The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Composer won’t let hearing loss stop her creating

Deafness and disability have not stopped composer Sonia Allori from excelling in the musical career she has always dreamed of, writes

- Jamie Wilde

What is it like to make music that you can’t hear? Beethoven suffered when his hearing began to fade. But it seems some people have found a way of overcoming deafness in music. Dame Evelyn Glennie, the world-renowned Scottish percussion­ist, is testament to this. And deaf composer Sonia Allori, originally from Inverness but now based in Aviemore, may just be following in her footsteps.

Sonia had been on a fairly traditiona­l path for a classical musician, with teaching, chamber music and wedding performanc­es taking up her time. She has not been deaf all of her life, but a history of congenital deafness on the Scottish side of her mixed Italian heritage meant that she slowly started losing her hearing around eight years ago. And Sonia now identifies as being part of the deaf community.

Like Glennie though, Sonia has found her own way of connecting to music without hearing and has not given up pursuing her passion.

“I realised my passion for music fairly early on,” says Sonia.

“I have lived in the Highlands for most of my life. I have an Italian singing dad so my childhood is spattered with songs and music which paint vivid memories.”

Being part of a musical household, Sonia mentions that the transition to playing and writing her own music was “organic” from a young age.

She moved to the hubbub of city life during her university studies more than a decade ago. And though deafness hadn’t impacted her life by this point, another incident did.

In a blog post, Sonia describes how she woke up one morning unable to speak or move, but with her brain still intact.

“I now think of my life as being in two halves,” she tells us.

“There’s the bit where it was all systems go with the body functionin­g nicely, and then there’s the other bit where things were suddenly very different.”

Sonia later underwent bouts of physio and speech therapy. However, she also did this while studying for her PhD in Compositio­n and training as a music therapist for music charity Nordoff

Robbins, showing a determinat­ion for her chosen career path.

“I’ve been a full-time wheelie for a decade now,” says Sonia.

“Some aspects of life remain difficult today. Energy, capacity, not being able to be fully independen­t... Sometimes it gets you down, (but) I rally and regroup then I’m ready to do battle again.”

After her studies, Sonia began working on a two-year project with accessible arts organisati­on Drake Music, which saw her take the lead on a re-interpreta­tion of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons.

During this time, she saw her “confidence and skills grow” and this led to later opportunit­ies including a composer residency at Edinburgh Film Festival and a performanc­e slot at the Fringe.

But how did Sonia adapt to making music not only with the challenges of her disabiliti­es, but with deafness too?

“I was going through a classic denial phase,” she says, “but then things just switched when I found I couldn’t hear the piano.

“I adapted and started to write more in my mind, planning and imagining the sounds in a kind of aural memory process.

“I continue to write and work things through in this way and have developed into writing mostly electro-acoustic music which mixes live acoustic recordings with music software.”

With lockdown last year, however, Sonia was faced with a whole new set of challenges.

“I had gained momentum in my career and in life, I was travelling and touring a lot and then it just stopped,” she says.

Adapting to the new “online-ness” of everything initially made her feel “more cut off than ever”. But she later found solace through looking at the new normal with a sense of humour.

“I discovered auto-captioning software (for Zoom calls) which is not always accurate and sometimes intermitte­ntly hilarious.

“One of my favourite auto caption fails was when the text said that a friend had climbed Mount Snowdon and found Jesus!”

Most recently, Sonia took part in a virtual music-for-film writing camp with Highlands and Islands composers organised by XpoNorth.

She tells us that she “loved the sense of community” and was able to take part through a combinatio­n of auto captioning, live captioning and live audio descriptio­n which made the experience accessible for her.

But Sonia also feels that more work can be done to make music more accessible for deaf and disabled musicians across Scotland.

“What’s missing is a clear pathway for young, deaf and disabled musicians coming through school and thinking ‘what’s next?’, ‘how can I make it in music?’.

“There are barriers to overcome and a limited number of opportunit­ies, but you have to keep plugging away at it to gain momentum just as any other musician would.

“I’m lucky enough to be one of the arty folks who still has work coming through and am currently working on several composer commission­s.

“I love being able to collaborat­e with different artists and artforms... I feel like I get to be different things in music.”

WHAT’S MISSING IS A CLEAR PATHWAY FOR YOUNG, DEAF AND DISABLED MUSICIANS

 ??  ?? DETERMINAT­ION: Sonia Allori has adapted to hearing loss, and composes by imagining the sounds in her head.
DETERMINAT­ION: Sonia Allori has adapted to hearing loss, and composes by imagining the sounds in her head.
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 ??  ?? The composer, who took a traditiona­l path into a musical career, has made the best of lockdown and found humour in it.
The composer, who took a traditiona­l path into a musical career, has made the best of lockdown and found humour in it.
 ??  ?? Sonia doesn’t let her disabiliti­es hold her back.
Sonia doesn’t let her disabiliti­es hold her back.

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