera Innovation. In the blog below, Maria details her initial experiences with Reiki (which she explains and defines in her own terms), a one-of-a-kind approach to operatic performance and how the pandemic led to unexpected personal and professional innovation and growth. - JM


By Maria Dominique Lopez

In the fall of 2019, I was in a trance-state while meditating. I felt a strong tingling in my palms and when I opened my eyes, I had a vision that a golden stream of healing light shooting out of my hands. The vision ended after a few moments, but the tingling never did. For months, I had no idea what this constant tingling in my hands meant, or why every time I touched someone in pain, their pain went away. After months of research, I decided to take my first Reiki course and I learned that I was already attuned by the universe and somehow had opened my own energy channels for healing. When I received my universal attunement to Reiki last year, I was so awed by the beauty, magic, and possibility of God’s Infinite Universe that singing completely lost its luster for me. 

This is a problem when you’re a professional singer!

It seemed as though I’d found my true calling, feeling more authentically myself than I’d ever felt before. I was a healer, coming into my own, and it had nothing to do with music. I seriously considered quitting singing in favor of starting a full-time Reiki practice, but COVID-19 hit. Now that the opera industry is on life support, the universe made that decision for me—at least for the time being—but I digress. So many friends told me, “you can do both,” and I knew that they were correct. But, I just couldn’t see how I’d still feel authentic making music anymore. It’s no secret that the ratio of work-to-reward is toxically skewed in the music industry. Why put that much of myself into a singing career when the monetary reward is abysmal? The spiritual and emotional rewards so much greater with Reiki?

And then I talked to James Mowdy of Opera Innovation and Jonathan Morgan of DominantArts.Design and they literally changed my entire way of thinking about it. They encouraged me to not just “do both” and keep them separate, but to find unifying thread(s) and MARRY THEM! 

In my Reiki practice, I work a lot on opening and balancing people’s chakras. Chakras are energy centers mapped throughout the body. Fun science fact: the endocrine system is made up of seven pairs of glands (adrenals/suprarenals, testes/ovaries, pancreas, thymus, thyroids/parathyroids, pineal and pituitary), all of which are located in the same areas as the seven main Chakras. Coincidence? I think not!

With our physical eyes, we can see the reality of what’s right in front of us - what is. But with our Third Eye, we can see what’s all around us - what can be. In short, the Third Eye helps us problem-solve.

For those unfamiliar, the Third Eye is the chakra that sits in the middle of our forehead, and it’s considered the seat of wisdom and understanding. We’re not talking about traditional college education or trivia knowledge here, rather, one’s openness to possibilities in a multidimensional universe. With our physical eyes, we see the reality of what’s happening right in front of us - what is. But with our Third Eye, we’re able to see what’s all around us - what can be. In short, the Third Eye helps us problem-solve.

I felt stuck with this dichotomy of Reiki versus music because My Third Eye was completely shut to the possibilities of a union between the two. James and Jonathan each challenged me to ask myself important questions - questions I might not have pondered on my own because I couldn’t see a workable solution. They helped open my Third Eye!

Sometimes, we all need a little help, a push in the right direction. Just because I’m a lightworker doesn’t mean I’m always enlightened! My Third Eye was closed to the greater possibilities, and I couldn’t have seen where this was all going without those nudges. After weeks of meditating and questioning, and hours of conversations with Jonathan about the unifying threads, I arrived at my epiphany.

#SingTheLight

I realized that in order to reinvigorate my love for music, I should infuse it with Reiki. Not only would I channel Reiki to myself, my colleagues, and the immediate performance space, but I’d also channel Reiki directly to audiences, hence Sing the Light. After all, music is transcendent and has the unique ability to touch the soul and soothe the spirit, as does Reiki, just in a different way. So instead of quitting music, I look forward to returning to live performance, and putting #SingTheLight into motion; when a concert goer buys a ticket to hear me sing, they’ll also be receiving group Reiki as an audience member.  

As a Reiki Master, my mission is to help a new generation come to consciousness, ascending to their own universal calling. As an opera singer, I already transport audiences through beautiful music. Through #SingTheLight, my intention is to do both, elevating audiences through music while also helping them reach their next level of ascension, by singing group Reiki healing right into them.

Not only would I channel Reiki to myself, my colleagues, and the immediate performance space, but I’d also channel Reiki directly to audiences. After all, music is transcendent, and it has a unique ability to touch the soul and soothe the spirit, as does Reiki, just in a different way.

#SingTheLight - connecting with audiences on this quantum level - will change the way we experience live opera.

Together, Reiki, music and #SingTheLight will comprise my life practice as Ascending Arts. Personally, this feels like so much more than a new business, company or brand. Ascending Arts is the most authentic expression of who I am as an Artist as well as a Reiki Master, in practice every day. Welcome to Ascending Arts, it’s my honor to hold this space for you.

Visit Ascending Arts on Instagram.