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Solfeggio Lessons & Songwriting (part two)

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By TalentManager


AdryA by Lynne Conte
AdryA by Lynne Conte

Adrienn Antal "AdryA"

Adrienn Antal of beautiful Budapest, Hungary has performed with well-known bands throughout Budapest before venturing on her own creating the stage name of “AdryA.” She is known to have a “voice of an angel.

“It started since childhood, not just studying solfeggio lessons, but also piano lessons for six years at a very young age," she says, "music is a language and a way to send messages to the world and people, and for musicians, it’s a way to express their thoughts and feelings.

"It’s like fire inside inspiring me to be a performer and a musician," she said.

She was first inspired by artists such as U2, Pink Floyd, and Joey Tempest’s voice, saying, “It was Tempest unique sound and phrasing that inspired me with both my singing and character.”

However, “AdryA” looks up to and listens to all kinds of music regardless of style. She is a big fan of “Depeche Mode,” saying, “They created a whole style in the music industry with a constant renewing modern, but unique sound. Dave Gahan has a sort of voice I could recognize in my deepest dreams.”

Then she classified her music as being in the genre of rock, pop, alternative, new age and world music that contain industrial/gothic elements.

She says, “Writing songs is absolutely spontaneous in many different ways. All you need is inspiration, the “spark” that might come anywhere and anytime.”

For example, capturing a melody, “it happened to me once, I was traveling on the bus when a beautiful melody overwhelmed my mind. Fortunately, I managed to memorize it, and as soon as I got home, I sat next to my synth and recorded the idea immediately,” she said.

Another writing experience by “AdryA” as she remembers was coming home from a beautiful summer trip and being impressed by the place where she stayed, and through that experience, she composed it into a song.

Next, she says taken solfeggio lessons helped her to become a singstress by exercises given to improve both rhetorical and practical skills.

“Solfeggio lessons are an introduction into the world of music and gives an artist their abilities in a more conscious way. We read the score, learn about the notes and tunes, we sing and solmizate," she says, “To solmizate, means to sing using syllables like "do", "re" and "mi" to represent the tones of the scale.”

It was 2005 when “AdryA” decided to go solo saying that she wanted to develop a solo career because she feels extremely connected with her songs.

“I work on songs in my home studio and record them. I want my songs heard and played,” she says.

 

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Isabella Snow profile image

Isabella Snow  says:
2 years ago

Interesting. I guess Im one of the few musicians who doesnt use music as a form of expression. I dont try to communicate with my audience at all. I sing for myself, really. I sing because I need to. That it happens to reach people (if it does) is just a fortunate side effect.

Juniata  says:
2 years ago

Do you like karaoke? I know I do! I went and purchased an i-Sing Portable MP3 Karaoke Player!!! It is so cool!! http://www.i-sing.com

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