logo
Young competitors fine-tune confidence on stage

Young competitors fine-tune confidence on stage

In fine voice at SongFest'25! yesterday are (clockwise from top left) Kahurangi Makiha, Max Smith, Poppy Hussey, Holly Hamilton, Mackenzie Dunnicliff, Rishi Shantapriyan, Yulia Wood, Kahurangi Potae-Tamatea and Lucy Appleton (centre). PHOTOS: GERARD O'BRIEN
Hits from Miley Cyrus, Adele and Queen filled the air at the weekend as young singers blew "the back off the auditorium wall" for SongFest'25!.
The three-day annual singing competition, for those aged 20 and under, began on Friday evening at the University of Otago Castle 1 lecture theatre and received a total of 58 entries from as far as Hamilton.
Convener Peter Thomson said this was the competition's second year rebranded as "SongFest".
The competition had been running for more than 75 years and was formerly known as the Green Island Junior Vocal Competition.
Giving young people an opportunity to sing to an audience from a stage helped them to grow their confidence as a performer and their self-esteem, Mr Thomson said.
It was "more than just a singing competition".
"SongFest is all about a performance experience, to give the kids that performance experience singing from a stage.
"What it enables them to do over the weekend is the more they do it, the less nerves they have."
The look and feel had been changed to deliberately appeal to teenagers, Mr Thomson said.
This included advertising more on social media and developing a TikTok presence.
The competition had "much more depth about it now".
"There's kids here with microphones singing to full backing tracks, and they were blowing the back off the auditorium wall.
"It was a couple of girls singing jazz numbers, and we've never had that before.
"Normally it's somebody playing a piano quietly and a kid standing there very still, singing beautifully.
"Now they're standing there, it's like a performance in a pub or whatever.
"There's quite a different vibe in the place now."
tim.scott@odt.co.nz
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Doll maker Sylvanian Families sues Tik Tok account over adult sketches involving alcohol, drugs and violence
Doll maker Sylvanian Families sues Tik Tok account over adult sketches involving alcohol, drugs and violence

NZ Herald

time21 hours ago

  • NZ Herald

Doll maker Sylvanian Families sues Tik Tok account over adult sketches involving alcohol, drugs and violence

Adult sketches featuring the Sylvanian Families toys have gained the Sylvaniandrama TikTok account 2.5 million followers. Photo / TikTok/ sylvaniandrama Listening to articles is free for open-access content—explore other articles or learn more about text-to-speech. Already a subscriber? Sign in here Access to Herald Premium articles require a Premium subscription. Subscribe now to listen. Adult sketches featuring the Sylvanian Families toys have gained the Sylvaniandrama TikTok account 2.5 million followers. Photo / TikTok/ sylvaniandrama Sylvanian Families is at the centre of a legal battle with a TikTok creator. The beloved toys feature in videos from the Sylvaniandrama TikTok account, in which they are featured acting out adult sketches involving alcohol, drugs, cheating, violence and murder, but the Japanese manufacturer has taken exception to the social media content. Epoch Company Ltd has filed a copyright infringement case in the United States claiming the videos are causing 'irreparable injury' to the company's reputation. Thea Von Engelbrechten – the owner of the TikTok account that has amassed 2.5 million followers – has filed a counternotice claiming her works are 'parody'. Sylvanian Families are sold as 'an adorable range of distinctive animal characters with charming and beautiful homes, furniture and accessories'.

‘Crate diggers' in for treat at sale
‘Crate diggers' in for treat at sale

Otago Daily Times

timea day ago

  • Otago Daily Times

‘Crate diggers' in for treat at sale

Regent Theatre Music Sale co-ordinator Mark Burrows examines a pressing of Eccentric Soul: The Nickel & Penny Labels amid boxes of DVDs at the theatre before its annual music sale on Saturday. PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Whether it is French field recordings, esoteric minimalist music or a 1959 concert at Dunedin's Town Hall, "crate diggers" are in for a treat at this year's Regent Theatre Music Sale. CDs, vinyl records, cassettes, DVDs, music sheets and more will be up for grabs at little cost on Saturday for the theatre's third annual sale. Sale co-ordinator Mark Burrows said about 1000 banana boxes worth of stock had been received so far. The music sale began as an off-shoot of the Regent Theatre's 24 Hour Book Sale to raise funds for the theatre. They were expecting a "real range" of customers on Saturday, Mr Burrows said. "Old guys like me, there'll be a bunch of them, crate diggers, but there's students who will turn up and look for a bargain or just out of curiosity." While the volume of donations was similar to last year, the quality this time around was better, he said. One particular donation contained next-to-new vinyl records that were "so outside the 99.5% of people's listening experience". This included a collection of electronic "non-music", which he believed were French field recordings of which only 350 copies were ever made. Also received was "a bunch of really interesting esoteric unusual music" of a "minimalist vein". "It'll be basically meaningless to the whole public, except for two people down at the music department in the University of Otago." Music from New Zealand bands such as the JPS Experience and Sneaky Feelings were also among the mix, as well as a recording of selected items from the King Edward Technical College Jubilee Music Festival, performed at the Dunedin Town Hall in August 1959. Vinyl records and CDs were good because they were physical mediums you could pick up and look at, Mr Burrows said. They had "just got cool". "So, I think it reflects a bit of that fringe edge of society. There's always people who are looking for cool stuff that the rest of the 95% don't know about. "And then there's the other side of it, the audiophile community, who believe, for good reason, that vinyl sounds better." The music sale runs from 10am to 6pm.

Young competitors fine-tune confidence on stage
Young competitors fine-tune confidence on stage

Otago Daily Times

time2 days ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Young competitors fine-tune confidence on stage

In fine voice at SongFest'25! yesterday are (clockwise from top left) Kahurangi Makiha, Max Smith, Poppy Hussey, Holly Hamilton, Mackenzie Dunnicliff, Rishi Shantapriyan, Yulia Wood, Kahurangi Potae-Tamatea and Lucy Appleton (centre). PHOTOS: GERARD O'BRIEN Hits from Miley Cyrus, Adele and Queen filled the air at the weekend as young singers blew "the back off the auditorium wall" for SongFest'25!. The three-day annual singing competition, for those aged 20 and under, began on Friday evening at the University of Otago Castle 1 lecture theatre and received a total of 58 entries from as far as Hamilton. Convener Peter Thomson said this was the competition's second year rebranded as "SongFest". The competition had been running for more than 75 years and was formerly known as the Green Island Junior Vocal Competition. Giving young people an opportunity to sing to an audience from a stage helped them to grow their confidence as a performer and their self-esteem, Mr Thomson said. It was "more than just a singing competition". "SongFest is all about a performance experience, to give the kids that performance experience singing from a stage. "What it enables them to do over the weekend is the more they do it, the less nerves they have." The look and feel had been changed to deliberately appeal to teenagers, Mr Thomson said. This included advertising more on social media and developing a TikTok presence. The competition had "much more depth about it now". "There's kids here with microphones singing to full backing tracks, and they were blowing the back off the auditorium wall. "It was a couple of girls singing jazz numbers, and we've never had that before. "Normally it's somebody playing a piano quietly and a kid standing there very still, singing beautifully. "Now they're standing there, it's like a performance in a pub or whatever. "There's quite a different vibe in the place now."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store