Francesca Chiejina: the radiant soprano who wants opera for all

Born in Lagos and raised in the US, she swapped medical training for arias – and has learned to embrace the pressure of being a leading voice

Francesca Chiejina began her year as a ghost, ended it as an enchantress, and took in a goddess, a princess, a pauper and an acclaimed Proms appearance along the way. Covid might have meant an enforced pause for many musicians, but it certainly doesn’t seem to have derailed this radiant and versatile soprano. “Yeah,” she smiles, “I’ve had a crazy year.”

The Nigerian/American singer, 30, has been based in London since 2014, studying at Guildhall and then winning a place on the Royal Opera House’s prestigious Jette Parker Young Artists programme. We talk over Zoom as she’s in Nigeria for her first visit in more than three years. “It’s lovely to be here,” she says. “Being on the same soil where I was born. I’ve been reflecting a lot, re-remembering and rediscovering who I was, who I am and who I want to be.”

Who she is and who she wanted to be was never a singer, let alone a soprano. As a girl in Lagos, there were piano and violin lessons and her talent was evident. Her family moved to Michigan in the US when she was 10 (“I remember carrying my violin as my hand luggage!”) and in public schools she enjoyed free music lessons, and was part of orchestras and choirs. “I’d get solos here and there, and my teachers would tell me my voice was good,” she says. Still, she began studying to be a doctor, and a very different career looked set.

“I never thought I’d sing for a living, but this tiny seed in me kept growing until when I was about 20 it just exploded.”

Her parents were took some convincing. There were tears, she says. “They thought I was ruining my life, that I should at least finish my medical training, but I think it was when I got into the Jette Parker programme that they finally accepted I wasn’t making a huge mistake.”

And the soprano bit? As a teenager she sang alto, the lowest female voice, in choirs, and she began her musical training as a mezzo. “I had never really stretched my voice,” she says. “And, sopranos had this reputation for being really hard to please, difficult girls who like to be the centre of attention, and I thought: that’s not me. I’m a mezzo, personality-wise!” But her teacher had a hunch and encouraged her to explore her range, and Chiejina’s voice blossomed.

“For a long time, and even a little bit still today, I was a reluctant soprano,” she laughs. “But I’m slowly learning to be a better one – in terms of standing up for myself. It’s a lot of pressure to be the tenor or the soprano, you have to learn how to say no a lot.”

Not that “no” has been her watchword this last year. “Obviously I don’t want to tire myself out but I figured if I say yes to lots of opportunities I will be able to discover what I like, and what is challenging in a good – and bad – way, and where my real strengths are. I see it as taking in data. It’s really fun to stretch my voice while I’m young and to have the freedom to experiment.”

Her voice suggests she will particularly excel in Verdi and Puccini – and she’s currently learning La bohème’s Mimi for an English Touring Opera production in spring 2022, but in Handel’s Amadigi as enchantress Melissa (also for ETO) she was hailed as “exceptional”; as the soloist in Berg’s Seven Early Songs at the Proms with John Wilson’s Vertigo orchestra her voice “glinted with beauty”, and as Britten’s Miss Jessel in Turn of the Screw – a filmed production from OperaGlass Works – she was hugely impressive: “Her luscious voice heavy with illicit experience and knowledge.”

Beyond the bohème, future plans include Strauss’s Four Last Songs at Cadogan Hall, and she reveals she’d love to do more of Verdi and Puccini’s famous heroines – Aida or Madama Butterfly’s Cio-Cio-san. “I really want to sing the hell out of these parts. That’s the thrill of these roles. The music is so exciting!”

She points out that her musical training in the US at public schools was provided free by the state, and – had she grown up in the UK where similar opportunities are desperately limited – she is unlikely to have been able to develop into the musician she is today. “Music needs to be accessible to all from a really early age. Everyone needs the opportunity to discover it. You can’t just force people as adults to go to stuff that they don’t know or care about.”

Did she ever feel that she didn’t fit the overwhelmingly white world of classical music?

“No one ever made me feel that, at least not to my face,” she says, “but in my classes I just got used to the fact that there were only ever one or two people of colour. I got kind of numb to being the token black face, and chose not to focus on it too much as it can be an incredibly lonely existence. Instead I focused on wanting to excel and simply being really really good at what I do.”

On those latter points there is no doubt.

• This article was amended on 3 January 2022. Due to an editing error an earlier version referred to Aida and Madama Butterfly’s Cio-Cio-san as “Puccini’s famous heroines”; the former is a Verdi heroine.

Contributor

Imogen Tilden

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Il Proscritto review – Opera Rara unearth an uneven gem
Saverio Mercadante’s opera of a love triangle in 17th-century Scotland is conducted with conviction by Carlo Rizzi and its complex heroine is beautifully sung by Irene Roberts

Erica Jeal

27, Apr, 2023 @2:00 PM

Article image
Hindemith: Cardillac review | Andrew Clements's classical album of the week
This 2013 Munich rendition of the 1926 work, conducted by the late Stefan Soltész, might be held together by slender narrative threads, but it is still an important historical curiosity

Andrew Clements

13, Jul, 2023 @2:00 PM

Article image
Holliger: Lunea review | Andrew Clements's classical album of the week
Holliger’s 2018 opera, depicting episodes from the life of Austrian poet Nikolaus Lenau, is superbly presented in this live recording, with Gerhaher leading an impressive cast

Andrew Clements

12, May, 2022 @2:33 PM

Article image
Rimsky-Korsakov: Sadko review | Andrew Clements's classical album of the week
Champion of the Russian composer’s operas Dmitri Tcherniakov notches up another with this Bolshoi theme-park staging

Andrew Clements

18, Nov, 2021 @3:00 PM

Article image
‘She’s badass’: how brick-throwing suffragette Ethel Smyth composed an opera to shake up Britain
She was bisexual, served a prison sentence, and was so outraged by cuts to her opera The Wreckers that she stormed the orchestra pit. Finally, this summer, it will be heard as its extraordinary composer intended

Imogen Tilden

19, May, 2022 @3:06 PM

Article image
Davis: X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X | Andrew Clements's classical album of the week
The libretto may creak a little but the Berg-influenced orchestral writing and jazzy solos are powerful in this performance of a historically significant work

Andrew Clements

03, Nov, 2022 @4:00 PM

Article image
Jana Horn: the enigmatic Texan songwriter guided by her faith
Recorded after she made peace with ‘ugliness and imperfection’ in music, Horn’s debut album is a skeletal marvel that evokes Yo La Tengo and soft country shuffles

Laura Snapes

29, Dec, 2021 @12:30 PM

Article image
Gabriels: the gospel-soul trio set to be 2022’s word-of-mouth hit
Jacob Lusk was an American Idol contestant who had never found his true musical identity. Now, his astounding voice powers a trio who are steeped in the richness of Black musical history

Michael Hann

28, Dec, 2021 @12:30 PM

Article image
Special Interest: the DIY noise-poppers calling for reparations
The New Orleans band, ‘all actively practising homosexuals’, evoke the chaos of today in their whirl of punk, techno and melody – and resist the commodification of queerness

Luke Turner

31, Dec, 2021 @12:30 PM

Article image
An explosive act of violence: why Britten’s Rape of Lucretia speaks to our brutal times
Britten’s opera is a strange, unsettling and unbearably private piece. Set in ancient Rome and written over 70 years ago, its theme is still all too contemporary, writes the director of a new production

Oliver Mears

11, Nov, 2022 @7:00 AM