Baritone
Matthias Goerne has been noted for his interpretations of German lieder and orchestral song. He has also had success in a variety of operatic roles, both mainstream and contemporary, and not all of them in German.
Goerne was born in Weimar, then in East Germany, on March 31, 1967. He sang youth roles with the Weimar City Opera.
Goerne studied in Leipzig with Hans-Joachim Beyer, and then with the cream of the German lieder singers of the day,
Elisabeth Schwarzkopf and
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau and took several major competition prizes before singing in
Bach's St. Matthew Passion, BWV 244, under legendary conductor
Kurt Masur in 1990. He made his operatic debut in 1992 in Cologne, in
Hans Werner Henze's opera Der Prinz von Homburg. Another break was a prominent substitute appearance, in
Mahler's Des Knaben Wunderhorn, for the ailing
Fischer-Dieskau, in 1997. He has often sung vocal parts in works by
Mahler.
A cast member at the Dresden Staatsoper for many years,
Goerne has appeared increasingly often at other houses. He made his Covent Garden debut as Wozzeck in
Berg's opera of the same name in 2002, and the role of Marcello in
Puccini's La bohème, in Italian, is part of his repertory.
Goerne was an artist-in-residence at the
New York Philharmonic for the 2018-2019 season, and in 2019 he made return visits to the Salzburg Festival in Austria.
Goerne has performed many recitals devoted to the German lied, and among his major recording projects is a 12-volume
Schubert edition that appeared on the Harmonia Mundi label between 2008 and 2014.
Goerne's recording catalog is large and includes albums on Decca, Hyperion, and other labels, in addition to Harmonia Mundi. As his voice has deepened, he has essayed Wagnerian roles and issued the album
The Wagner Project in 2017. On Harmonia Mundi, he was heard on a recording of
Brahms' A German Requiem, Op. 45, in 2019, with the
Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra. Also, in 2019, he released an album of
Schumann lieder with
Leif Ove Andsnes that was nominated for a Grammy award.