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Eleonora Buratto, Giacomo Puccini, Jonathan Tetelman, Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia & Daniel Harding

Puccini: Tosca, Act III: O dolci mani

Eleonora Buratto, Giacomo Puccini, Jonathan Tetelman, Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia & Daniel Harding

2 SONGS • 8 MINUTES • NOV 29 2024

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℗© 2024 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin

Artist bios

Tenor Jonathan Tetelman has been active mostly in Britain and continental Europe. He was signed to the Deutsche Grammophon label in 2021.

Tetelman was born in Castro, Chile, in 1988 but was adopted as a baby by American parents and raised in Princeton, New Jersey. He sang in choirs as a youth and actually made his recording debut as early as 2004 on a set of Christmas albums issued by the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. Tetelman attended the Manhattan School of Music from 2007 to 2011, studying baritone voice with Maitland Peters. He went on to New York's Mannes College of Music, resolving to switch to tenor voice but quitting in frustration due to the difficulty of the change. For several years, he worked outside of opera, including a stint as a New York club DJ. He returned to voice studies, working with private teachers Mark Schnaible and Patricia McCaffrey.

Tetelman soon began to find operatic roles, many of them in Britain and continental Europe. He has specialized in Italian and French repertory. Among Tetelman's specialties is the role of Rodolfo in Puccini's La bohème, which he has sung at the Komische Oper Berlin and the English National Opera. He excels in several other Puccini roles, including Cavaradossi in Tosca and Pinkerton in Madama Butterfly, as well as in the roles of Alfredo in Verdi's La traviata and in the title role of Massenet's Werther. Tetelman has appeared at such major houses as the Gran Teatro del Liceo in Barcelona, the Semperoper in Dresden, and the Teatro Solís, in Montevideo, Uruguay. Closer to home, he has sung Verdi's Requiem with the Boston Symphony Orchestra at the Tanglewood Festival, replacing an ailing singer on short notice. He was slated to make his debut as Alfredo with the San Francisco Opera in a new production during the 2022-2023 season. Tetelman was signed to Deutsche Grammophon and released his debut album there, Arias, in 2022. ~ James Manheim

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Conductor Daniel Harding was a prodigy, earning worldwide renown while still in his teens. His early record of success continues in adulthood, with major conducting positions and a large catalog of recordings.

Harding was born in Oxford on August 31, 1975. Taking recorder lessons as a child, he attended Chetham's School of Music as a trumpeter and joined Britain's National Youth Orchestra at 13. The following year, Harding set his sights on a career as a conductor. He assembled an orchestra from among his fellow students, and when he was 17, he conducted them in Schoenberg's Pierrot Lunaire, not a simple score for a conductor. The performance went off well, and Harding brashly sent a tape to famed conductor Simon Rattle. Although at first, by his own testimony, Rattle thought Harding was crazy, but went to see a performance by the ambitious youngster and was favorably impressed. Harding became Rattle's assistant at the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and made his debut in 1994 with that orchestra. Word got around about the precocious conductor's talents. He was hired by composer Hans Werner Henze to assist with preparations for the Munich Biennial Festival, and he took a conducting master class with Pierre Boulez.

For the 1995-1996 season, he became the assistant conductor of the legendary Berlin Philharmonic under Claudio Abbado. When scheduled conductor Franz Welser-Möst fell ill, Harding stepped in without rehearsal to lead the orchestra in a difficult program of music by Berlioz, Brahms, and Dvořák, earning critical acclaim and international attention. He became the youngest conductor ever to lead a BBC Proms Concert in 1996, and the following year his career was launched as he took on conducting positions at the Trondheim Symphony Orchestra in Norway and the Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie in Bremen, Germany. Leaving the latter group in 2003, he was appointed principal guest conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra the following year. Harding became the principal conductor of the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra in 2007, remaining in that position as of the early 2020s. He also held chief conductor positions with the Mahler Chamber Orchestra from 2003 to 2011 (staying on as laureate) and with the Orchestre de Paris from 2015 to 2018. Harding held a variety of major guest conducting positions not only with orchestras but also at opera houses, including Italy's La Scala.

Harding has recorded prolifically with almost all of the orchestras with which he has been associated, issuing albums on Virgin, EMI, Harmonia Mundi, and other major labels. In 2020, he led the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra in performances of Schoenberg's Violin Concerto and Verklärte Nacht, featuring violinist Isabelle Faust. In addition to his busy conducting schedule, Harding maintains his status as a licensed airline pilot, flying part-time for Air France as of the early 2020s. ~ James Manheim

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Language of performance
Italian
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