Candide, Act Two: Make Our Garden Grow (Finale)Marin Alsop, London Symphony Orchestra, Sir Thomas Allen, Leonardo Capalbo, Jane Archibald, Anne Sofie von Otter, Marcus Farnsworth, Thomas Atkins, Carmen Artaza, Guildhall School Young Artists & London Symphony Chorus
ALBUMAnne Sofie von Otter: Mahler - Song CyclesAnne Sofie von Otter
Mais álbuns de Anne Sofie von Otter
ALBUMBernstein: CandideMarin Alsop, London Symphony Orchestra, Leonardo Capalbo, Jane Archibald, Anne Sofie von Otter & Sir Thomas Allen
ALBUMA Simple SongAnne Sofie von Otter & Bengt Forsberg
ALBUMSebastian Fagerlund: HöstsonatenAnne Sofie von Otter, Erika Sunnegårdh, Tommi Hakala, Helena Juntunen, Nicholas Söderlund, Finnish National Opera Orchestra & John Storgårds
ALBUMSibelius: Tapiola, En saga & SongsAnne Sofie von Otter, The Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra & Hannu Lintu
ALBUMSo Many ThingsAnne Sofie von Otter & Brooklyn Rider
ALBUMDouce FranceAnne Sofie von Otter
ALBUMBizet: CarmenAnne Sofie von Otter, Marcus Haddock, Laurent Naouri, Lisa Milne, Philippe Jordan, London Philharmonic Orchestra & The Glyndebourne Chorus
ALBUMSchubert: Lieder With OrchestraAnne Sofie von Otter, Claudio Abbado, Chamber Orchestra of Europe & Thomas Quasthoff
ALBUMSogno baroccoAnne Sofie von Otter & Leonardo Alarcon
ALBUMA Summer's Day - Swedish Romantic SongsAnne Sofie von Otter
Playlists de artistas
Anne Sofie von Otter Essentials
Follow this mezzo's focused, beautiful voice as she takes on everything from Baroque to Abba.
Biografia do artista
Since the early 1980s, Anne Sofie von Otter has staked her reputation in the opera world on her versatility and urge to challenge both herself and her audience with her choice of repertoire. Born in 1955 in Stockholm, the Swedish mezzo-soprano attended conservatory in her hometown and in London, developing a coloratura proficiency that positioned her well for parts in comic opera and opera seria. Her breakout appearance was as Cherubino in The Marriage of Figaro—first at Covent Garden (1985) and then at the Met (1988)—but throughout her career, she has pushed beyond the types of roles usually associated with her vocal profile. She began a recording career with Deutsche Grammophon in the late 1980s, often collaborating with concert pianist Bengt Forsberg. Her wide-ranging discography includes lute song and early opera, Mahler orchestral art songs—including Des Knaben Wunderhorn, a stunning 1999 collaboration with celebrated bass-baritone Thomas Quasthoff—and pop collaborations like 2001’s For the Stars, her joint album with Elvis Costello. In the 2010s, she continued to take on increasingly daring projects, premiering new works by contemporary composers (Thomas Adès, Sebastian Fagerlund, Rufus Wainwright) while expanding the programming at her popular recitals to traverse traditions including grand opera, Impressionist art song, and holy minimalism, and incorporating tunes from Rodgers and Hammerstein, Kate Bush, and Björk.