Margaret Price

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Dame Margaret Price DBE (born April 13, 1941 in Blackwood, Monmouthshire) is a Welsh soprano.

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[edit] Early years

Price, who came from a music-loving family, started singing for pleasure early in her life. She originally did not plan on making a career out of her talent; she dreamed of becoming a biology teacher instead as teaching was in her family.

At the age of 15, her school music teacher organised an audition with Charles Kennedy Scott who convinced her to study with him at Trinity College of Music in London and obtained a scholarship for her. Over the next few years, Price was trained as a mezzosoprano.

After graduation, she joined the Ambrosian Singers, but was reluctant to enter singing competitions. Her father was largely responsible for her discovery: He aggressively campaigned on her behalf to various opera companies.

[edit] Operatic Debut at 21

Price made her operatic debut in 1962, singing Cherubino in Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro at the Welsh National Opera.

[edit] Royal Opera House, Covent Garden

That same year, Price joined the Royal Opera House in London's Covent Garden, where she sang minor roles. Her breakthrough came when Teresa Berganza canceled a performance, and Price got the chance to take over as her understudy - again in the role of Cherubino, a performance that made her famous over night.

[edit] Fame

The conductor and pianist James Lockhart convinced Price to take further singing lessons to improve her technique and develop the luminous high scale that made her one of the most popular lyric sopranos of the 1970s and 1980s.

[edit] Mozart Specialist

Price also found support from Otto Klemperer, who conducted her first recording of a major role in a complete opera - Fiordiligi in Mozart's Così fan tutte. The 1972 recording established Price as a Mozart specialist.

[edit] Metropolitan Opera House

In the years that followed, Price appeared as a guest at important opera houses. Her Metropolitan Opera debut came in 1985 as Desdemona in Giuseppe Verdi's Otello.

[edit] Base

As Price did not enjoy travelling, she always kept a "home" stage, where she stayed and performed for the majority of each year - first Covent Garden, then Cologne, and since 1971 the Bavarian State Opera in Munich, where she lived until retirement in 1999.

[edit] Retirement & Return

Afterwards, she returned to Wales and took residence in a small seaside town.

[edit] Repertoire

Price was most famous for her Mozart-portraits, especially Fiordiligi, Donna Anna in Don Giovanni, Contessa in Le Nozze di Figaro (after having sung Cherubino and Barbarina at the beginning of her career), and Pamina in Die Zauberflöte. Additionally, she sang Verdi-roles, such as Amelia (Un ballo in maschera, a role she also performed on record with Luciano Pavarotti), Elisabetta (Don Carlo) and Desdemona (Otello), her debut role at the Met), Richard Strauss's Marschallin (Der Rosenkavalier) and Ariadne (Ariadne auf Naxos) and Adriana Lecouvreur by Cilea. However, due to fear of overstraining her voice, she kept her repertoire limited.

Price was also very active as a lieder singer, equally at home in the romantic idiom of Franz Schubert, Robert Schumann or Richard Strauss, and that of the Second Viennese School.

During her career, Price made many recordings of operas and of lieder. One of her most famous recordings is the Isolde in Carlos Kleiber's complete recording of Richard Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, a role she never sang on stage. She actually performed very few German roles.

Price was a Kammersängerin of the Bavarian State Opera and the Vienna State Opera.

She was made Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) for her services to music in 1993.

[edit] Honours

[edit] External links

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