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Soprano
Juliane Banse has a varied repertory of opera and concert music and is especially famed for her performances in
Mahler's symphonies. She is also a noted educator.
Banse was born in Tettnang, West Germany, on July 10, 1969. She moved with her family to Zurich, Switzerland, as a toddler. Musically talented, she took up the violin at age five and also took ballet lessons, making her stage debut as a dancer at the Zurich Opera House. One critic noted later that even as a singer, she retained the manner of a ballet dancer.
Banse switched to voice at 15, taking lessons with Paul Steiner and then with Ruth Rohner at the Zurich Opera House. She moved on to the Musikhochschule in Munich, studing with
Brigitte Fassbaender and Daphne Evangelatos.
Banse took first prize at the Kulturforum competition in Munich in 1989, and she has continued to win major prizes throughout her career.
The Munich prize led to a series of engagements in
Mozart roles for
Banse at the Komische Oper Berlin.
Banse made her recording debut in 1993 on the Jecklin label on a volume in a series of the complete songs of Othmar Schoeck. The
Mozart appearances in Berlin brought opera parts around Europe and a regular cast member slot at the Wiener Staatsoper beginning in 1994. That year, she made her debut with the
Vienna Philharmonic in a concert presentation of
Berg's Lulu Suite.
Banse made her U.S. debut the following year, with the
St. Louis Symphony in
Mahler's Symphony No. 2 in C minor. She has gone on to give
Mahler symphony performances under such conductors as
Simon Rattle,
Pierre Boulez, and
Lorin Maazel, among others.
Banse has appeared at many major opera houses and has a flourishing career as a lieder singer, having been accompanied by such major pianists as
András Schiff,
Maurizio Pollini, and
Helmut Deutsch. The latter was accompanist on her contributions to a complete cycle of Brahms songs on the CPO label. As of 2022,
Banse had appeared on more than 100 recordings, including, early that year, a reading of
Hans Werner Henze's Nachtstücke und Arien on the Naxos label. Her recorded output is notable for its breadth, including music from
Bach to the contemporary era.
Banse has been on the faculty of the Robert Schumann Hochschule Düsseldorf since early 2017. ~ James Manheim