Mi Ritiro is your new single. What can you reveal about its story and creation?
Mi Ritiro is a bitter-sweet love song that I wrote. It’s essentially the story about falling for someone and then realising that person is not who you thought they were and having to admit that to yourself. I wrote it in Italian as being classically trained some of my favourite arias that I sing are in Italian and the call to write in the original language of love (even though I am not fluent in Italian, I had some help with the correct grammar!) seemed appropriate.
I had written the lyrics and most of the melody when I teamed up with my good friend and wonderful pianist Stefano Marzanni. He helped write the harmony and arrange the piano part in a way that sounded classical yet simple. I wanted the song to sound like something between an aria from a modern opera and a song from a soundtrack of an old Italian movie. Once it was written, I worked closely with my amazing producer Tom E. Morrison, who worked tirelessly to bring my vision to life.
Stefano leads the instrumentation with the beautiful original piano arrangement alongside the string section. On violin, I have award-winning violinist Dermot Crehan (Lord of the Rings, Andrea Bocelli, Annie Lennox; I am so blessed to have him on my track. Then I have Alice Sophie on cello, Alexander Verster on double bass; Graham Pike on brass and Tom E. Morrison playing keyboard. Oh, and myself as the vocalist of course. I am really pleased with the end result. Everyone worked really hard to give an amazing performance for me and Tom’s pristine production is the icing on the cake. Graham actually played the trumpet part that you hear in one take. I was blown away when we were in the studio; I had goosebumps all over and knew instantly that would be the one to stay.
It is from the album, Lost in Love. Are there distinct themes and personal experiences you bring into the music?
Yes. I would say the album as a whole is based on the theme of love: wanting it, finding it or losing it. The album is a collection of self-penned love songs inspired by my passions, heartaches and the fairy-tale fantasies that falling in love can bring. All of the songs were written from personal experience on some level.
As well as being a crossover artist, I am also blending different genres in my music. I tried to really capture my vocals with their vulnerable yet powerful quality to compliment the Celtic, operatic and orchestral elements. I have put my heart and soul into this album so I am hoping, with the cinematic styled arrangements and my heartfelt lyrics, people will connect to the songs.
You are a Classical crossover artist. Do you think Classical music is coming into the mainstream more? Would you like to see Classical music come to the fore a bit more?!
Oh, yes. It’s definitely more mainstream than it ever has been I think with acts like Lindsey Stirling and 2 Cellos doing extremely well - who are also writing original material. With shows like the sold-out Classical Hacienda and the Blue Planet score winning awards, there is a real appetite for this genre.
I think, for it to come to the forefront even more, music should be a compulsory subject in school and there should be many more government-funded musical initiatives. I believe that Classical music is constantly evolving and growing as it blends with different genres and it would be great for upcoming artists to have affordable access to venues that have ready-made audiences to try out their ideas.