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'''Cornelius Hauptmann''' (born 14 June 1951) is a German opera and concert singer ([[Bass (voice type)|bass]]).<ref>[http://bit.ly/2GqpFyX Cornelius Hauptmann] on Bach Cantatas Website</ref>
== Life and career ==
Born in [[Stuttgart]],<ref>[http://bit.ly/2G47NKA Hauptmann] on AllMusic</ref> Hauptmann studied at the [[State University of Music and Performing Arts Stuttgart]].<ref>[http://bit.ly/2GhkHnY Cornelius Hauptmann] biography</ref> There he passed his stage examination in 1982 and obtained - as a student of [[Jakob Stämpfli (bass)|Jakob Stämpfli]] - the soloist diploma at the [[University of the Arts Bern]]. Master classes with [[Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau]], [[Hans Hotter]], [[Elisabeth Schwarzkopf]], who supervised him for 24 years, and [[Eric Tappy]] made a significant contribution to his artistic development - as evidenced by numerous prizes and awards at international singing competitions. He was also a fellow of the [[Herbert von Karajan]] Foundation.
Hauptmann made his debut at the Staatstheater Stuttgart in 1982 and was a member of the opera houses in Heidelberg and Karlsruhe until 1989.
As a freelance concert and opera singer he has made guest appearances - primarily in Mozart's operas - in Munich, Leipzig, Orléans, Paris (Bastille and Châtelet), Lisbon, Madrid, Lyon, Berlin (Deutsche Oper), Amsterdam, Zurich, Vienna (Volksoper), etc. under conductors such as [[John Eliot Gardiner|Gardiner]], [[Heinrich Hollreiser|Hollreiser]], [[Zubin Mehta|Mehta]], [[Hartmut Haenchen|Haenchen]], [[Kent Nagano|Nagano]], [[Marc Piollet|Piollet]], [[Neville Marriner|Marriner]] and others.
Especially in the concert field Hauptmann made a name for himself under conductors like [[Frieder Bernius|Bernius]], [[Leonard Bernstein|Bernstein]], [[Gary Bertini|Bertini]], [[Pierre Boulez|Boulez]], [[Michel Corboz|Corboz]], [[John Eliot Gardiner|Gardiner]], [[Helmuth Rilling|Rilling]], [[Nikolaus Harnoncourt|Harnoncourt]], [[Christopher Hogwood|Hogwood]], [[Kurt Masur|Masur]], [[Václav Neumann|V. Neumann]], [[Michael Tilson Thomas|Tilson Thomas]], [[Franz Welser-Möst|Welser-Möst]], [[Sigiswald Kuijken]], [[Pierre Cao|Cao]] and others.
Hauptmann teaches singing in [[master class]]es alongside private students and is a member of the jury at various singing competitions.
As a member of the board of the , Hauptmann initiated the lullaby project, in which 52 song singers with German language roots sing 52 [[lullaby|cradle and lullabies]]. Since October 2008, this project has been produced by Stuttgart-based [[Carus-Verlag]] and [[Südwestrundfunk|SWR]] and supervised by Hauptmann as artistic director. From December 2009 on, SWR and other affiliated radio stations broadcast a new lullaby every week for one year, 2 CDs and accompanying books were released. This charity project ("Herzenssache" Foundation) is supported by the German Chancellor [[Angela Merkel]] as patron and by the publishers [[Reclam-Verlag|Reclam]] and ''[[Die Zeit]]''. The project has been continued with [[folk song]] since 2010 and with [[children's song]] since 2011. [[Christmas song]]s appeared in autumn 2012.<ref>[http://bit.ly/2G76sCK Corneliuis Hauptmann] on Nmz.de</ref>
For this project Hauptmann was awarded the "Gräfin-Sonja-Gedächtnispreis"<ref>[http://bit.ly/2Gkzpum "Gräfin-Sonja-Gedächtnispreis"]</ref> by Count Christian Bernadotte<ref>[http://bit.ly/2G47PSI Count Christian Bernadotte]</ref> on the island of Mainau by the "Singen mit Kindern" Foundation in December 2011.
Since August 2012 Hauptmann has been chairman of the board of the German Tonkünstlerverband Baden-Württemberg and since April 2014 president of the German Tonkünstlerverband DTKV.
== Selected discography ==
Hauptmann released numerous CDs: Passions by Bach, masses and operas by Mozart, Schumann's ''Paradies und Peri'' (Gardiner/DG), Monteverdi, Mendelssohn, Schütz, Schubert (Bernius/Carus); Haydn's ''[[Stabat Mater (Haydn)|Stabat mater]]'' ([[Trevor Pinnock|Pinnock]]/[[Deutsche Grammophon]]DG); by Enescu's [[Œdipe (opera)|Œdipe]] ([[Lawrence Foster|Foster]]/[[EMI]]); Mozart's ''[[The Magic Flute]]'' ([[Roger Norrington|Norrington]]/EMI and Kuijken/Bayer); Beethoven's ''[[Missa solemnis]]'' ([[Philippe Herreweghe|Herreweghe]]/[[Harmonia mundi]]); Mozart's ''[[Requiem (Mozart)|Requiem]]'' and ''[[Great Mass in C minor, K. 427|Great Mass in C minor]]'' (Bernstein/DG), as well as numerous other recordings.<ref>[http://bit.ly/2GlqGIw Cornelius Hauptmann] discography on Jpc</ref>
== References ==
== External links ==
*
* [http://bit.ly/2G47QpK Cornelius Hauptmann] Homepage
*
[[Category:1951 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:People from Stuttgart]]
[[Category:German operatic basses]]
[[Category:Voice teachers]]
[[Category:20th-century German singers]]
[[Category:21st-century German singers]]
== Life and career ==
Born in [[Stuttgart]],<ref>[http://bit.ly/2G47NKA Hauptmann] on AllMusic</ref> Hauptmann studied at the [[State University of Music and Performing Arts Stuttgart]].<ref>[http://bit.ly/2GhkHnY Cornelius Hauptmann] biography</ref> There he passed his stage examination in 1982 and obtained - as a student of [[Jakob Stämpfli (bass)|Jakob Stämpfli]] - the soloist diploma at the [[University of the Arts Bern]]. Master classes with [[Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau]], [[Hans Hotter]], [[Elisabeth Schwarzkopf]], who supervised him for 24 years, and [[Eric Tappy]] made a significant contribution to his artistic development - as evidenced by numerous prizes and awards at international singing competitions. He was also a fellow of the [[Herbert von Karajan]] Foundation.
Hauptmann made his debut at the Staatstheater Stuttgart in 1982 and was a member of the opera houses in Heidelberg and Karlsruhe until 1989.
As a freelance concert and opera singer he has made guest appearances - primarily in Mozart's operas - in Munich, Leipzig, Orléans, Paris (Bastille and Châtelet), Lisbon, Madrid, Lyon, Berlin (Deutsche Oper), Amsterdam, Zurich, Vienna (Volksoper), etc. under conductors such as [[John Eliot Gardiner|Gardiner]], [[Heinrich Hollreiser|Hollreiser]], [[Zubin Mehta|Mehta]], [[Hartmut Haenchen|Haenchen]], [[Kent Nagano|Nagano]], [[Marc Piollet|Piollet]], [[Neville Marriner|Marriner]] and others.
Especially in the concert field Hauptmann made a name for himself under conductors like [[Frieder Bernius|Bernius]], [[Leonard Bernstein|Bernstein]], [[Gary Bertini|Bertini]], [[Pierre Boulez|Boulez]], [[Michel Corboz|Corboz]], [[John Eliot Gardiner|Gardiner]], [[Helmuth Rilling|Rilling]], [[Nikolaus Harnoncourt|Harnoncourt]], [[Christopher Hogwood|Hogwood]], [[Kurt Masur|Masur]], [[Václav Neumann|V. Neumann]], [[Michael Tilson Thomas|Tilson Thomas]], [[Franz Welser-Möst|Welser-Möst]], [[Sigiswald Kuijken]], [[Pierre Cao|Cao]] and others.
Hauptmann teaches singing in [[master class]]es alongside private students and is a member of the jury at various singing competitions.
As a member of the board of the , Hauptmann initiated the lullaby project, in which 52 song singers with German language roots sing 52 [[lullaby|cradle and lullabies]]. Since October 2008, this project has been produced by Stuttgart-based [[Carus-Verlag]] and [[Südwestrundfunk|SWR]] and supervised by Hauptmann as artistic director. From December 2009 on, SWR and other affiliated radio stations broadcast a new lullaby every week for one year, 2 CDs and accompanying books were released. This charity project ("Herzenssache" Foundation) is supported by the German Chancellor [[Angela Merkel]] as patron and by the publishers [[Reclam-Verlag|Reclam]] and ''[[Die Zeit]]''. The project has been continued with [[folk song]] since 2010 and with [[children's song]] since 2011. [[Christmas song]]s appeared in autumn 2012.<ref>[http://bit.ly/2G76sCK Corneliuis Hauptmann] on Nmz.de</ref>
For this project Hauptmann was awarded the "Gräfin-Sonja-Gedächtnispreis"<ref>[http://bit.ly/2Gkzpum "Gräfin-Sonja-Gedächtnispreis"]</ref> by Count Christian Bernadotte<ref>[http://bit.ly/2G47PSI Count Christian Bernadotte]</ref> on the island of Mainau by the "Singen mit Kindern" Foundation in December 2011.
Since August 2012 Hauptmann has been chairman of the board of the German Tonkünstlerverband Baden-Württemberg and since April 2014 president of the German Tonkünstlerverband DTKV.
== Selected discography ==
Hauptmann released numerous CDs: Passions by Bach, masses and operas by Mozart, Schumann's ''Paradies und Peri'' (Gardiner/DG), Monteverdi, Mendelssohn, Schütz, Schubert (Bernius/Carus); Haydn's ''[[Stabat Mater (Haydn)|Stabat mater]]'' ([[Trevor Pinnock|Pinnock]]/[[Deutsche Grammophon]]DG); by Enescu's [[Œdipe (opera)|Œdipe]] ([[Lawrence Foster|Foster]]/[[EMI]]); Mozart's ''[[The Magic Flute]]'' ([[Roger Norrington|Norrington]]/EMI and Kuijken/Bayer); Beethoven's ''[[Missa solemnis]]'' ([[Philippe Herreweghe|Herreweghe]]/[[Harmonia mundi]]); Mozart's ''[[Requiem (Mozart)|Requiem]]'' and ''[[Great Mass in C minor, K. 427|Great Mass in C minor]]'' (Bernstein/DG), as well as numerous other recordings.<ref>[http://bit.ly/2GlqGIw Cornelius Hauptmann] discography on Jpc</ref>
== References ==
== External links ==
*
* [http://bit.ly/2G47QpK Cornelius Hauptmann] Homepage
*
[[Category:1951 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:People from Stuttgart]]
[[Category:German operatic basses]]
[[Category:Voice teachers]]
[[Category:20th-century German singers]]
[[Category:21st-century German singers]]
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