Media release
6 November 2009
Young Pacific Opera Star Wins Top Music Award
University of Auckland music student Pene Pati has won the top prize in one of Australasia’s most prestigious singing
competitions.
The 21-year-old Samoan-born tenor has taken out the New Zealand Aria competition in Rotorua. The event is the second
largest competition in New Zealand after the Lexus Song Quest and launched the careers of some of the country’s finest
young singers.
Pene, a third-year music and arts student, sang Questa o Quella from Rigoletto by Verdi in the first round of the
competition. His performance earned him an award for “most promising opera voice” and a spot in the grand final singing
with the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra. In the final, he sang Lensky’s Aria from the great Russian tragedy Eugene
Onegin by Tchaikovsky.
Pene says he thought his chances of making the finals were slim and his chances of winning even slimmer. He had only
sung in one other public competition before this one – a small singing competition in West Auckland – and some of the
other finalists at the New Zealand Aria competition were emerging artists with the NBR New Zealand Opera.
“Winning this award is well above my expectations. I was blown away. I had decided to go down to Rotorua by myself
because I didn’t think I’d win anything. Luckily, my sisters and brothers decided to come down with me for a holiday and
could help me celebrate!”
Pene said he was touched by the audience’s emotional response to his singing.
“Many people in the audience were in tears as I sang my second aria. Even though they couldn’t understand the words,
they could feel the emotion.”
As a child, Pene and his siblings sang every Friday for residents at a South Auckland rest home managed by his father.
While in the third form at Aorere College in Manukau, his sister convinced him to join the school choir. From there, he
rose up the singing ranks quickly, making the Graduate Choir of New Zealand in the fourth form and soon after the New
Zealand Youth Choir and New Zealand Secondary Schools Choir.
Pene’s performance teacher at the University, well-known soprano Patricia Wright, says her student has a natural gift.
“He’s a very intelligent, sensitive singer, and he works extremely hard. He has a lovely communication with the
audience, and he knows how to use his voice to the best effect.”
Dr Te Oti Rakena, Vocal Studies Co-ordinator (Classical) and Associate Dean - Equity at The University of Auckland’s
National Institute of Creative Arts and Industries, says Pene has a beautiful, natural voice and a vocal strength that
is rare in someone so young. He says Mr Pene reflects the wealth of musical talent in Māori and Pacific communities.
“We have 38 students in the School of Music’s Vocal Studies Department, and one-third of them are of Māori and Pacific
descent, with a significant number of Samoan descent. Pacific students have a huge influence in the classical
profession.”
The University of Auckland’s National Institute of Creative Arts and Industries comprises the School of Architecture and
Planning, Elam School of Fine Arts, the Centre for New Zealand Art Research and Discovery (CNZARD), the School of Music
and the Dance Studies Programme.
A low resolution image of Pene Pati singing with colleague Alexandra Ioan at the production of Albert Herring by
Benjamin Britten is attached. The opera was put on by the Vocal Studies Department at The University of Auckland’s
School of Music. A high resolution image is available upon request.
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