Liederabend Bryn Terfel

14. December 2026

Folk Band
Singers of the International Opera Studio


Musical Director:
Patrick Rimes

Cast


Bassbariton Bryn Terfel

Bryn Terfel

Bryn Terfel, bass-baritone from Wales, won the Song Prize in Cardiff in 1989. Since then, he has appeared at the world’s leading opera houses. His roles include, among others, the title role and Leporello in "Don Giovanni", Jochanaan in "Salome", Nick Shadow in "The Rake’s Progress", Wolfram in "Tannhäuser", and Balstrode in "Peter Grimes". He sang Hans Sachs in the acclaimed production of "Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg" at the Welsh National Opera, Wotan in the "Ring" cycle at the Royal Opera House London and the Metropolitan Opera New York, as well as Sweeney Todd at the English National Opera. His recent appearances include Scarpia ("Tosca") at the Bavarian State Opera Munich, the Royal Opera House, and the Met, Dulcamara ("L’elisir d’amore") and Don Basilio ("Il barbiere di Siviglia") at the Vienna State Opera, and Gianni Schicchi at the Verbier Festival. He has given recitals at venues including the Hamburg State Opera and in Budapest, and has performed with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic. In Faenol, North Wales, he directed his own festival for nine years. His discography includes operas by Mozart, Wagner, and Strauss, as well as over fifteen solo albums, for which he has received the Grammy, the Classical Brit, and the Gramophone Award. In 2003, Bryn Terfel was appointed Commander of the British Empire, received the Queen’s Medal for Music in 2006, was knighted in 2017, honoured with the title "Austrian Kammersänger" for his contributions to the Vienna State Opera, and received the European Culture Prize in 2022 at the Tonhalle Zurich. He was also a recipient of the Shakespeare Prize from the Alfred Toepfer Foundation and was awarded the "Freedom of the City of London" in 2015.

Tosca28 Sept / 2 / 8 / 11 / 15 / 19 Oct 2025 Liederabend Bryn Terfel14 Dec 2026
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Abstract

With dazzling variety and diverse formats, the extensive concert programme presents itself to audiences. In large symphonic forces, the Orchestra of the Zurich Opera House can be heard in seven Philharmonic Concerts, alternating between the Zurich Opera House and the Tonhalle. Internationally renowned soloists and guest conductors devote themselves to the great works from Beethoven to Strauss, as well as to fascinating discoveries from the concert repertoire. A special focus is placed on the Prokofiev cycle, created in collaboration with the Tonhalle Orchestra. Three concerts by Orchestra La Scintilla on period instruments, together with a series of gala and special concerts – including one with the Children’s Opera Orchestra – further enrich this wide-ranging programme.

In smaller and more individual formations, musicians from the Orchestra of the Zurich Opera House appear in the popular chamber concerts, which take place on Sunday mornings and Monday evenings. The Ensemble Opera Nova brings works from the late twentieth and the twenty-first centuries to the studio stage. The concert programme is rounded off by the song recitals, where some of the most beautiful and distinctive voices of our time can be heard.

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