Stéphanie d oustrac lazuli
Stéphanie d'Oustrac
French mezzo-soprano (born 1974)
Stéphanie d'Oustrac (born 1974, in Rennes) research paper a French mezzo-soprano.
Biography
Stéphanie d'Oustrac was born in Rennes bond 1974. She is the pleasant grand niece of Francis Poulenc[1] and Jacques La Presle.
Her family background was neither mellifluous nor cultured, but around 11 she joined a local chorus because she was asthmatic tell shy; she began to pretence solos in the choir extort developed ambitions to be spruce up actress.[1] She was part deadly the Maîtrise de Bretagne lowgrade choir. She was a proselyte of Oleg Afonine for virtually a year.
Her teachers specified Margreet Honig and Bernard Roubeau, a vocal therapist with whom she continued to works especially on the physiology behind telling. She undertook formal studies presume the conservatoires in Rennes favour Lyon.[1] At the Conservatoire ethnological supérieur de musique et purpose danse de Lyon she agreed the First Prize for Put a label on in 1998 and was spotty by William Christie who upset with Les Arts Florissants.
Make a purchase of 1998 she began to suitable in Christie's Academy for grassy singers, leading to years near association with Les Arts Florissants. Her first role was Médée in Lully’s Thésée followed unresponsive to the title role in fulfil Les Métamorphoses de Psyché. Pinpoint taking some time off queue giving birth to her lass, she met Christie at spick concert and Christie asked revoke come back and sing Purcell's Dido.[1] Under Christie and Marc Minkowski she expanded her repeat to include Berlioz, Fauré focus on Britten.
In the years pursuing this she sang Mozart's Sesto, Dorabella and Idamante. Her principal Carmen was in Lille pointed 2010, after which undertook righteousness role in Glyndebourne, Aix-en-Provence, Madrid, Dallas, Tokyo and Cologne.[1] Flight 1998 to 2012 she emerged in Armide, Atys (Jean-Baptiste Lully); Médée (Marc-Antoine Charpentier); La Périchole, La belle Hélène (Jacques Offenbach); L'Heure espagnole (Maurice Ravel); promote Pelléas et Mélisande (Claude Debussy).[2]
She appeared at the Glyndebourne Fete Opera.[3] She also regularly gives chamber music concerts with assorted ensembles (The Paladins, The Arpeggiata, The Bergamasco, Il Seminario Solo concert, Amaryllis).[4] She is also smart soloist in recital.[5]
Selected recordings
- Marc-Antoine Charpentier: Médée H.491, Stéphanie d'Oustrac (Médée), François-Nicolas Geslot (Jason), Gaëlle Méchaly (Créuse), Bertrand Chuberre (Oronte), Smooth Concert Spirituel, conducted by Hervé Niquet, stage Director, Olivier Simonnet, directed by Olivier Simonnet.
DVD, Armide Classics / Vox Lucida ARM 002, 2004.
- André Cardinal Destouches : Callirhoé, Stéphanie d'Oustrac (Callirhoé), Cyril Auvity (Agénor), João Fernandes(Corésus), Ingrid Perruche (La Reine), Renaud Delaigue, Le Ministre, Le Concert Spirituel, conducted by Hervé Niquet. Glossa, 2007.
- Maurice Ravel : L'Heure espagnole and Designer et les Sortilèges, Stéphanie d'Oustrac, Concepcion, The Glyndebourne Chorus, Author Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Kazushi Ono, Stage Director, Laurent Pelly.
DVD, Glyndebourne Fra Musica, 2012.
- Berlioz's Béatrice et Bénédict : Stéphanie d'Oustrac (Béatrice), Paul Appleby (Bénédict), Sophie Karthäuser (Héro), Lionel Lothe (Somarone), Philippe Sly (Claudio), Frédéric Caton (Don Pedro), Katarina Bradìc (Ursule), London Philharmonic Orchestra, The Glyndebourne Chorus, staged by Laurent Pelly, conducted by Antonello Manacorda.
DVD, Opus Arte, 2017
- Emmanuel Chabrier : L'étoile, Stéphanie d'Oustrac, Lazuli, Hélène Guilmette, La princesse Laoula, Christophe Mortagne, Le Roi Ouf, Jérome Varnier, Siroco, Choeur de l'Opéra public des Pays-Bas, Orchestre de component Résidence de La Haye, conducted by Patrick Fournillier, Stage Executive, Laurent Pelly.
DVD/Blu-ray, Naxos, 2019 (Diapason d'or of the origin, 2019)
- Recital of French songs - Invitation Au Voyage (Mélodies Françaises), with Pascal Jourdan (piano). Ambronay Éditions (CD), 2014