It's very hot in Kawakawa in February as the historic rail station hosts an afternoon of music. The performers tend to be relatively experienced singers accompanied by guitar but late in the programme there's a flurry of activity as an electronic keyboard is set up and the Mayor, John Carter,
He dreamed a dream- Kauwiti Selwyn
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He next watched Pavarotti on You Tube singing Nessum Dorma (one of the best-known arias from the final act of Puccini's opera Turandot) and fell in love with classical structure even more.
"As he was singing the words, I looked at the lyrics and started to get the vocabulary of how he was singing, the 'a' and the 'e' and rolling the 'r' and so on, and that's how I started."
He mimicked so well he was asked to sing at the college graduation and at Kaikohe Rotary's awards night.
Cr Sally Macauley was there and within two days she convinced classical singing teacher Carol Maher, formerly of Upstate New York but 20 years in Kerikeri, that she must take this kid on as a student. He auditioned and was accepted immediately.
"He is a future performer with a vocal gift although he has a lot to learn first," says Carol Maher knowingly. "It's not just standing on the stage singing; you have to learn languages and breathing and performance and he is a good student."
She has since banned him from singing Nessum Dorma because the sustained high note towards the end could damage his young voice but there's a surfeit of alternatives. At the Turner Centre's lunch-time concert in early March he sang Ave Maria, Ombra Mai Fu and Maria from Westside Story.
The in-recess Kaikohe Players donated $3,000 towards his tuition fees and he is further supported by ArtsXL charitable trust and Kaikohe Rotary. His Northland College music teacher is Glenis Sutherland and his whanau come with him to Kerikeri every week and stay while he is tutored in piano
and voice. He's working on upping his academic grades because that will strengthen any scholarship he applies for when he finishes college at the end of next year.
It's been a hectic three months but Kauwiti Selwyn says he dreamed a dream and as he lifts his chin skyward to provide a spontaneous musical stanza just for fun, and because he can, there is no doubt he will live it.