Home Blog The Women in My Life
31Aug

The Women in My Life

By Erin Helyard | Blog | 31 Aug 2022 |

Women have been so important to my own development as a musician and as a person: my mother, who first taught me piano, my first piano teachers, flautist Margaret Crawford (who introduced me to Quantz and the joy of music), and pianist Stephanie McCallum, who taught me (and continues to teach me) everything I know about keyboard playing. 

Pinchgut Opera Artistic Director Erin Helyard with his mother, Crista White.

When I started looking at the work of historical female musicians, I felt a great affinity with those women of the past who often battled (like me) with repressive ideologies or societal strictures. That is why the Women of the Pietà program is so special, as I feel close to those women of the Pietà through my research into women musicians of the 18th century. 


More importantly, this concert also presents an opportunity to work with my colleagues and friends who are among some of the most inspiring artists I have worked with. My favourite instrument is the natural horn. It is an instrument capable of such a wonderful range of emotions, textures, and colours. The natural horn is a tricky beast. I’ve always adored the musicians who make music with just a coiled tube and their embouchure! It seems magical, to me, that tones could ever emerge from such a thing. 


Carla Blackwood (pictured above right) and Dorée Dixon (pictured above left) are two very close friends who are the most wonderful musicians, and I wanted to program a work that could have been performed at the Pietà in order to showcase their extraordinary musicianship. Visitors to the ospedali always commented on the girls playing the horn. William Beckford wrote how charming it was to see “a delicate white hand journeying across an enormous double bass, or a pair of roseate cheeks puffing, with all their efforts, at a French horn.” Another English tourist spoke of how “divinely performed” the concerts were at the Pietà under Vivaldi’s influence: “we could just distinguish the girls through the lattice, fiddling, playing the French horn […] [it] was the sweetest thing I have ever heard.” I’m thrilled to be working once again with  these talented members of the Orchestra of the Antipodes, and can’t wait to start rehearsals next week.

Pinchgut Opera Artistic Director Erin Helyard with Associate Professor Stephanie McCallum, concert pianist. Photo Courtesy Adelaide Festival

We acknowledge the traditional owners of the land on which we work and perform, the Gadigal people of the Eora nation – the first storytellers and singers of songs.
We pay our respects to their elders past and present.
International Opera Award Winner Logo

© COPYRIGHT 2002 - 2024 PINCHGUT OPERA LTD | Privacy Policy | Accessibility | Website with MOBLE