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Performing arts in Hong Kong
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Soprano singer Renee Fleming on the voice of nature, how music ‘is good for your health’

The soprano talks about how she champions sustainability through music and her work to highlight the health benefits of music and the arts

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Renee Fleming performs during “Renee Fleming: Voice of Nature” at the Hong Kong Cultural Centre in October 2025. The shows performed on October 24-25 had a first half consisting of songs related to different aspects of nature, accompanied by a film created by the National Geographic Society. Photo: HK Phil
Natasha Rogai

“I don’t want to hit people over the head and make them sorry they came to the concert,” Renee Fleming said with a smile, “But I do want a sort of collective ‘We love the planet.’”

The American soprano was talking about Voice of Nature: The Anthropocene, the title of her 2021 album and “Renee Fleming: Voice of Nature”, the concert she was performing in Hong Kong.

At 66, Fleming has lost none of the beauty and glamour which, combined with her exquisite voice and dramatic ability, have made her one of the world’s greatest opera stars. She seems indefatigable – the city was the second stop in Asia following Shanghai – and she gave three lectures in Hong Kong in addition to her two concerts.

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What drives her is her desire to bring home the message about sustainability and biodiversity, she said.

The Voice of Nature project began as an album which she created with Canadian conductor Yannick Nezet-Seguin at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Renee Fleming performs during “Renee Fleming: Voice of Nature”, with the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra in October 2025, at the Hong Kong Cultural Centre. Photo: HK Phil
Renee Fleming performs during “Renee Fleming: Voice of Nature”, with the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra in October 2025, at the Hong Kong Cultural Centre. Photo: HK Phil

Fleming had always been interested in how so much of the great poetry of the 19th century had framed the human condition through the lens of nature, and then been set to music, she said. Yet later art songs tend to deal with other subjects. “So I wanted to compare our relationship with nature in that period with now.”

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