Updating shopping cart...

“A born communicator who loves words as much as music, he has reached out to audiences way beyond the rarefied temples of opera house and recital hall . . .”

The Times (London)

A Biographical Timeline

Born in North Wales in 1965, Bryn Terfel entered London’s Guildhall School of Music in 1984, studying first with Arthur Reckless and later with Rudolf Piernay. In 1988 he won the Kathleen Ferrier Memorial Scholarship and the following year graduated from the Guildhall, receiving the school’s Gold Medal. Shortly after that he represented Wales in the “Singer of the World” Competition in Cardiff and launched his career by winning the lieder prize.

1990

 

Opera debut as Guglielmo (Così fan tutte)and Figaro (Le nozze di Figaro) at Welsh National Opera; release of Monteverdi’s Vespers of the Blessed Virgin conducted by Sir John Eliot Gardiner

1991

 

English National Opera debut and US debut at Santa Fe as Figaro; release: Jochanaan in Strauss’s Salome under Giuseppe Sinopoli

1992

 

Breakthrough Salzburg Festival debut as Jochanaan; Covent Garden debut as Masetto (Don Giovanni); first artist to receive the Critics’ Circle Award for the most important contribution to British musical life; release: Angelotti in Puccini’s Tosca; named “Young Singer of the Year” by Gramophone

1993

 

Signs exclusive contract with Deutsche Grammophon; triumphant Vienna State Opera debut as Figaro; sings Ford in Falstaff at Welsh National Opera; “Newcomer of the Year” at the International Classical Music Awards; participates in the Wagner Gala Concert on New Year’s Eve with Claudio Abbado and the Berliner Philharmoniker

1994

 

Figaro at Covent Garden and at his Metropolitan debut; first recitals in London’s Wigmore Hall, at the Salzburg Festival and in Florence; US recital debut in New York’s Alice Tully Hall; soloist at the “Last Night of the Proms”. Releases: Figaro with Gardiner, Baron Mirko Zeta in Lehár’s Merry Widow under Gardiner; An die Musik – Schubert songs with pianist Malcolm Martineau (Gramophone Award)

1995

 

Leporello in Don Giovanni at the Met; Leporello and Figaro at the Salzburg Festival; Jochanaan at Covent Garden; recital debut at La Scala. Release of The Vagabond – songs by Vaughan Williams, Butterworth, Finzi and Ireland (Prix Caecilia, Edison Award, Gramophone Award)

1996

 

Debut recital at New York’s Carnegie Hall; releases include opera arias under James Levine (Grammy®) and Something Wonderful with songs by Rodgers & Hammerstein (Gramophone Award)

1997

 

La Scala opera debut as Figaro; release of Handel arias under Sir Charles Mackerras

1998

 

Hollywood Bowl debut. Releases: Leporello (Don Giovanni) under Abbado, Mephistopheles (Berlioz’s Damnation de Faust) with Myung-Whun Chung, requiems by Fauré and Duruflé also under Chung (Classical Brit Award) and If Ever I Would Leave You, a collection of famous Broadway songs

1999

 

Falstaff at Sydney Opera House, Chicago Lyric Opera and the re-opening of Covent Garden; debut as Don Giovanni in Paris; title role in Handel’s Saul under Mackerras at the Edinburgh Festival; release: Nick Shadow in Stravinsky’s The Rake’s Progress under Gardiner (Grammy®)

2000

 

Met appearances in Les Contes d’Hoffmann (four roles) and as Don Giovanni; Nick Shadow at San Francisco Opera; Mephistopheles at the Edinburgh Festival; first Faenol Festival (his own festival held annually in North Wales). Releases: his Welsh Album We’ll Keep a Welcome and Schumann lieder

2001

 

Don Giovanni in Vienna, Figaro in Tokyo, Figaro and Falstaff in Munich, Falstaff at the Salzburg Festival; tour of the Far East. Release: Falstaff with Abbado (Tokyo’s Record Academy Prize, Echo Award)

2002

 

Don Giovanni at Covent Garden, Falstaff at the Met and Bavarian State Opera, four roles in Les Contes d’Hoffmann in Paris, Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd (debut) in Chicago; his Faenol Festival wins the Welsh Tourism Award as “Greatest Show in Wales – Event of the Year 2001”. Release of Wagner arias (Prix Caecilia)

2003

 

Concert with Abbado at the Lucerne Festival; Faenol Festival includes an opera gala with José Carreras. Awarded a CBE for services to opera in the Queen’s New Year Honours list. Release of his platinum-selling album Bryn Terfel Sings Favourites with Sissel and Andrea Bocelli (Classical Brit Award). DVD release: Bryn Terfel Live in Concert

2004

 

“Male Artist of the Year” at the Classical Brit Awards. Debut as Wotan in Das Rheingold in Covent Garden’s new Ring production

2005

 

Debut as Wotan in Die Walküre at Covent Garden; appears with Plácido Domingo in Die Walküre (concert version) at the BBC Proms. Falstaff in debuts in Houston and Los Angeles. Releases: Silent Noon, a second anthology of English songs, Simple Gifts (Grammy®); on DVD: Don Giovanni from the Met under Levine

2006

 

Title role in Wagner’s Der fliegende Holländer with Welsh National Opera and Scarpia in Tosca at Covent Garden. Appears at the BBC Proms Concert where he is awarded The Queen’s Medal for Music by Elizabeth II. Receives the Shakespeare Prize from the Alfred Toepfer Stiftung, Hamburg for his “outstanding contributions to European cultural heritage in the English-speaking countries in Europe” and an Echo Award as “Singer of the Year”. Releases include Tutto Mozart! – favourites with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra under Mackerras

2007

 

Title roles in Don Giovanni and Falstaff in Vienna and Puccini’s Gianni Schicchiat Covent Garden; Sweeney Todd at London’s Royal Festival Hall (concert performance); Figaro at the Met. Opera arias in Munich, Hamburg and Dresden; a concert at the Tower of London

2008

 

One of the main highlights of the year is his appearance at the “Last Night of the Proms” in London’s Royal Albert Hall. Release of Terfel’s recording of favourite folksongs from the British Isles with the London Voices, London Symphony Orchestra and Barry Wordsworth

2009

 

Engagements at Covent Garden as Scarpia and the Dutchman, the latter also at the Bavarian State Opera; performs opera arias with Rolando Villazón and the Prague Philharmonia at the Paris Théâtre des Champs-Élysées; further concerts in the Czech Republic, the USA, UK and New Zealand; festival appearances include Bergen, Verbier and Edinburgh

2010

 

Among this year’s highlights are Wotan in Das Rheingold in Robert Lepage’s new production of Wagner’s Ring at the Metropolitan, Falstaff at the Opéra de Monte-Carlo, Scarpia at the Met, Hans Sachs in Die Meistersinger for Welsh National Opera, a Bad Boys European concert tour, an opera gala at his Faenol Festival with the WNO Orchestra and singers including Rolando Villazón, and a US recital tour with Malcolm Martineau. CD releases include his recording (with Paul Daniel conducting the Swedish RSO) of Bad Boys – characters from opera and musicals ranging from Mozart and Beethoven to Weill and Sondheim – as well as an album of Carols & Christmas Songs

2011

 

Plans include Wotan in Die Walküre in the new Met Ring andselected scenes from Wagner with the Los Angeles Philharmonic under Esa-Pekka Salonen

10/2010

Share