Upshaw, Dawn
Dawn Upshaw
Opera singer
Began Road to International Career
Natural Talent Combined With Scholarship
Even though Dawn Upshaw is one of the most sought-after contemporary performers on the operatic and concert stage, she is in some ways an unlikely star. Raised by parents who, as amateur performers, specialized in songs by folk greats Peter, Paul and Mary and Bob Dylan, her early musical heroes were Linda Ronstadt and Barbra Streisand, and she even briefly considered a career singing commercial jingles. She was not at all impressed by her first exposure to opera—a production of Rossini’s Barber of Seville— while she was in high school and did not become serious about singing operatic roles until her audition in 1984 for the Metropolitan Opera’s (Met) Young Concert Artists program.
Even after achieving international fame, Upshaw is something of an atypical celebrity—an “anti-diva,” as David Patrick Stearns of Stereo Review has called her. In a profession where monumental egos have become legendary, Upshaw remains modest and self-critical, once telling Gramophone’s Edward Seckerson, “I don’t have an incredible voice; I don’t think that I have a particularly individual sound.” And although the rigorous demands of a performing career have been known to wreak havoc on the families of many artists, Upshaw has carefully guarded her private life, often bringing her husband and daughter with her on tour and insisting on at least one full month off a year to spend with them. As she confided to Stearns, “I’ve always found my sense of identity from my family, not through performing. And that will always be most important.”
An Inventive Performer
As remarkable as Upshaw’s path to stardom has been, her choice of repertoire and the manner in which she has presented it in recital and on recording. Although she has been widely acclaimed in mainstream operatic roles, such as those in Mozart’s operas, she made a commitment early in her career to champion contemporary music, especially works by American composers. She has followed through on her decision by premiering roles—such as the lead in William Mayer’s controversial Death in the Family— programming contemporary vocal literature on her recitals, and recording works by such American composers as John Harbison, Gian Carlo Menotti, Samuel Barber, and Charles Ives.
Upshaw has also tried to bring a new freshness to the time-honored traditions of the vocal recital; she enjoys chatting with the audience during her performances and occasionally builds recitals around a single theme. In one performance she chose “Childhood,” beginning with the Mussorgsky song cycle The Nursery and ending
For the Record…
Born July 17, 1960, in Nashville, TN; daughter of a psychotherapist and a teacher; married Michael Nott (a musicologist), 1986; children: Sarah Elizabeth. Education: Illinois Wesleyan University, B.A., 1982; Manhattan School of Music, M.A., 1984; studied with Jan DeGaetani at summer workshops in Aspen, CO.
Opera singer and concert performer. Attended apprenticeship program and debuted as Countess Ceprano in Verdi’s Rigoletto, Metropolitan Opera, New York City, 1984-85; sang soprano lead in premiere of William Mayer’s Death in the Family, St. Louis, MO, 1986; replaced Kathleen Battle as Adina in Donizetti’s L’elisir d’amore, Metropolitan Opera, 1988; sang in four Mozart productions, Metropolitan Opera, 1991-92; appeared in concert with Los Angeles Philharmonic, Atlanta Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra, and other ensembles; toured with Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center; performed in festivals in Edinburgh, Scotland, and Aix-en-Provence, France, 1992.
Selected awards: Winner of Young Concert Artists International Auditions, 1984; first prize, Walter Naumberg Vocal Competition, 1985; Grammy awards, 1989, for Knoxville: Summer of 1915, and 1991, for The Girl With Orange Lips.
Addresses: Agent —Agnes Bruneau and Associates, 155 West 68th Street, No. 1010, New York, NY 10023. Record company —Elektra/Nonesuch, 75 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY 10019.
with Brahms’s lullaby. Her inventiveness is even visible in the packaging of her second solo recording, The Girl With Orange Lips, which features a provocative photo of her taken at the Bronx Botanical Gardens. “People have an idea of what classical records should look like,” she expressed to Stearns, “and I think that’s a little ridiculous.”
Although she sang informally with her parents and was a choir member in high school, Upshaw began her formal music training at Illinois Wesleyan, where she studied with David Nott. Nott’s son Michael, a musicologist, became Upshaw’s husband in 1986. After graduating, the singer moved to New York, where she studied voice with Ellen Faull at the Manhattan School of Music. During summer workshops in Aspen at this time, she became acquainted with Jan DeGaetani, considered one of the country’s outstanding vocal interpreters of contemporary music. DeGaetani had a profound impact on Upshaw’s career; as Upshaw told Susan Elliott of the New York Times, “I was always aware of Jan’s particular devotion to 20th-century music; but also, just from watching and listening to her, I learned how important it is to have a lot of respect for myself. To do things I think are important.”
Began Road to International Career
The first important stepping-stone in Upshaw’s career was her success in 1984 at international auditions sponsored by Young Concert Artists, which led to an apprenticeship at the Metropolitan Opera. Upshaw made her operatic debut there during the 1984-85 season, singing the small role of Countess Ceprano in Verdi’s Rigoletto. She also developed a friendship and important working relationship with the Met’s artistic director, James Levine, with whom she has since appeared on several recordings.
In 1985 Upshaw shared first prize in the Naumberg competition, subsequently giving a recital at the Lincoln Center and recording her first solo disc for Musicmasters. Another major break came at the Met in 1988, when she filled in for an ailing Kathleen Battle in the role of Adina in Donizetti’s L’elisir d’amore. Upshaw’s career has skyrocketed ever since; she has received requests to perform at opera houses and festivals throughout the United States and Europe, has traveled on lengthy recital tours, and has appeared on several highly acclaimed recordings, two of which have won Grammy Awards.
Natural Talent Combined With Scholarship
Throughout her career Upshaw has been praised for the warmth and freshness of her tone and the effortlessness of her vocal technique. Reviewing Upshaw’s performance as Pamina in Mozart’s Magic Flute, Bernard Holland of the New York Times called her “the radiant pure center of the evening.” In addition, David Stearns has written of her “spring-water-fresh vocal quality, rare directness, and simplicity of manner.”
Yet, part of what has made Upshaw a truly outstanding artist has been her striving for more than just sheer beauty of tone. As she told Connoisseur’s Elizabeth Riely, “I don’t think about sound alone in singing. That comes before. Ultimately, in performance I forget about the technique. I try to get the message across through the music the composer has written.” To do this, Upshaw studies the texts of the pieces she sings in tremendous depth, exploring the details and nuances of the words in order to communicate them to her audience. “I try to have a solid understanding of the text—not just what it’s saying, but what it means and why the composer has set it in a particular way,” she commented to Elliot. “And I go for a certain naturalness and simplicity, because through that, the message gets across much more easily than fussing about how I’m standing or even singing.”
It is the unlikely collection of elements she embodies—the informal, “girl-next-door” image combined with a brash sense of musical adventure and a profound dedication to the art of singing—that has no doubt endeared Upshaw to audiences, critics, and fellow musicians. Although the singer herself may at times seem surprised at the turns her life has taken, there are those who find her talent a natural gift that could not go unexpressed. As the great conductor Robert Shaw declared, according to Elliott, “It’s [Upshaw’s] nature to sing, just like it’s a bird’s nature. That’s why she’s here on earth.”
Selected discography
Naumberg Foundation Presents: Works by Wolf, Strauss, Rachmaninoff, Ives and Weill, Musicmasters, 1986.
Strauss, Ariadne aufNaxos, Deutsche Grammophon, 1986.
Knoxville, Summer of 1915, Elektra/Nonesuch, 1989.
Vivaldi, Gloria in D; J. S. Bach, Magnificat in D, Telarc, 1989.
Donizetti, L’elisir d’amore, Deutsche Grammophon, 1990.
Schubert, Mass No. 2, Telarc, 1990.
American Elegies, Elektra/Nonesuch, 1991.
Charpentier, TeDeum, Magnificat, EMI, 1991.
The Girl With Orange Lips, Elektra/Nonesuch, 1991.
Mozart, Lucio Silla, Teldec, 1991.
Mozart, The Magic Flute, EMI, 1991.
Mozart, The Marriage of Figaro, Deutsche Grammophon, 1991.
Gorecki, Symphony No. 3, Elektra/Nonesuch, 1992.
Mozart, La Finta Giardiniera, Teldec, 1992.
Sources
Connoisseur, February 1988.
Gramophone, November 1991.
New York Times, February 4, 1990; February 10, 1990; September 28, 1991; November 10, 1991; December 17, 1991; February 15, 1992.
Opera News, February 2, 1991.
Stereo Review, June 1992; July 1992; September 1992.
Wall Street Journal, April 27, 1990.
Additional information for this profile was obtained from Agnes Bruneau and Associates, 1992.
—Jeffrey Taylor
Upshaw, Dawn
Dawn Upshaw
Opera singer
Even though Dawn Upshaw is one of the most sought-after contemporary performers on the operatic and concert stage, she is in some ways an unlikely star. Raised by parents who, as amateur performers, specialized in songs by folk greats Peter, Paul and Mary and Bob Dylan, her early musical heroes were Linda Ronstadt and Barbra Streisand, and she even briefly considered a career singing commercial jingles. She was not at all impressed by her first exposure to opera—a production of Rossini's Barber of Seville—while she was in high school, and she did not become serious about singing operatic roles until her audition in 1984 for the Metropolitan Opera's (Met) Young Concert Artists program.
Even after achieving international fame, Upshaw remained something of an atypical celebrity, an "antidiva," as David Patrick Stearns of Stereo Review called her. In a profession where monumental egos have become legendary, Upshaw remains modest and self-critical, once telling Gramophone 's Edward Seckerson, "I don't have an incredible voice; I don't think that I have a particularly individual sound." The rigorous demands of a performing career have been known to wreak havoc on the families of many artists, but Upshaw has carefully guarded her private life, often bringing her husband and daughter with her on tour, and insisting on at least one full month off each year to spend with them. As she confided to Stearns, "I've always found my sense of identity from my family, not through performing. And that will always be most important."
As remarkable as Upshaw's path to stardom has been, her choice of repertoire and the manner in which she has presented it in recital and on recordings are equally noteworthy. Although she has been widely acclaimed in mainstream operatic roles, such as those in Mozart's operas, she made a commitment early in her career to champion contemporary music, especially works by American composers. She has followed through on her decision by premiering such roles in her recitals, and recording works by such American composers as John Harbison, Gian Carlo Menotti, Samuel Barber, and Charles Ives.
A Fresh Approach to the Classics
Upshaw has also tried to bring a new freshness to the time-honored traditions of the vocal recital; she enjoys chatting with the audience during her performances and occasionally builds recitals around a single theme. In one performance she chose "Childhood," beginning with the Mussorgsky song cycle The Nursery and ending with Brahms's lullaby. Her inventiveness is even visible in the packaging of her second solo recording, The Girl With Orange Lips, which featured a provocative photo of her taken at the Bronx Botanical Gardens. "People have an idea of what classical records should look like," she expressed to Stearns, "and I think that's a little ridiculous."
Although she sang informally with her parents and was a choir member in high school, Upshaw began her formal music training at Illinois Wesleyan, where she studied with David Nott. Nott's son Michael, a musicologist, became Upshaw's husband in 1986. After graduating, the singer moved to New York, where she studied voice with Ellen Faull at the Manhattan School of Music. During summer workshops in Aspen she became acquainted with Jan DeGaetani, considered one of the country's outstanding vocal interpreters of contemporary music. DeGaetani had a profound impact on Upshaw's career; as Upshaw told Susan Elliott of the New York Times, "I was always aware of Jan's particular devotion to 20th-century music; but also, just from watching and listening to her, I learned how important it is to have a lot of respect for myself. To do things I think are important."
The first important stepping-stone in Upshaw's career was her success in 1984 at international auditions sponsored by Young Concert Artists, which led to an apprenticeship at the Metropolitan Opera. Upshaw made her operatic debut there during the 1984-85 season, singing the small role of Countess Ceprano in Verdi's Rigoletto. She also developed a friendship and important working relationship with the Met's artistic director, James Levine, with whom she has since appeared on several recordings.
Rising Star
In 1985 Upshaw shared first prize in the Naumberg competition, subsequently giving a recital at the Lincoln Center and recording her first solo disc for Musicmasters. Another major break came at the Met in 1988, when she filled in for an ailing Kathleen Battle in the role of Adina in Donizetti's L'elisir d'amore. Upshaw's career has skyrocketed ever since. She has received requests to perform at opera houses and festivals throughout the United States and Europe, has traveled on lengthy recital tours, and has appeared on several highly acclaimed recordings, three of which have won Grammy Awards.
Throughout her career Upshaw has been praised for the warmth and freshness of her tone and the effortlessness of her vocal technique. Reviewing Upshaw's performance as Pamina in Mozart's Magic Flute, Bernard Holland of the New York Times called her "the radiant pure center of the evening." In addition, David Stearns has written of her "spring-water-fresh vocal quality, rare directness, and simplicity of manner."
For the Record . . .
Born on July 17, 1960, in Nashville, TN; daughter of a psychotherapist and a teacher; married Michael Nott (a musicologist), 1986; children: Sarah Elizabeth. Education: Illinois Wesleyan University, bachelor's degree, 1982; Manhattan School of Music, master's degree, 1984; studied with Jan DeGaetani at summer workshops in Aspen, CO.
Opera singer and concert performer. Attended apprenticeship program and debuted as Countess Ceprano in Verdi's Rigoletto, Metropolitan Opera, New York City, 1984-85; sang soprano lead in premiere of William Mayer's Death in the Family, St. Louis, MO, 1986; replaced Kathleen Battle as Adina in Donizetti's L'elisir d'amore, Metropolitan Opera, 1988; sang in four Mozart productions, Metropolitan Opera, 1991-92; appeared in concert with Los Angeles Philharmonic, Atlanta Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra, and other ensembles; toured with Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center; performed in festivals in Edinburgh, Scotland, and Aix-en-Provence, France, 1992; released million-selling recording of Górecki's Symphony No. 3, 1992; released Dawn Upshaw Sings Rodgers & Hart, 1996; released tribute album Hommage à Jane Bathori: The Inspiring Muse, 1999; released world premiere recording of John Adams's El Niño, 2001; joined faculty, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY, 2004; inaugurated "Perspectives" series, Carnegie Hall, 2004-05.
Awards: Winner of Young Concert Artists International Auditions, 1984; first prize, Walter Naumberg Vocal Competition, 1985; Grammy Awards, Best Classical Vocal Soloist Performance for Knoxville: Summer of 1915, 1989; Best Classical Vocal Soloist for The Girl With Orange Lips, 1991; Best Chamber Music Performance (with Kronos Quartet) for Berg's Lyric Suite, 2004.
Addresses: Agent—Agnes Bruneau and Associates, 155 West 68th St., ... 1010, New York, NY 10023. Record company—Nonesuch Records, 1290 Ave. of the Americas, New York, NY 10018.
Yet part of what has made Upshaw a truly outstanding artist has been her quest for more than just sheer beauty of tone. As she told Connoisseur 's Elizabeth Riely, "I don't think about sound alone in singing. That comes before. Ultimately, in performance I forget about the technique. I try to get the message across through the music the composer has written." To do this, Upshaw studies in depth the texts of the pieces she sings, exploring the details and nuances of the words in order to communicate them to her audience. "I try to have a solid understanding of the text—not just what it's saying, but what it means and why the composer has set it in a particular way," she commented to Elliot. "And I go for a certain naturalness and simplicity, because through that, the message gets across much more easily than fussing about how I'm standing or even singing."
It is the unlikely collection of elements she embodies—the informal, "girl-next-door" image combined with a brash sense of musical adventure and a profound dedication to the art of singing—that has endeared Upshaw to audiences, critics, and fellow musicians. Although the singer herself may at times seem surprised at the turns her life has taken, there are those who find her talent a natural gift that could not go unexpressed. As the famous conductor Robert Shaw declared, according to Elliott, "It's [Upshaw's] nature to sing, just like it's a bird's nature. That's why she's here on earth."
Remained Grounded
As Upshaw's career developed, she intensified each part of her musical personality while still holding them all in a delicate balance. The woman-next-door quality was underscored when Upshaw revealed to a reporter that she herself still cleaned the bathrooms of her family's suburban New York City home—hardly traditional diva behavior. As for music itself, Upshaw continued to champion new music, giving the premieres of some 40 new works in the early 2000s alone. But she also developed into an ideal interpreter of Broadway show material, as on 1996's Dawn Upshaw Sings Rodgers & Hart. Her light voice occupies that space between classical and theatrical vocal technique where many of the Great White Way's early performers operated. Upshaw's pop recordings have often had the same adventurous spirit she brought to classical music. Her Dawn Upshaw Sings Vernon Duke album of 1998 resurrected the work of an immigrant composer whose hits included "April in Paris" and "I Like the Likes of You," and whose work has gradually been forgotten in recent years.
Ironically, it was a contemporary classical recording, not a pop disc, that became Upshaw's biggest seller and brought her worldwide fame. Her 1992 recording of Polish composer Henryk Górecki's Symphony No. 3 ("Symphony of Sorrowful Songs"), a grim yet meditative work on the theme of the Holocaust, sold over a million copies worldwide and became the best-selling contemporary classical release of all time. The texts Upshaw sang included a 15th-century Polish prayer, another prayer by an 18-year-old girl that was found inscribed on the wall of a Nazi prison, and a Polish folk song about a mother trying to find the dead body of her child. The recording, conductor David Zinman told Salon, "changes people's lives. They're stunned. They don't know what it is. I'm told people stop their cars when they hear it on the radio."
Perhaps the most versatile singer of her time, Upshaw has continued to perform traditional operatic repertory, art song recitals, and vocal music from the earlier eras of classical music. By the early 2000s, she could have her pick of the new vocal works written by the top composers worldwide, and her name was associated with major premieres such as that of John Adams's modern Nativity oratorio El Niño in 2003. She worked several times with the innovative Kronos Quartet of San Francisco, earning her third Grammy Award for the 2004 recording she made with them of Alban Berg's Lyric Suite in 2004. That year, Upshaw became a faculty member at the Bard University Conservatory of Music in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, and became the first artist to appear in a brand-new "Perspectives" series at Carnegie Hall.
Selected discography
Naumberg Foundation Presents: Works by Wolf, Strauss, Rachmaninoff, Ives and Weill, Musicmasters, 1986.
Strauss, Ariadne auf Naxos, Deutsche Grammophon, 1986.
Knoxville, Summer of 1915, Elektra/Nonesuch, 1989.
Vivaldi, Gloria in D, Telarc, 1989.
J. S. Bach, Magnificat in D, Telarc, 1989.
Donizetti, L'elisir d'amore, Deutsche Grammophon, 1990.
Schubert, Mass No. 2, Telarc, 1990.
American Elegies, Elektra/Nonesuch, 1991.
Charpentier, Te Deum, Magnificat, EMI, 1991.
The Girl With Orange Lips, Elektra/Nonesuch, 1991.
Mozart, Lucio Silla, Teldec, 1991.
Mozart, The Magic Flute, EMI, 1991.
Mozart, The Marriage of Figaro, Deutsche Grammophon, 1991.
Gorecki, Symphony No. 3, Elektra/Nonesuch, 1992.
Mozart, La Finta Giardiniera, Teldec, 1992.
John Harbison, Simple Daylight; Words About Paterson, Nonesuch, 1993.
Long Time Ago: American Songs by Aaron Copland, Teldec, 1994.
White Moon: Songs to Morpheus, Nonesuch, 1996.
Dawn Upshaw Sings Rodgers & Hart, Nonesuch, 1996.
Forgotten Songs: Dawn Upshaw Sing Debussy, Sony, 1997.
Dawn Upshaw Sings Vernon Duke, Nonesuch, 1998.
Hommage à Jane Bathori: The Inspiring Muse, Erato, 1999.
Angels Hide Their Faces: Dawn Upshaw Sings Bach and Purcell, Nonesuch, 2001.
John Adams, El Niño, Nonesuch, 2001.
Canteloube, Chants d'Auvergne (2 vols.), Erato, 2002.
Mozart, Don Giovanni; Die Zauberflöte, Virgin, 2003.
(With the Kronos Quartet) Berg, Lyric Suite, Nonesuch, 2003.
Voices of Light: Music of Messiaen, Debussy, Golijov & Fauré, Nonesuch, 2004.
Sources
Periodicals
Boston Globe, January 31, 1993, p. B26.
Connoisseur, February 1988.
Daily Telegraph (London, England), January 28, 2003, p. 19.
Gramophone, November 1991.
Guardian (London, England), September 16, 1994, p. 17; May 12, 2000, p. 14; February 21, 2003, p. 6.
New York Times, February 4, 1990; February 10, 1990; September 28, 1991; November 10, 1991; December 17, 1991; February 15, 1992; May 2, 2000, p. E1.
Opera News, February 2, 1991.
Plain Dealer (Cleveland, OH), October 7, 1999, p. E4.
Stereo Review, June 1992; July 1992; September 1992.
Wall Street Journal, April 27, 1990.
Online
"Brilliant Careers: All-American Diva," Salon, http://archive.salon.com/bc/1999/03/30bc.html (December 14, 2004).
"Dawn Upshaw," All Music Guide,http://www.allmusic.com (December 14, 2004).
Additional information for this profile was obtained from Agnes Bruneau and Associates, 1992, and from a Bard College press release dated December 6, 2004.
—Jeffrey Taylor andJames M. Manheim
Upshaw, Dawn
Upshaw, Dawn
Upshaw, Dawn, greatly admired American soprano; b. Nashville, Tenn., July 17, 1960. She studied at 111. Wesleyan Univ. (B.A., 1982) and then pursued vocal training with Ellen Faull at the Manhattan School of Music in N.Y. (M.A., 1984); she also attended courses given by Jan DeGaetani at the Aspen (Colo.) Music School. In 1984 she won the Young Concert Artists auditions and entered the Metropolitan Opera’s young artists development program. She was co-winner of the Naumburg Competition in N.Y. (1985). After appearing in minor roles at the Metropolitan Opera in N.Y, she displayed her vocal gifts in such major roles as Donizetti’s Adina and Mozart’s Despina in 1988. In 1990 she sang Pamina in a concert performance of Die Zauberflöteat the London Promenade Concerts. In 1992 she appeared as the Angel in Messiaen’s Si. François d’Assiseat the Salzburg Festival. In 1995 she portrayed Strauss’s Sophie in Houston. In 1996 she was engaged as Handel’s Theodora at the Glyndebourne Festival. She sang Mozart’s Cherubino and Stravinsky’s Anne Trulove at the Metropolitan Opera in 1997. She also pursued a notably successful career as a soloist with major orchs. and as a recitalist. Her remarkable concert repertoire ranges from early music to the most intimidating of avant-garde scores.
—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire