René Pape made his LA Opera debut as the bass soloist in the Verdi Requiem (September 2007).
The German bass impressed Chicago recently with his Lyric Opera portrayal of Méphistophélès in Faust, his only U.S. engagements during the 2009/10 season. He then returned home to the Berlin State Opera for holiday performances as Sarastro in The Magic Flute. Meanwhile, he prepares for the role he was destined to perform: Wotan in Wagner's Das Rheingold, in a new production under Daniel Barenboim at La Scala in Milan, which opens on May 13, 2010.
Mr. Pape honored Carnegie Hall and his U.S. audiences with the first solo recital of his career in April 2009, earning accolades like a New York Times review that read, in part: "For pure, soul-wrenching introspection, nothing on the program - not even in Dichterliebe - quite matched Mr. Pape's rendering of the Wolf Michelangelo songs, particularly the central meditation on mortality, 'Alles endet, was entstehet.'"
A Chicago Sun-Times critic, reporting on Mr. Pape's Lyric Opera Méphistophélès in Faust, called him "today's reigning bass." Another typical review is this one from the Chicago Tribune: "Sealing the triumph was the debonair and sardonic Méphistophélès of René Pape..., a grand seigneur of evil, commanding his every scene with a wicked wink and an urbane shrug. What's more, his singing was a perfect match for his characterization: he rolled out his pliant, powerful bass for the Golden Calf song and the mocking serenade."
Mr. Pape is a dramatic animal whose onstage presence in a dozen roles regularly wins acclaim. Still, his fans yearn to hear him in the more intimate atmosphere of the recital. Acknowledging this, he is expanding his recital activities in Europe, starting in Seville on January 24, 2010, when, with fellow Dresden native, pianist Camillo Radicke, he performed a program of songs by Schubert, Wolf and Schumann.
An exclusive Deutsche Grammophon recording artist, René Pape just received a German ECHO Klassik award (equivalent to a Grammy) for his solo debut album, "René Pape: Gods, Kings & Demons" in the category "Operatic Recording of the Year: Arias and Duets." According to International Record Review magazine: "Pape seems to have everything, including a magnetism which he exerts not only when he appears on stage - how many performances of Tristan have been rescued from mediocrity by King Marke's arrival, when Pape is taking one of his favorite roles?… - but also on disc, as this first solo recital from him immediately testifies."
On a brand new recording for EMI Classics, Mr. Pape sings the bass part in Verdi's Requiem conducted by Antonio Pappano, which has earned significant praise for the German bass; London's Observer wrote "René Pape is an aristocratic, authoritative bass... . A total triumph." Mr. Pape repeated the Verdi Requiem in two Munich performances led by Valery Gergiev in January 2010, followed by the title part in two performances of Mendelssohn's oratorio Elijah in Barcelona in February.
In February and March 2010, at his home company, the Berlin State Opera, Pape reprises Méphistophélès in Faust; his signature role of King Marke in Tristan und Isolde; and Prince Gremin in Eugene Onegin. Most importantly, he participates in a special recital gala, a fundraiser on March 5 for the renovation of the famous home of the Berlin State Opera "Unter den Linden". Daniel Barenboim and James Levine will play both sets of Brahms Liebeslieder-Walzer (Op. 52 and Op. 65) with a quartet of top-flight singers - Dorothea Röschmann, Waltraud Meier, Matthew Polenzani, and Pape himself.
All of which leaves a little time for the man Opera News calls "the world's most charismatic bass" and the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung calls "the greatest operatic bass in the world" to finalize preparations for the role debut of a lifetime: as Wotan in Das Rheingold, in Milan with Barenboim in May 2010.