Click here to find out more
 

Click Here to Shop  -- Meridian Marketplace

LDSGetaway.com
LDSPro.com




Click here to find out more






Share the article on this page with a friend.
Click here.
Meridian Magazine : : Home


(Part 2)
by Robb Cundick

Read Part 1 here:

In Part 1 I related the story of Lulu Christensen McDaniels, who sang a solo in General Conference in October of 1932 – nearly 72 years ago.  Lulu was blessed with a remarkable voice; one that her teacher felt was so special that he didn’t want to do anything to change it and so he limited his instruction to breathing techniques.  Lulu was very humble about her musical gift and always looked for ways to use it in serving God and bringing happiness to others.

Another Extraordinary Gift

This picture of Liriel in the Assembly Hall is my favorite. It was taken by one of her friends, Joyce Weeks. The happiness she has received from her commitment to the Gospel radiates from her face almost as brightly as the light from the window.

On Sunday, April 4th, 2004, another young woman with an extraordinary gift will step before the Church to sing in General Conference.  At age 22, Liriel Domiciano has been singing since she was a young girl.  She has always loved to sing.  Though slight of frame, she has been blessed with a voice of amazing power; and yet surprisingly, she has received very little formalized instruction.  Liriel grew up in a poor suburb of Sao Paulo, Brazil. Music lessons were not within her family’s means, but at an early age she was exposed to good music.  She imitated what she heard and began to sing classical arias when she was just five.

Like Lulu, Liriel came to prominence through a stroke of good fortune that was decidedly providential.  She joined the Church when she was fourteen (more about that later).  Everyone loved her voice and a fellow Church member suggested she try out for Brazil’s “Raul Gil Amateur Show” (something akin to “American Idol”).  She was an immediate success and eventually teamed with a young tenor from the show named Renaldo Viana. 

Liriel and her escort/interpreter Jeanette Oakes. Liriel told me that Sister Oakes has been an angel to her ever since they first met at a news conference in Sao Paulo.
Liriel and Renaldo quickly became a sensation in Brazil.  Their first CD sold over a million copies in just a few weeks.  Liriel (professionally she uses only her first name) was not allowed to mention her Church membership on television but she always wore her Young Women’s medallion as an acknowledgment of her faith and her commitment to the Lord.  She has become such a household name in Brazil that a company has expressed interest in creating a “Liriel” doll.

Last week I had the pleasure of interviewing Liriel.  We sat face to face in the lobby of the Joseph Smith Memorial Building.  She is learning English very quickly, but has only been at it since November and so she was more comfortable speaking through an interpreter, Jeanette Oakes, who is also her escort for her trip north. 

Exciting Invitations

The story of Liriel’s debut in America starts just seven months ago.  Peggy Fletcher Stack of the Salt Lake Tribune was in Brazil to do a follow-up story to an article she had written about the experiences of an LDS missionary.  At a news conference, Jeanette Oakes introduced her to Liriel, and Peggy decided to write a piece about her for the Tribune.

The three of them met at a restaurant for an interview.  “They asked me a question.” Liriel told me, “The question was – it was an amazing question to me – ‘Would you like, some day, to sing with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir?’  At this point I said to them, ‘That’s the dream of my life!’  And the moment that I said that, it was something that came out of my heart.  I didn’t go after that opportunity.  It was just a hope.  I wouldn’t have made any effort whatsoever.  That wouldn’t have been proper.  It was just a hope that I had.”

The Church’s Brazilian Office of Public Affairs picked up on that and decided to contact Mormon Tabernacle Choir director Craig Jessop.  I asked Craig about how things happened on this end and he told me that a man from Brazil called him to ask if he had heard of this marvelous young singer and the great miracle she was bringing about for the Church in Brazil.  Craig asked to hear some of Liriel’s recordings.  Upon listening, he was very impressed.  “Something about this touched me,“ he said, and he extended an invitation for her to come to Salt Lake City and join the Choir on Music and the Spoken Word.

Liriel was ecstatic when she received the invitation, but there was something even more exciting to come.  In February, she was featured in a cultural program that was held in Sao Paulo’s Pacaembu Stadium to celebrate the rededication of the Sao Paulo Temple.  President Hinckley was there and was so impressed with her performance that a week later he took the unusual step of inviting her to sing in General Conference.

A Dream Come True

Liriel Domiciano was absolutely magnificent when she sang with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir on Music and the Spoken Word. Look closely and you will see that she is wearing her Young Women's medallion.

Liriel arrived in America in mid-March.  Her performance on Music and the Spoken Word took place on the 21st.  When she was introduced to the Choir she not only made a graceful bow to each section of singers, but also combined it with a charming flourish of her hand and a captivating smile that immediately endeared her to us all.  She was clearly delighted to be with us.  She performed magnificently, demonstrating great versatility in performing both sacred and popular works, including “The Marvelous Work,” by Haydn, “Pie Jesu” (in tandem with another talented young LDS singer, Cari Sue Green) from Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Requiem, and the beloved “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.”

Our interview was two days later, so I asked how she felt about singing with the Choir.   “I felt realized,” she said, “I felt that a dream had happened.  I was very, very, very happy because I was singing with angels.  They sing in such a perfect way.  Even today, I keep re-studying their sound, their manners, and their ways.  I marvel how they are so perfect.  And I continue to pray to my Father in Heaven that he can help and teach me to sing with the Spirit like the Choir, so that perhaps I, too, could help His children “

Goodness!  As a member of the Choir I felt almost uncomfortable in the bright light of such praise.  Just ask Craig Jessop or Mack Wilberg how perfect the Choir is the next time they’re in the middle of dissecting one of our many flaws.  But I know that Liriel’s reaction to the Choir goes far deeper than the technical aspects of singing; there is more to it than that which is heard.  It is what is felt when the Mormon Tabernacle Choir sings that is most significant.   “The thing that is special about the Choir,” I told her, “is that our Heavenly Father’s love is in our hearts when we sing.  And we feel that with you, too.  I am sure you will influence and inspire many hearts.”

A Desire for Direction

In talking with Liriel I sensed that, as with Lulu, music is not the only thing that makes her story remarkable.  And so I asked her about her youth and how she came to join the Church. 

Liriel comes from a family of six, including her father, Genivaldo, her mother, Valderez, her older sister Patricia (26), and younger sisters Priscila (21), and Danielle (12).  When the girls were small, Genivaldo’s friends told him, “These little girls are going to be a real problem for you some day.”  But he needn’t have worried because Liriel and her sisters were well behaved and obedient; they didn’t give their parents problems.

Liriel and Utahn Cari Sue Green sang the beautiful, "Pie Jesu" by Andrew Lloyd Webber.

As she was growing up, Liriel did not like what she saw going on around her.  Though she and her friends were Catholic, their religion didn’t seem to provide the direction that Liriel wanted.  “When you’re Catholic,” she told me, “everything is allowed.  You can drink, you can smoke; you can do whatever you want with yourself, openly.”  She found herself asking, “Is this right?”  “Sometimes I saw fathers who were married but had girlfriends; [fathers] that drank and smoked,” she said, “I didn’t see how that lifestyle fit with God’s plan.”

For a time she seriously considered becoming a nun.  She went to catechism and attended a “perseverance program” with some of her friends who planned to become nuns.  “I felt that I didn’t want the things I saw the world brought to people and that if I chose to be a nun, I would be protected from those things and have a life that I thought was a better life,” she said.

Liriel shared this ambition with her mother.  “[If I become a nun] my desire will be to serve my Heavenly Father my entire life,” she told her, “because in this way I will be able to help Him in His work.”  But her mother did not like the idea. She said,  “No.  This isn’t right for you.  What the correct thing for you is to some day get married and have a family.”  Still, Liriel was not content, “how should it be that I can do everything right the way I want to do?” she wondered.  And so she decided to pray to her Heavenly Father:  “I told my Father that I wanted a law and I wanted rules and I wanted a way – a direction to have a life the way I had envisioned.”  [Is this a great story for “Standards Night,” or what?]

Her friends couldn’t understand this attitude.  “[They] said to me that the way I thought was wrong.  They said if I continued in this way, when I got older I’d lose everything that I ought to take advantage of while I was young.  [They told me] to not be so closed; and to be open to the lifestyle that they had chosen.  But at the same time they told me these things, when I was with them I didn’t feel good; their lifestyle was not for me because I didn’t feel good when I was with them.”

An Answer to Prayer

When Liriel was fourteen, something happened that brought an answer to her prayers.  Her sister returned to Sao Paulo after having lived with an aunt and uncle in another city.  She had joined the Church while away and was now a member of seven months.  She invited the family to the Sunday meetings and they soon agreed to take the missionary lessons. 

Liriel was excited.  “When the missionaries spoke and taught us the classes about the commandments [and] about the Word of Wisdom,” she said, “I felt so happy.  I thought, ‘This is exactly what I’m looking for.  This is the lifestyle that I always dreamt about.’  …And so, when I was baptized I had absolutely no doubt that I was doing the right thing.” 

Valderez also told Liriel about a dream she had had prior to their investigation of the Church in which she had seen the Salt Lake Temple.  All the family, with the exception of her father, decided to enter the waters of baptism.

I asked Liriel how Genivaldo feels about their decision.  She said, “When we joined the Church, he was able to see the changes that we made and that we were happy; and that we’re not going to create problems.  He agrees that we have a foundation and that the Church is our foundation; and that was the direction we all wanted to take.  My father is a person who has always been very observant of the things I’ve done in my life.  He has always been watching and he has acquired a lot of respect for the lifestyle that I have chosen.  Whenever someone tries to say something negative about the Church, he doesn’t allow that.”

I was struck by Liriel’s confidence and her firm sense of direction as she talked about her life’s journey.  She spoke with great passion and there was sincerity in her eyes.  Her ready smile and her genuineness were touching to me.  Like Lulu McDaniels, she seems determined to maintain her sense of humility and gratitude for the gifts with which she has been blessed.

New Opportunities

Though Liriel did finally have an opportunity to take voice lessons after she became a celebrity, it was still only sporadically – again, due to financial considerations.  Despite the spectacular sales of her recordings she has not become wealthy – most of the money went to her producers.  But fortunately that arrangement has run its course and the situation will hopefully be rectified the next time Liriel negotiates a contract.

Liriel is congratulated by Mormon Tabernacle Choir director
Craig Jessop.

While she is staying in Salt Lake City, arrangements have been made for her to study with one of Utah’s premier voice teachers, Betty Jean Chipman.  Sister Oakes told me that at one of the lessons, Sister Chipman listened to a recording of Liriel singing, “Tico-Tico,” a Brazilian popular song made famous by the actress Carmen Miranda.  Betty Jean was so impressed that she said, “I’m glad I didn’t hear that before I began teaching you.  It’s so good, I would have been terrified!”

And so, as He did with Lulu Christensen those many years ago, our Heavenly Father has once again blessed a special young lady with a gift that will lift and inspire many of His children.  As you listen to Liriel sing, “I Know that My Redeemer Lives” on Sunday, I am sure you will feel – as do I – that she underestimates herself; she does indeed already sing with the same spirit as the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. 

When our interview ended I said, “It will be exciting for us [the Choir] to follow your career and see where you go.  We hope that you can join us again some day – in fact, many times!  Thank you so much.  And may our Heavenly Father bless you.  You will be in all of our prayers!”  As I turned to leave, she arose and asked if she could give me a hug.  After her tender embrace I walked out of the Joseph Smith Memorial Building feeling a sudden (and, for me, unusual) swell of tears in my eyes.  It was a moment of crystal clarity about the truthfulness of the gospel and the impact it can have upon a life.  Liriel knows exactly where she is going.  What a contrast between her life and the lives of so many other young people in our day.

Liriel felt intimidated when she first saw the empty Conference Center.
Wait until she sees this!!

As I think about Lulu and Liriel, I am grateful for purity, for dedication, for steadfastness and for any number of other qualities one could name when describing these two extraordinary women.  They have sought – and continue to seek – to bless the lives of others with the remarkable talents with which our Heavenly Father has blessed them.  May His blessings be with them!

Thanks once again to Deb Gehris, who took the pictures of Liriel with the Choir, and to Joyce Weeks, who provided the one taken in the Assembly Hall.

Click here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.


© 2003 Meridian Magazine.  All Rights Reserved.

 

About the Author:

Robb Cundick is the eldest son of Tabernacle Organist emeritus Robert Cundick. He has sung in the Mormon Tabernacle Choir since July of 1990. Robb earned a Ph.D. in Medical Informatics at the University of Utah and is a medical computer programmer at the Huntsman Cancer Institute in Salt Lake City. Father of five, he is married to the former Laurel Soderborg. His articles for Meridian contain his own observations and do not represent the Mormon Tabernacle Choir or the Church in any official capacity.

Related Articles:

Music Archive

What do you think?
Share your thoughts, comments, and impressions about this article.

Format for Print,
Click Here

 

Share the article on this page with a friend.
Click here.