Its
a rite of passage that is repeated hundreds
of times a year, up and down the country. The
annual school show. A chance for adoring parents
to grin and bear it while their children sing
flat, forget their lines, and maybe trip over
the scenery. Everybody expects a few laughs
and some family bonding. Certainly nobody expects
genius
but occasionally, just occasionally,
it appears.
It
was at just such a show that young Christchurch
mum Jill Westenra first witnessed her daughter
Hayleys extraordinary talent.
Her school put on a show called The
Littlest Star,
she says. Hayley was just six, and all
shed said to me was mummy I need
my ballet gear. So I went along and found
that in fact she was the littlest star, and there
she was singing away holding the microphone,
and she was note for note precise - I thought
how does she even remember it? Teachers
approached Jill after the performance and told
her that her daughter was a pitch perfect vocalist
and suggested she take violin lessons. It was
the beginning of a relationship with music thats
been the driving force in Hayleys life
ever since.
And
its a connection thats come completely
unforced. In stark contrast to most kids who
have to be forced to practice, Hayley took
every opportunity to perfect her talents -
quickly adding piano and recorder to her repertoire
of instruments, and learning to read sheet
music by age seven. It was also around this
time that her passion for musical theatre began
to take shape. Spying a newspaper ad for a
performing arts school production of Cinderella she
took the paper to Jill asking; how do
I do that mummy? I want to do that. What
followed was a remarkable stage career as a
child vocalist. By age 11 Hayley had appeared
in over 40 productions, including Annie, Snow
White and The Seven Dwarfs, The
King and I and
Alice In Wonderland. Shed also
sung on TV shows McDonalds Young Entertainers and What
Now? and performed annually at the Coca-Cola
Christmas In The Park event. Its
a really great feeling,
she recalls, when youre on stage
youre sort of in darkness and then you
step out into the lights and its like youve
moved into a different world.
By
2000 Hayley decided she wanted to record, and
entered the studio to produce a demo album
for herself she describes now as a momento.
But it was a momento that would soon prove
instrumental in moving her career from multi-talented
vocalist, to fully fledged recording artist.
Recording
finished and with violin in hand, Hayley and
her sister Sophie (also a gifted singer) decided
to spend the day busking on the streets of
central Christchurch. The pair quickly drew
an enthusiastic crowd. There was this
one woman who asked us if wed recorded
anything, she says, so I sent her
over to mum, and she really wanted to buy a
copy of my CD. As luck would have it,
the young buskers fan was a journalist
with local television station CTV, who arranged
for Hayley to sing on air. The appearance captured
the attention of country star Gray Bartletts
management company, and a deal with Universal
Music New Zealand soon followed.
Hayley
said that her self-titled debut album in New
Zealand was the sort of music I like
to sing which is an eclectic mix of classics
such as All I Ask Of You and Mists
Of Islay as well as a number of Andrew
Lloyd Webber songs and operatic works by Gounod
and Schubert and pop. This was soon followed
by the Christmas album "My Gift To You" which
is a collection of seasonal tracks and Hayley's
personal xmas favourites. Hayley's younger
sister Sophie sings two of the tracks on the
album, "Do You Hear What I Hear"
and "Through These Eyes".
Something
of an opera buff (her favourite vocalist is
Andrea Bocelli), Hayley studies French and
German at Burnside High School.
Its important for a vocalist to be
able to sing in any language, she says. I
can sing in Italian, although I cant speak
it yet. Still only 15, shes obviously
got plenty of time to learn - if she can fit
it in between her hobbies of indoor rock climbing,
swimming, cross country running and netball.
Fun though these other pastimes are, Hayley says
music remains her top priority - and shes
getting better with age. Girls voices develop
as they get older, she says with a smile, so
my top range is getting higher and my bottom
range is getting lower. It just keeps getting
stronger and richer all the time
who knows where it will take me.
Decca
Music Group will be releasing Hayley's debut
international album worldwide in 2003