Not
a Fairy Tale
One of my reader reviews on Amazon for Eli’s
Heart states “The story was fairy tale, full of music and wonder.”
There is a fairy tale element to the book; there had to be, given Eli Levin’s
dual challenges of a serious congenital heart defect and a prodigious musical
talent. It could have taken place anywhere and in any era.
Jamie Logan, on the other
hand, the protagonist of You Are My Song, is very much a product of
small town America in the 1950s, He is a good-hearted, naïve boy when the story
begins. Jamie has a beautiful tenor voice and is an unusually handsome man. He
loves to sing. He has a lot to learn about life, about himself, about what he
wants and what he wants to do. About what it will take for him to achieve his
dream.
Jamie is fortunate that he
is white, and that he’s straight. He learns through some of his friends and fellow
college students that being other than white and straight – especially in the
1950s and 1960s in the South ─ could lead to complications. To his credit, he
does what he can for his friends who face these problems, and grows as a man
and an artist because of it.
Jamie just wants to sing,
and it’s not that simple. Despite the many attributes he has, and the fact that
he is more than willing to work hard at perfecting his craft, the “gold ring”
he is after is not easily attained. Good things happen to him and for him, but
there are definitely challenges he has to face, both personal and professional.
What was most enjoyable
about writing the book was revisiting “opera world” by listening to – and
watching – recordings and videos of operas, and appreciating all over again
those glorious voices I have admired and loved for many years. YouTube is
great. I saw full length productions of Carmen, La Traviata, La
Bohème. I saw the Met’s HD broadcast last year of Tosca and
recently of The Merry Widow and The Tales of Hoffmann.
I watched again my DVD of Manon Lescaut with the wonderful
performers Kiri te Kanawa and Placido Domingo.
I listened to numerous
recordings, both my own and on YouTube, of a number of tenors from the 1950s
and 60s: Jussi Björling, Giuseppe di Stefano, Jan Peerce, Richard Tucker,
Franco Corelli, Mario del Monaco, Nicolai Gedda, Fritz Wunderlich, and yes,
Mario Lanza. Great tenors, all of them.
I was reminded of both the
immense satisfaction an opera singer can experience and the intense frustration
he can face. It’s not an easy life. But as Jamie learns, if you are born to do
this ─ sing opera ─ you will try to find a way. And there’s a chance if you
have the voice and the drive – and the luck – you might know the amazing
sensation of standing on a stage with fellow artists and singing with a full
orchestra, without a microphone, and feeling your voice soar to the far reaches
of the opera house.
The almost
overwhelming joy of bringing music to life as few people can.
You Are My Song is available on Amazon, paperback and Kindle.
The Kindle edition is only $3.99 and the paperback is currently listed (as of
April 2, 2015) at $11.52 (retail price is $14.35). It’s a good story, and I
loved telling it!
Photo: Franco Corelli as Don José in Carmen
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