Artist's albums
You Did Not Want For Joy
2023 · album
Sounds and Sweet Airs - A Shakespeare Songbook
2023 · album
Bach: Anna Magdalena Notebooks, 1722 and 1725
2023 · album
Elysium - A Schubert Recital
2023 · album
Wolf: Italienisches Liederbuch
2022 · album
String Quaret No. 2, Op. 10: III. Langsam, 'Litanei'
2022 · single
Trennung: Songs of Separation
2022 · album
Ice Land: The Eternal Music
2022 · album
Sævarsson: Requiem - II. Kyrie
2022 · single
Purcell - Birthday Odes for Queen Mary
2021 · album
Canteloube: Chants d'Auvergne
2021 · album
Album für die Frau
2021 · album
Purcell - Royal Odes
2021 · album
Bach: Cantata, BWV 199
2020 · album
The Contrast: English Poetry in Song
2020 · album
Mahler: Symphony No. 4 in G Major
2019 · album
Reason in Madness
2019 · album
Abbandonata - Handel Italian Cantatas
2018 · album
Handel: Ode for St Cecilia's Day
2018 · album
A Soprano's Schubertiade
2018 · album
Lost Is My Quiet
2017 · album
Bach: Cantatas for Soprano - Nos. 152, 199 & 202
2017 · album
A Verlaine Songbook
2016 · album
Come all ye songsters (Wigmore Hall Live)
2016 · album
Fleurs
2015 · album
Poulenc: Stabat Mater; 7 Répons des Ténèbres
2014 · album
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Biography
Carolyn Sampson has been proclaimed "the best British early music soprano by some distance" by the editors of Gramophone magazine. Often performing and recording the music of Handel, she has also appeared on conductor Masaaki Suzuki's cycle of Bach cantatas and has recorded music of eras later than the Baroque. Sampson was born on May 18, 1974, in Bedford, England. She attended the University of Birmingham, where she studied voice with Richard Smart and sang with the choir Ex Cathedra. She made her debut in Monteverdi's L'incoronazione di Poppea at the English National Opera and has appeared in many productions with that company. She has also appeared at the Paris Opera but most commonly performs in concert with leading early music ensembles, including The King's Consort, Collegium Vocale, and the Freiburger Barockorchester. Sampson has also appeared with major symphony orchestras, such as the NDR Radiophilharmonie and Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin. She made her solo recording debut in 2004 with a pair of albums on the Hyperion label (her credits date back to the 1990s), one featuring love songs from Rameau's operas and the other of Handel's Ode for St. Cecilia's Day, HWV 76. In 2005, Sampson recorded a newly discovered Bach cantata, Alles mit Gott und nichts ohn' Ihn, BWV 1127, with Suzuki, then in the process of recording a complete Bach cantata cycle, and she appeared on a number of releases in the cycle. In 2007, her performance at the Boston Early Music Festival production of Lully's Psyché was recorded and earned her a Grammy nomination. She went on to record other albums for the BIS label, home to the Suzuki recordings, in the 2010s, and she has also recorded for Vivat, Harmonia Mundi, and other labels. Although she has focused mostly on Baroque music, she has also recorded music by Charles Villiers Stanford, Hubert Parry, and Francis Poulenc, among other more recent composers. Sampson has appeared on more than 100 albums in all, including a recording of Canteloube's Songs of the Auvergne on BIS in 2021. ~ James Manheim, Rovi