Artist's albums
Pavarotti: Puccini, Verdi & Donizetti
2023 · album
Pavarotti: Italian Arias
2023 · compilation
Pavarotti: Great Arias
2023 · compilation
The World Of Pavarotti
2022 · compilation
O Sole Mio
2022 · album
Pavarotti sings Puccini
2022 · compilation
Nessun Dorma
2022 · single
La Bohème
2021 · album
King of the High Cs (60th Anniversary: 1961-2021)
2021 · compilation
Tenores en Vivo. Pavarotti. Doming. Carreras.
2021 · compilation
Classical Christmas Songs
2020 · compilation
The Three Tenors - In Concert, Rome 1990 (And Selected Highlights)
2020 · compilation
Miserere (Live)
2020 · single
Spirito Italiano
2020 · compilation
Pavarotti - The Greatest Hits
2019 · compilation
Perfect Day (Live)
2019 · single
Schubert: Ave Maria, D. 839 (Live)
2019 · single
The People's Tenor
2017 · album
Christmas With Pavarotti
2016 · album
Verdi: Un ballo in maschera (Live)
2016 · album
Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi (Live)
2016 · album
Une histoire d'amour avec le Québec
2015 · album
Luciano Pavarotti
2014 · album
The Maestro
2014 · album
Classic Duets
2014 · album
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Biography
One of the most successful and admired opera singers of all time, Luciano Pavarotti was king among tenors from the late 1960s through the 1990s. His voice was noted for its exciting upper register, and tailor-made for the operas of Verdi, Bellini, Donizetti, and Puccini, and as it darkened slightly over the years, for the verismo composers as well. His vocal longevity, which kept him singing youthfully well into his sixties, and still beautifully after that, was a credit to his commanding technique and artistry, and remarkable considering his nearly 40 years of performing. Pavarotti's father was a baker, and his mother worked in a cigar factory. As a boy, he sang alto in the cathedral choir, and when his voice changed he joined the Modena city choir. He had brief careers as a schoolteacher and an insurance agent; during that time, his major extracurricular activity was not music but soccer, and his play made him a local star. However, increased involvement in the choir (which took prizes in international competitions) led him to pursue vocal studies, and he eventually settled on singing as his aspiration. Pavarotti studied voice with Arrigo Polo in Modena, then with Ettore Campogalliani in Mantua. His operatic debut was as Rodolfo in La Bohème in Reggio Emilia (April 19, 1961), and soon increasing success led to a debut in Amsterdam on January 18, 1963, as Edgardo in Lucia di Lammermoor. After singing the same role with Joan Sutherland in Miami in 1965, he was engaged to travel with her in the Sutherland Williamson International Grand Opera Company, touring Australia. In 1966 he appeared at Covent Garden as Tonio in La fille du régiment, where his seemingly effortless handling of the nine successive high Cs in the aria "Pour mon âme" sent his career into high orbit. He repeated the feat at the Metropolitan Opera in 1972, and for more than two decades after that he was a fixture on the operatic scene, appearing in nearly every major European and American house, and even China, where he performed Puccini's La bohème in the 1980s. Pavarotti appeared in the first "Live from the Met" broadcast on the PBS network and was the most consistent draw on that series for years. His outstanding catalogue of recordings on the London (Decca) record label preserves nearly every role he ever performed and is hard to match for its quality and scope. His charity work included AIDS benefit concerts and world hunger gala events, as well as his "Pavarotti and Friends" concerts to benefit children, especially in the former Yugoslav states. He also founded a quadrennial contest to identify talented young singers and boost their careers. And, as one of the "Three Tenors," he brought operatic singing to a wider popular audience than previously might have been thought possible. In 2003 he released his first solo crossover CD, Ti adoro. He was diagnosed with cancer in 2006, yet remained positive and hopeful of still being able to record and perform until his death.