Keeping you up to date with Musical Matinee concerts throughout Port Stephens, Newcastle and the Hunter Valley

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Romance in Red White and Blue

Music lovers were treated to a fabulous Saturday Afternoon of glorious music played by Ann O'Hearn and sung by Newcastle's own Madam Butterfly, Jennifer Barnes.

Georgia Hall was the young Soprano who filled the church with her fabulous voice.
                                                        Ann O'Hearn
                                                         Jenny Barnes
                                                        Georgia Hall
A Scrumtious Afternoon Tea was provided afterwards

Thursday, May 12, 2016

When I grow up, I want to be an Opera Singer



         When I grow up I want to be an Opera Singer

Musical Matinees proudly presents Georgia Hall on Saturday 21st May, 2016 at St Andrews Presbyterian Church, 12 Laman St, Newcastle.

She will be performing in Romance in Red, White and Blue as the young artist. Accomplished pianist and teacher Ann O’Hearn accompanies Georgia and Jennifer Barnes (aka Opera Australia’s  Madame Butterfly) in this dramatic concert performance.

If you were to ask Georgia as a child what she wanted to be when she grew up, her answer would have been an opera singer. Coming from a very musical family, Georgia grew up learning singing, piano and ballet. Her fondest memories are of her time spent in the family singing studio listening to her grandmothers teach singing and attending her mother’s rehearsals.

A regular concert performer in and around Newcastle and Sydney, Georgia has enjoyed performing roles for Opera Hunter including Phoebe in The Yeomen of the Guard, The Mother in Amahl and the Night Visitors and key roles in CONDA Nominated Love, Life and Opera. In 2015 she performed Forester’s Wife and covered the Fox in Pacific Opera’s production of The Cunning Little Vixen. In 2016, Georgia takes up a second year in Pacific Opera’s Young Artist Program while she makes her role debut as The Countess in The Marriage of Figaro with Opera Hunter.
Georgia holds an Associate Diploma from the Trinity College London for Singing Performance and is studying for a Bachelor of Music degree with principal study in classical voice at the University of Newcastle under the tutelage of Dr. Jennifer Barnes.

A complimentary home made, afternoon tea after the show provides and opportunity to meet the artists.

Tickets $25 from Sticky Tickets or at the door on the day.
Music students free.

                                         Georgia Hall

Newcastle's own Madame Butterfly in recital


Musical Matinees presents a rare opportunity to hear our own Madame Butterfly, Dr Jennifer Barnes, in recital on Saturday May 21 at 2pm in St Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, Newcastle. 

Jennifer is a well-known Newcastle singer, teacher, choir and music director.  She has a superb soprano voice, which landed her the coveted role of Madame Butterfly as a principal artist with Opera Australia. She also performed in several other operas.

She will appear in Romance in Red, White and Blue with local pianist Ann O’Hearn in a recital of English, French and German songs on Saturday May 21 at 2pm in St Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, Newcastle. 

Georgia Hall will be the guest, young performer appearing as part of a new Musical Matinees Inc initiate to give young singers a chance to perform alongside professionals.

Complimentary, home-made refreshments after the concert provide the opportunity to meet with performers

Tickets are just $25 at the door on the day or online from 
https://www.stickytickets.com.au/33083/romance_in_red_white_and_blue.aspx


 Program
Jenny and Ann
Purcell
If music be the food of love
Sweeter than roses

Hahn
A Chloris
Le Rossignol
Quand je fus pris au pavillon
La Douce Paix

Ann - solo

Georgia Hall
Richard Strauss
Heimliche Aufforderung
Morgen

Ann - solo

Jenny and Ann
Poulenc
Airs Chantes

Horace Keats
Love’s Secret
 

Sunday, May 1, 2016



Science Has Great News for People Who Can’t Sing

Source: Getty Images
Source: Getty Images
Forget the middle school haters who shamed you into believing you were tone-deaf. A new study reveals that singing is more like playing an instrument than previously thought: Singing accurately is a skill that can be taught and developed. And that means that even the worst singers among us should just keep singing.

“No one expects a beginner on violin to sound good right away; it takes practice, but everyone is supposed to be able to sing,” Steven Demorest, the lead researcher behind the study, told Northwestern University. “When people are unsuccessful, they take it very personally. But we think if you sing more, you’ll get better.” The study: Using three age groups — kindergarteners, sixth graders and college-aged adults — researchers asked each person to listen to a pitch and then sing it back. Researchers noticed a significant increase in accuracy from kindergarteners to sixth graders, likely because most kids that age have regular musical training at school.
Surprisingly, the adults performed at a level closer to the kindergarteners than the sixth graders; researchers now think that’s because singing has a “use it or lose it” quality to it. It’s like a muscle. And all that off-pitch singing only helps strengthen it.
“It’s a skill that can be taught and developed, and much of it has to do with using the voice regularly,” Demorest explained to Northwestern. “Our study suggests that adults who may have performed better as children lost the ability when they stopped singing.”
Just keep singing: According to the study, only 34% of kids in the U.S. past the eighth grade choose to participate in music classes of any kind; that percentage decreases as kids near high school graduation. Those dire statistics, combined with anecdotal evidence that many kids stop singing when they’re told they’re simply “tone deaf,” have convinced researchers that kids are dropping out of music education because they’ve been shamed into believing they’re simply no good.
That’s a real problem — and it’s depriving kids of important cognitive benefits. Music education has loads of scientifically proven benefits: It improves reading and verbal skills, raises IQ, helps in learning new languages, slows the effects of aging, betters memory, enhances self-confidence and so much more. Singing in particular has great physical benefits too. It’s an aerobic activity that increases blood oxygenation, improves heart health and exercises core muscles.
In short, singing — no matter how bad — is a good thing. In fact, it might just make you better. Don’t let the haters keep you down.
Kate Beaudoin (Music.Mic) / February 18, 2015
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