Annette Nauraine lives, teaches, sings and writes in Connecticut.
Deciding when to “retire” from the stage and what to do post singing career are perhaps the greatest challenges singers face. Three singers who enjoyed major careers share how they made the difficult decision to stop singing full time and how they are finding fulfillment in their “afterlife.”
The facets of teaching are too many for an encyclopedia to list, but here are some tips from one teacher’s studio. This is a follow-up to Ms. Nauraine’s February article,
How’s your working relationship with your teacher? A few simple suggestions may make all the difference.
Singers can make a living doing choral singing in New York and Chicago, but it’s a tough life. Annette Nauraine shows you how it’s done and gives hints on how to do it in your hometown on a smaller scale.
It’s time to practice but you’re just sick of it all. What to do? Annette Nauraine offers immediate help here
Singers sometimes feel that they have to live in New York to have a career. Michele Baron is living proof that you can have a career anywhere in the world.
Printed music is a big investment. That’s why singers and teachers photocopy music. That, or because the music is hard to get, or out of print, easily available at the
Empower your career by taking part in the creation of a new musical work written just for you.
Manners really do matter when it comes to the business of getting hired and rehired. Here’s a chance to brush up on the niceties large or small that we may have overlooked.
A behind-the-scenes look at the creation of a new opera at the Berkshire Opera Company.
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