Everybody's a work in progress. I'm a work in progress. I mean, I've never arrived... I'm still learning all the time.
Renee Fleming
I think opera has gained a kind of glamorous appeal. It's a live performance that aligns all of the arts, and when it is represented in the media, in film in particular, it is presented as something that is really a special event, whether it's a great date or something that's just hugely romantic.
One of my timesaving habits is to save all of my magazines and junk mail for airplane trips. I walk on the plane with a very heavy bundle, but by the time the trip is over, it can all be thrown away.
Every singer eventually gets around to a Christmas disc.
I'm lucky - I can do two things at once.
I've spent hours and hours doing research into Appalachian folk music. My grandfather was a fiddler. There is something very immediate, very simple and emotional, about that music.
I've always been inspired by artists who have shown musical and intellectual curiosity and the courage to take risks.
I think touring is hard.
My parents discussed singing every night over the dinner table; I had a tremendous music education.
Well, any time I'm preparing for a performance or even a rehearsal, it's as if in a way, like any other athletes, these are muscles that support the vocal cords which are just I believe cartilage. It demands a kind of constant warming up and a constant feeling of where is the voice today.
At this stage in my career, I don't have to take any big risks. You want to take a calculated risk, not one that leads to people saying 'yes, but there was that one time when she made that big mistake.' It's always a shame when that happens, especially if you've gotten by for decades without anything hugely tragic.
For my own singing, I used to be attracted by the baroque, the flashier the better, but now I prefer a simpler, purer style.
Learning operatic roles is ongoing, and I find that I can learn on the train or subway, during a manicure, getting my hair done, and even while driving if I only look at the score at red lights.
I am so envious of my colleagues from 100 years ago who only sang new works, they hardly ever sang revivals.
It is always fragile, being a parent.
I listen to archival and historic recordings. I love watching singers. I learned a lot from watching videos.
A lot of performers don't want to leave the circuit, the European opera house circuit, partly because most singers don't sing many concerts, or at least not while they are in their prime.
I don't want to be somebody who stands still and sings pretty. Each song is a world. Each song is a story. I don't achieve nearly what I want.
Being steeped in the process of learning and exploring keeps me from becoming too nervous. Partly it's about not getting bored.
I want to keep my voice young, with nothing heavy.
No voice teacher can be all things to all people. You have to gain information from whatever sources you can. You have to listen.
For a while it was hard for me to say no to work.
I enjoy the more floaty, exposed, elegant singing.
I don't like to sing loud.
My mother was the worst kind of stage mother. She would make me and my younger sister and brother little duckling costumes and put us in kiddie shows.
I'm not a reactionary.
I would love to do more private concerts.
I have a certain image that's more classic, and I'm happy to stay out of the fray.
For years, I had no time for exploratory travel.
I do everything in the third person. Performance is about being someone else.
I'm reserved, so I've always needed to find a way of opening up. Jazz helped me do that.
With classical singing you have to put out so much air - you project, you emit force.
I learned so many roles so quickly as a young singer, I thought it was time to come back to them and make them better - deeper, more nuanced.
When a human being without amplification makes a sound that is high and loud, it is almost unworldly.
Contrary to the norm, as my technique improved my voice became higher.
Opera is really fun.
Because everything about the voice interests me, I felt it would be fascinating to learn a completely different style of singing.
My parents were both high-school music teachers.
Having to travel so much plays havoc with your personal life.
My worry is that opera will become an historic art form as opposed to a living, breathing thing.
I have had a very difficult time with stage fright; it undermines your well-being and peace of mind, and it can also threaten your livelihood.
I'm not exactly an angry young person.
There's no performance where I never have to think about setting up a phrase or making a technical adjustment while I'm performing.
I'm rarely singing in English.
I'm American. I'm eclectic. I'm going to follow my musical passions. And if people don't like it, and it hurts my legacy, I'm not going to worry about that.
I was constantly being pushed toward a European ideal of what it means to be a classical or opera singer, let's say in the Renata Tebaldi mode. I reject that.
I don't want to record anything unless it can be great and genuinely interesting.
I want to get out of the major opera houses.
I was always a very good student.
Some of my first teachers were incredibly tough. You could never sing more than three words without being stopped and having to do it over 20 times. I loved that - that sort of process of dissecting and trying to figure out and master this incredibly mysterious instrument.