Operatic voices don’t usually feature at Eurovision, but JJ, taking the stage to represent Austria, is an exception.
In “Wasted Love,” JJ, 24, gently coos about a recent heartbreak until he hits the chorus, and his voice soars in volume and pitch, making full use of his classical training.
JJ, whose real name is Johannes Pietsch, is a countertenor, meaning his vocal range most closely matches a female mezzo-soprano. He is in the choir at the Opera School of the Vienna State Opera. In recent months, he has appeared in the company’s productions of Mozart’s “The Magic Flute” and Benjamin Britten’s “Billy Budd.”
JJ said that he hoped his performance would “awaken interest in classical music” among Eurovision’s viewers, but that he also wanted to make the case for greater use of operatic vocals in pop music. Putting them together could create fun “popera” songs, JJ said.
After spending most of his childhood in Dubai, JJ started classical singing at 15 when he moved to Austria. His father, noting JJ’s high singing voice, asked him to try belting out the “Queen of the Night” aria from “The Magic Flute,” JJ recalled. Soon, JJ said, he was watching YouTube videos of Maria Callas and Montserrat Caballé performances, then imitating those renowned sopranos.
Key figures in Vienna’s opera scene have wished JJ luck at Eurovision, including Bogdan Roscic, the general director of the Vienna State Opera. “He’s excited and happy for me,” JJ said, “but he said he will not watch.” Eurovision is still too much of a silly spectacle for some, even with JJ in it.