Giorgia
Fumanti Biography
Though she sings with a purity and grace few
can match, Giorgia Fumanti remains one surprisingly modest vocalist.
No matter that the ravishing Italian-born soprano has already
won fans across Europe, Asia and North America with her live
performances and 2004 debut CD. She still insists her talent
is only a gift, one she eagerly gives away at every opportunity.
Giorgia will have another chance to do so with the upcoming
release of her new Angel Records CD, From My Heart.
Produced
by Craig Leon, and recorded at London's Abbey Road Studios as
well as Wisseloord Studios in Holland, From My Heart will surely
vault Giorgia to global prominence. Along the way, she can expect
comparisons to artists like Enya and Andrea Bocelli because
she, too, deftly straddles the line between pop and classical.
But from the start, Giorgia Fumanti sought to put a uniquely
personal stamp on her music.
To do
that, she favors an eclectic group of composers, from Sting
to Italian film music master Ennio Morricone. She especially
loves the music of Morricone because he draws from both pop
and classical traditions. "The most important thing in
a song is whether it fills me with emotion," she says.
"The music of Ennio Morricone is perfect for that."
So perfect,
in fact, she recorded four Morricone classics for the new CD,
including themes from "The Mission", "Cinema
Paradiso", and "Once Upon a Time in the West".
Giorgia herself translated the lyrics of Sting’s "Fields
of Gold" for her stunning acoustic-flavored rendition of
"Campi d’Oro". In addition to Sting, she salutes
another of her heroes with her own take on Barbra Streisand’s
"I’ve Dreamed of You".
Giorgia
shows off her classical training on songs like the "Aria"
(based on "The Swan" from Saint-Saens’). But
she also has fun on songs like "Espiritu", with its
choral backgrounds, and "Volero", another song featuring
Giorgia’s own Italian lyrics.
Though
artists like Andrea Bocelli have found international favor,
the pop-classical hybrid isn't easy to pull off, and Giorgia
knows it. That's why her connection with producer Craig Leon
proved so important. "Some songs are very big, some are
very simple," she notes. "In some I wanted a big orchestra
and in others I wanted to sing very simply: just me and piano
or guitar. Craig was great because he understood exactly what
I had in mind when I dreamed up this album years ago."
Leon states, "working with Giorgia was a great experience.
It was wonderful to hear new, fresh ideas from a young artist
interpreting the material that she chose for the project."
In casual
conversation, Giorgia often talks about dreaming. Perhaps it
serves as a metaphor for the feeling she hopes to convey with
her music. It certainly reflects her lifelong sense of purpose.
"I hope through my voice people can receive something that
can help them", she says. "As far as I’m concerned,
all emotions are important."
Giorgia
Fumanti grew up Aulla, a city north of Tuscany that stands at
the crossroads of Italian history. Though tourists pass through
to visit the region's famed castle Fortezza della Brunella,
for Giorgia, Aulla was a small town that bred big ambitions.
Her parents hoped Giorgia might become a lawyer or go into the
family mercantile business. But it was not to be. Beginning
in childhood, when her grandmother would sing her lullabies,
music pierced Giorgia's heart.
However,
it wasn't until her mid-teens, when she was invited to join
the church choir that she had any inkling she could sing. "I
was shy as a teenager", she recalls. "But in the choir
on that first day, I opened my mouth and out came this soprano
voice, totally without self-consciousness. Everyone was in shock.
Within three months I had become the soloist in the Christmas
concert".
To please
her parents, Giorgia did give law school a try, coming within
two exams of a law degree. She also devoted much of her time
to working with disabled children in her hometown. Around the
same time she began a period of introspection, which included
practicing yoga, reiki and meditation. "It helped me listen
to my heart and soul," she says, "and to start to
do music seriously."
To that
end, she enrolled in the highly esteemed Conservatorio di Parma
Arrigo Boito, gaining much from the rigorous classical training.
Still, she sensed that opera was not for her. "It was the
first time I really took life into my own hands," she says.
"In Italy there is only classical study, so I studied technique
and took what I needed."
In 2002,
she met artist manager Maurice Velenosi who immediately picked
up on Giorgia's potential. He offered to take her on, but with
a catch: she would have to relocate to Velenosi's home turf
of Montreal. Though she found it painful to leave her family,
Giorgia bet it all and moved to Canada. "It was beautiful,"
she says, "because I was able to think only about music."
In 2004,
she recorded her debut independent CD, Like a Dream, an album
that featured Giorgia's take on the music of Vangelis. It was
her opening salvo in the World Music arena, and along with international
touring, it brought her widespread acclaim. Within a year, major
labels were courting her, with Angel Records ultimately signing
her.
From there,
Giorgia began the painstaking process of choosing songs and
recording From My Heart with ensembles like the Netherlands
Media Orchestra and the English Chamber Choir. She's already
mapping out a world tour following the CD release, hoping her
music will touch as many as possible.
As focused
as she is on music, Giorgia's longtime passion for helping others
has never diminished. She is today the World Ambassador for
the Cerebral Palsy Association of Quebec (L’Association
de paralysie cérébrale du Québec), performing
concerts, meeting with members and doing what she can to increase
awareness of the condition.
But music
remains front and center for the singer, who looks forward to
the challenges and rewards ahead. "When I was a child."
she says, "people asked me what I wanted to do. I said
I wanted to be a missionary. Now my dream is to be a missionary
through my music and share with people all the emotions that
music makes me feel."
She won't
have long to wait to see that dream come true.