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by Dominique Olivier Delicate, simple, natural and eminently endearing is how one might describe the soprano Suzie Le Blanc, but that would give the impression of reducing her to a frozen image, of turning her into a Madonna of 17th and 18th century music. On the contrary, the singer is communicative and lively, and in her art also, she puts to advantage her spontaneity enhanced by natural grace. Her relationship with the stage is warm as well as vibrant, owing nothing to stage fright. "When I was young, I found it easier to sing before a public than to practice. My voice came out more easily‹I was more relaxed. That's rare, don't you think?"
She discovered ancient music when her family moved to Montreal in 1976. "I hadn't heard much, almost nothing in fact. It was love at first sight. One evening, at a concert of the Studio de Musique Ancienne de Montréal (SMAM) I told myself, 'that's my music.' It was as if I understood it from before. Everything was extraordinary: the harmony, the words, the tone of the instruments, the form. I absorbed it through my pores." She immediately devoted herself to the study of the harpsichord. At CEGEP, she took singing as a second subject so as to have as much time as possible for the keyboard. But then Réjean Poirier, at the time director of SMAM, asked her to sing in his choir on the occasion of his wedding. Following this, Suzie LeBlanc sometimes sang as a soloist, and with two other women-singers formed a trio called Musica Secreta. During a tour of Western Canada an opportunity presented itself when a group from Vancouver was looking for a soprano. "I asked myself if I should take this job, which was professional and almost full time or continue the harpsichord. I chose singing and learned the craft on stage."
To remedy her technical weaknesses, the soprano did what always worked for her. She dove in. "When performing, I never thought of technique. My way of working was to give." In her mid-thirties, she has managed to perfect her technique retaining, all the while, a natural manner that makes her deeply touching. While praising her nimbleness and control as well as the beauty of her voice, one cannot remain insensitive to the generosity of her musical personality. Apart from known artists such as Rinaldo Alessandrini, Ton Koopman, Reinhardt Goebel, she sings regularly with the lute player Steven Stubbs, and she mentions a few names dear to her: Richard Egarr, Jaap ter Linden, Andrew Manze, Rachel Podger, Paul O'Dette. "These are people who love to create in a very spontaneous way, like me, who do not necessarily have one way to do things. We experience music in the same way, with a lot of freedom." [Translation : Tom Levitt] Click here to win a prize of Suzie LeBlanc recordings. Listen: Suzie LeBlanc recording (30 sec). (RealAudio)
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