He won a gold medal
in a singing competition in Wales (1882). He emigrated to North America and
studied singing first in Pittsburgh and Cleveland, then in New York. After an
unsuccessful concert tour in England, he sang in New York churches. In 1903 he
made his official debut as an oratorio singer. In 1904 Walter Damrosch selected
him for a concert performance of ‘’Parsifal’’. In 1910 he was celebrated at the
Cincinnati Festival, where he also achieved great success in 1914, 1920, 1925
and 1927. In 1925 he sang the tenor solo in Mendelssohn's ‘’Elias’’ with great
success in New York. From 1925 to 1929 and still in 1934 (71 years old) he was
admired in New York at performances of the Messiah by Handel. In 1911 he came
to England and sang at the London Crystal Palace at the celebrations for the
coronation of George V in Handel's ‘’Messiah’’ and Mendelssohn's ‘’Elias’’. He
was considered one of the most important oratorio singers of his era. Enrico
Caruso attended his concerts in New York because he admired his incomparable
messa-di-voce technique. He didn't appear on stage.
HELLO AND WELCOME TO MY BLOG! MY NAME IS ASHOT ARAKELYAN, AND I’M A RECORD COLLECTOR. FORGOTTEN OPERA SINGERS IS THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE AND THE ONLY WEBSITE ENCYCLOPEDIA ON THE WEB DEDICATED TO THIS SUBJECT. IT PROVIDES BIOGRAPHIES, CHRONOLOGICAL INFORMATION, AND PHOTOS OF OVER 2,500 OPERA SINGERS. YOU CAN ALSO ORDER UNIQUE CDS OF THESE FORGOTTEN OPERA SINGERS HERE. IF YOU'RE ALREADY A CUSTOMER, I KINDLY ASK YOU TO RECOMMEND MY WEBSITE TO FRIENDS, RELATIVES, AND VOCAL MUSIC LOVERS.
Forgotten Opera Singers
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