Victoria de los Ángeles

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Victoria de los Angeles was one of the finest lyric sopranos in the decades after World War II. She was born Victoria Gómez Cima, and learned to sing and play piano and guitar while still in school. She entered the Conservatorio de Liceo in Barcelona to study piano and singing, completing the six-year program in three and graduating with full honors. Her membership in the Conservatory’s Ars Musicae gave her wide exposure to the art song repertory and Baroque and Renaissance music. De los Angeles debuted in a song recital at the Palau de la Música Catalana. Her operatic debut was also in Barcelona, at the Gran Teatro del Liceo, singing the Countess in Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro. Her national and international breakthroughs occurred after she won the Geneva International Singing Competition in 1947. She was immediately booked for performances in Madrid, singing in Manon and La Bohème opposite Beniamino Gigli before returning to Barcelona, where she moved into Germanic roles, adding Freischütz, Lohengrin, and Tannhäuser to her portrayals. The Competition had also brought her to the attention of the BBC, which brought her to London to sing in Manuel de Falla’s La Vida Breve in 1948. She signed an exclusive contract with EMI, recording at least 21 full-length operas, 25 solo recitals, and appearances on 40 other EMI releases over a 30-year period. She sang in most of the major houses of the world, touring in South Africa, the Middle East, Australia, East Asia, and Latin America (where she was a frequent guest artist at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires). She performed with conductors such as Thomas Beecham, Herbert von Karajan, Georg Solti, Pierre Monteux, Carlo Maria Giulini, Charles Münch, Zubin Mehta, and Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos. She had a wide vocal and dramatic range. In one evening, she sang both the roles of Nedda in I pagliacci and Santuzza in Cavalleria rusticana. As a recitalist, her vast and wide repertory embraced not only the central German and French Romantic and 20th century eras, but had a strong representation of early music, plus Spanish and Catalan folk songs. Besides having a lovely, warm, and dark tone, she was always noted for the intelligence of her portrayals and musical choices. She closely monitored her own singing. She retired from the operatic stage in 1969, after an exceptionally successful portrayal of Verdi’s Desdemona in Dallas, though she returned to Covent Garden as Carmen in 1978. However, she continued singing recitals. As time passed, she lowered the number of her appearances, yet reviews continued to stress the purity of her voice. She was heard to say that the moment she heard a wobble in her voice she would “shut up the shop.” One of her last appearances was in connection with the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona, where she still exhibited characteristic vocal purity. ~ Joseph Stevenson