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Richard Conrad


Richard Conrad (born 1935) is an American singer whose voice has at times inhabited both the tenor and baritone ranges. He has sung in opera, cabaret and musicals. He is perhaps best known for his 1963 recorded collaboration with Joan Sutherland and Marilyn Horne, conducted by Richard Bonynge, known as The Age of Bel Canto.

Richard Conrad studied in Boston with Harry Euler Treiber, in Germany with Gisela Rohmert, and had other studies under Felix Wolfes, Aksel Schiøtz, and Pierre Bernac. In his early years Conrad was a light baritone. He soon developed the ability to pass easily into the "head" register as well as the technical facility to manage the most intricate florid passages. His teacher (Treiber) and others began to recommend that he might emulate the "baritones" of the 18th and early 19th centuries, many of whom sang as tenors, and He began exploring the bel canto and unusual coloratura tenor repertoire. His operatic debut was in Boston in 1961 singing in the American premiere of Mozart's La finta semplice, and later that year he made his recital debut in Washington, DC. In 1963 he was brought to the attention of Joan Sutherland and Richard Bonynge with whom he made a series of historic recordings of the florid bel canto repertoire. In 1966 he settled in Rome, Italy and performed in opera, with orchestra, in recital, and on radio and television in many countries of Europe, England, the United States, Canada, and Africa.He returned to Boston in 1980 and founded Boston Academy of Music (a reincarnation of a previously defunct organization of the same name). He managed the concert and opera repertory company for 23 years, presenting the American premiere of Sullivan's grand opera Ivanhoe and many operas which had never been heard in Boston (Strauss' Arabella, the original version of Verdi's La forza del destino, Rossini's La pietra del paragone, and many others). ( He now leads Bostonian Opera and Concert Ensemble with whom he produced (and sang the role of Golaud) the New England premiere of the original version of Debussy's Pelleas and Melisande, which was recorded by ARSIS AUDIO.) In 1983 he was the victim of a street mugging in which his voice was severely injured. After a long period of rehabilitation and retraining (under Gisela Rohment at the Lichtenberger Institut in Germany),he reemerged (again as a baritone), specializing in the comic roles of Gilbert and Sullivan and the Italian bel canto composers.

In 1985 he began touring in revues of music by Cole Porter, Jaques Brel, Jerome Kern, Kurt Weill, and Noel Coward. He made his theater debut in the premiere of Bill Russell's "Elegies for Angels, Punks, and Raging Queens" (New York 1990), and sang in the premiere of "Move!" at the Carre Theater in Amsterdam the following year. He has also enjoyed a success as Albin in La Cage aux Folles and as Cervantes/Don Quixote in Man of La Mancha.


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