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Gerald Finley    bassbaritone

This Canadian baritone has become one of the leading singers and dramatic interpreters of his generation, recording with major labels and performing at the major opera and concert venues in a wide variety of repertoire, all to critical acclaim. His relationship with leading conductors including Nicklaus Harnoncourt, Sir Simon Rattle, Sir Roger Norrington and Antonio Pappano has been part of a flourishing career.

In opera, his work has been founded on the leading Mozart baritone roles (Don Giovanni, Count, Figaro, Papageno, Guglielmo) Handel (Argante, Achilles, Garibaldo) and the involvement in major new works for the stage. He has successfully created the leading roles in recent world premieres including Mark Anthony Turnage’s The Silver Tassie (as Harry Heegan) at English National Opera for which he was nominated for the 2000 Oliver Award for Outstanding Achievement in Opera and for which he won the 2000 Royal Philharmonic Society Award for Singers. As Jaufre Rudel, in Kaija Saariaho’s opera L’Amour de loin, he received critical acclaim in the Paris, Santa Fe and Helsinki premieres.

\ He created the title role in Fantastic Mr. Fox at L.A. Opera and most recently, with San Francisco Opera, created the role of J. Robert Oppenheimer in John Adams' Doctor Atomic. He has also performed and recorded the title role in Vaughan Williams’ Pilgrim’s Progress with the Royal Opera Covent Garden, and in 2001 completed the title role in a film version of Britten’s Owen Wingrave, a role he first sang at the Glyndebourne Festival in 1997.

At the Royal Opera Covent Garden further roles include Count, Figaro, Don Giovanni, Creonte in Haydn’s L’anima del filosofo, the Forester in The Cunning Little Vixen and Germont in La Traviata. His close association with Glyndebourne, where he has performed since 1986, includes appearances as Papageno, Figaro, Guglielmo, Nick Shadow and Agamemnon in Iphigenie en Aulide. At the Metropolitan Opera New York, he has sung Papageno, Marcello and most recently the title role in Don Giovanni.

\  Appearances at l’Opera de Paris include Don Giovanni, Count, Figaro, Papageno, Valentin, Sharpless and Olivier in Strauss’ Capriccio. In Chicago at the Lyric Opera, his Papageno was an outstanding success, as was his recent debut in the title role of Eugene Onegin at English National Opera. He made his Salzburg debut as Guglielmo, conducted by Sir Simon Rattle.

His concert work is equally prestigious, and he has featured in recordings of Haydn, Schumann, Brahms and Mozart. In recent seasons he has premiered new works for Baritone and Large Ensemble written by Mark Anthony Turnage called The Torn Fields and When I Woke, as well as a new piece of Reflections on L’amour de loin by Saariaho. He is a frequent guest of many orchestras throughout Europe and he continues his work from Bach, Haydn and Handel to Britten, Stravinsky and Webern. His relationship with the Berlin Philharmonic includes performances of Beethoven and Mozart.

\ As a recitalist, he works regularly with Julius Drake, appearing throughout Europe and North America, and is a frequent guest at the Wigmore Hall. He has recorded a number of song discs in the Hyperion Schubert series with Graham Johnson, including An 1827 Schubertiade. His solo disc entitled A Song - For Anything, a collection of songs by Charles Ives, has recently been released by Hyperion Records to great critical acclaim.

\On CBC records his disc Songs of Travel won the 1998 Canadian Juno Award for best Classical Album and he has also released the complete songs of Henri Duparc. Also recently released are his recordings of Mozart’s Requiem and Handel's  Messiah with Nicklaus Harnoncourt for Deutsche Harmonia Mundi.

Gerald Finley began singing as a chorister in Ottawa, Canada, and completed his musical studies in the UK at the Royal College of Music, King’s College, Cambridge, and the National Opera Studio with the support of the Friends of Covent Garden, The Countesss of Munster Musical Trust, and was the winner of Glyndebourne’s John Christie Award.

Date Last Edited: 27th March 2006

Repertoire or Discography

Hogwood (Decca)

Dido and Aeneas           Jacobs / OAE (Harmonia  Mundi)

Schubert

Schubert Series              with Graham Johnson (Hyperion)

Schumann                    

Das Paradies und diePeri  Gardiner (DG)

Stanford

Orchestral Songs               Hickox / BBC NOW (Chandos) *

Turnage                       

The Silver Tassie             Paul Daniel / ENO (ENO Live)

Vaughan Williams            

Songs of Travel               with Stephen Ralls (CBC)

Pilgrim’s Progress           Hickox / ROH Orchestra (Chandos)

Webern                       

Kantate 2, op 31            Boulez (DG)

* Due for release in May 2006        

        

DVD/VIDEO

Britten              

Death in Venice               NVC Arts             

Owen Wingrave              Arthaus Musik

Mozart            

Le Nozze di Figaro          NVC Arts              

Saariaho

L'amour de loin                DG

Strauss

Capriccio                           Paris Opera

photo by: Sim Canetty-Clarke

Recordings Available
Management
CONTACT:,
 IMG Artists, North America
    152 W. 57 St., 5th fl.
    New York, NY 10019
    USA
    Email


 IMG Artists - Europe
    Lovell House, 616 Chiswick High Rd.,
    London, W4 5RX
    Great Britain
    Email

Reviews

“Monday's performance was a nice demonstration of how consistent quality beats star power any night of the week. Gerald Finley is the Met's new Don. A young Canadian, he has a lovely, cultured baritone, creates a convincing physical presence and moves athletically onstage.”
 New York Times, March 30, 2005

The stars were the pair of outstanding baritones. The wonderfully seasoned Gerald Finley snarled and hissed as the bullying Count, far more menacing than productions usually allow, and all the more convincing for it"
Fiona Maddocks, Evening Standard, 1st  February 2006

'Gerald Finley alone would have been worth the ticket. The choral portion of Beethoven’s Ninth could rarely have been reached with such urgent eloquence as he generated on Saturday night.'
Geoff Brown, The Times, 3 May 2006

Recommended Recordings
 
 
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