Steven: I think there is a different between a pro singer and someone who love to sing?

Girogia: Yes, there is a difference. I didn’t choose consciously to be a pro singer. I was a very super shy girl when I was small, I was very little girl with very big eyes. I wanted to be a nun when I was four years old and then I wanted to be a missionary, a social worker, or a good lawyer. And then, at sixteen and half, I was involved in the volunteer job for the children with handicap and I heard that the choir of the church needed new voices, that was my beginning.
When I heard my manager because in Montreal they have friends but live in Canada, they are American, so they speak English too. When I heard my manager talking in English, French and Italian, I was so jealous. I said I wanted to do the same. Especially when I was in Fuji, of cause music is an international language but it’s so nice that you can communicate with the people. French, I love it, it is so much like Italian. I didn’t really study just by listening I started to learn. English I started in the school, a little bit boring but it was necessary. Even if I am not able to speak English, so there was a lot of hard work. The producer in the studio said your pronunciation was not good.

Steven: Can I call it a little compromise?For your career, you have to sing English songs.

Girogia: I didn’t look it that way. I look at it as a chance. A chance to open myself to the world.

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