Sanatçının Albümleri
Bruckner: Te Deum; Motetten; 150. Psalm
1999 · albüm
Cherubini: Requiem in D Minor
1999 · albüm
Bach, J.S.: Cantata BWV 140, Magnificat BWV 243
1979 · albüm
Maria Stader: Essentials
2019 · albüm
Beethoven: Fidelio (Recorded 1961)
2014 · albüm
Beethoven: Christ on the Mount of Olives, Op. 85
2013 · single
Mozart: Zaide, K. 344 (Fragment)
2012 · albüm
Brahms: Ein deutsches Requiem, Op. 45 (Live)
2011 · albüm
Pierre Monteux in Paris
2009 · albüm
Bruckner: Grosse Messe Nr.3; drei Motetten
2003 · albüm
Verdi: Messa da Requiem
1954 · albüm
Rossini: Stabat Mater
1955 · albüm
Mozart: Die Zauberflöte
1955 · albüm
Mozart: Arias
1962 · albüm
Benzer Sanatçılar
Ernst Haefliger
Sanatçı
Edith Mathis
Sanatçı
Rita Streich
Sanatçı
Barbara Bonney
Sanatçı
Cheryl Studer
Sanatçı
Gundula Janowitz
Sanatçı
Peter Schreier
Sanatçı
Arleen Auger
Sanatçı
Teresa Stich-Randall
Sanatçı
Margaret Price
Sanatçı
Münchener Bach-Chor
Sanatçı
Eugen Jochum
Sanatçı
Theo Adam
Sanatçı
Carlo Maria Giulini
Sanatçı
Irmgard Seefried
Sanatçı
Biyografi
Blessed with a silvery lyric soprano, true in timbre and beautifully trained, Maria Stader was unable to enjoy the opera career she deserved. Only 4'9" in height, she was deemed too diminutive to be a viable figure on-stage. Thus, she was confined to recording congenial opera roles and to making concert appearances. Despite what some might have regarded as a setback, she achieved genuine celebrity and became an artist favored by many first-rank conductors. Orphaned in Hungary during WWI, Stader was brought by the International Red Cross to Switzerland, where she was adopted by fisherman Hans Stader. She began her music training near her home on the shores of Lake Constance. Later, she studied with Hans Keller in Karlsruhe, Germany, with the famous dramatic soprano Giannina Arangi-Lombardi in Milan and with Therese Schnabel in New York. She attracted international attention when she won first prize for singing in the Concourse International d'Execution Musicale in Geneva in 1939. After WWII, Stader taught at the Musikacademie in Zurich while at the same time launching a concert career. Recognized as an exemplary Mozart singer, she was heard in other parts of Europe, Africa and the Far East, and eventually, in the United States. A rare opera appearance presented her as the Queen of the Night at Covent Garden during the 1949-1950 season. One of four sopranos to sing the role in that production, Stader did not attract sufficient attention to bring about reengagement. Her first American appearances took place in 1954 when she sang with the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Cleveland Orchestra. In 1956, she sang a series of concert performances in Israel of both Lucia di Lammermoor and Judas Maccabaeus under conductor Ferenc Fricsay. Among Stader's recordings, her Konstanze, Pamina, and Marzelline are attractive realizations. In the concert repertory, recordings of the Dvorák Requiem, several Mozart masses, and Mozart's Exsultate, jubilate are worthy examples of her art. Before her retirement in 1969, Stader published a text on the performance of Bach arias. During her career, she was honored with several awards, among them the Lilli Lehmann Medal, the Silver Mozart Medal (City of Salzburg), and the Austrian Order of Merit.