The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1994, Síða 26

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1994, Síða 26
136 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SPRING, 1994 Valdine: I started taking piano less- ons when I was five or six years old. When I was ten or twelve, I began flute lessons. I just thought the flute was such a nice instrument. I studied piano and flute all through school and I majored in piano. It wasn’t until I stopped studying piano at the University of Manitoba that I started to do a bit of singing. I obtained a job on the television show, “Hymn Sing” and earned a bit of money that way. Ijelga: You must have had an ob- vious talent to get a job on “Hymn Sing.” Valdine: Well, they were looking for somebody, and I was just in the right place at the right time. I certainly wasn’t training to be a singer, but they needed someone who had a good academic musical background and I had that. I was a quick learner, so maybe they saw some potential in me. It’s a good way for Winnipeggers to make a bit of money. You can’t always obtain scholarships. Actually, I think maybe it’s the only venue in Winnipeg for singers. Ijelga: Have you always been devoted to music? As a young person, did it ever occur to you to stop studying music, or to think that you really wanted to tiy something else? Valdine: No. I always knew that no matter what I did, I would be involved in music. When I was in high school studying, say, geography, I knew that it wasn’t all that crucial for me. Ijelga: Did you know that you had a talent for voice when you were younger? Can you expand on how and when you switched to voice? Valdine: Well, I did sing when I was younger, but I didn’t believe that singing was a particularly dignified way to make music. I wasn’t too keen on singing. At university, many of the singers were older, had begun to study singing later and had less background in music, so that they were miles behind academically and I thought that was very unusual. I had a good ear and was quick to learn, but I didn’t really think I was going to make a career out of singing. Ijelga: You studied at the University of Manitoba. Did you find it a good place to study? Valdine: I studied a year of piano there and then I moved to the Univer- sity of Toronto, where I continued to work another two years on piano. I then switched to become a theory major, because I did well in the academic part of music. But, it just wasn’t for me. I stayed with it for only a year. I came back to Winnipeg, transferred all my credits to the University of Manitoba, and took up singing as a major. (That’s when I got the job on “Hymn Sing.”) I would say that I had a veiy good voice teacher. I believe she was the one that really made the difference. Ijelga: What are some of your favourite works or roles? Valdine: They change a lot! There is always a current favourite, but when you are younger you have idealistic favourites that you hope one day to do. As you get older and learn that there is a definite type-casting as far as voices go, you become more realistic and set your goals to roles that are written in your voice range, your dynamic range. Ijelga: Therefore are there certain roles that you wouldn’t be able to sing? - that are not in your range? Valdine: Oh, yes. I could never sing the heavy Verdi roles, like Aida, or even Puccini properly. The “Toscas” - I can’t sing them either - the heavy Italian ones. I’m certainly a “Mozart” soprano, and some of the more lyric or modern ones, like “Juliet” and

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