Artist's albums
Berlioz: Les Troyens
2001 · album
Handel: Il trionfo del Tempo e del Disinganno
2001 · album
Rossini: Stabat Mater
2001 · album
Berlioz: Béatrice et Bénédict
2000 · album
Pergolesi and Scarlatti: Stabat Mater
2000 · album
Vivaldi: Concertos & Cantatas
2000 · album
Vivaldi: Gloria, Magnificat and concerti
2000 · album
Handel: Riccardo Primo
1996 · album
Cornacchioli: Diana Schernita (Live)
2014 · album
Vivaldi: L'incoronazione di Dario
2014 · album
Fano: La mia sera
2011 · album
Respighi: La Sensitiva
2010 · album
Vivaldi: Gloria
2009 · album
Vivaldi: L'olimpiade
2007 · album
Contralto
2002 · album
Vivaldi: l'Olimpiade
2002 · compilation
Vivaldi: Stabat Mater
2002 · album
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Biography
Italian singer Sara Mingardo is considered among the more important contraltos of her generation. Her repertory is broad, encompassing works by composers from Monteverdi to Britten, though she has scored some of her greatest successes in operas and sacred music of the Baroque. Mingardo was born in the Venetian suburb of Mestre. Though she displayed musical talent early on, she did not develop quickly: after studies in Venice at the Benedetto Marcello Conservatory and in Siena at the Academia Chigiana, she made her official operatic debut in Italy only in 1987, in Cimarosa's Il matrimonio segreto, singing Fidalma. Following that success she sang Cinderella in the eponymous Rossini opera, in Treviso and Rovigo, in 1988. It was in that Treviso effort that she won first prize in the annual Toti Dal Monte competition. Her other competition successes include the Giulietta Simionato Prize at the 23rd Vienna Competition. While most of Mingardo's appearances up to 1989 were at second-tier operatic venues, she began making her breakthrough at the major sites in Italy thereafter, including La Scala and San Carlo. In 1995 she made her first recording (on Polygram Records), singing the title character in Handel's Riccardo Primo, led by Christophe Rousset. This followed her official international debut in that role, in Fontevraud, France. She reprised this same role later on at the International Festival of Baroque Music in Bonn and at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris. After that 1995 French debut, she appeared regularly at numerous other major international locales: under Claudio Abbado, she sang Emilia in Verdi's Otello at the 1996 Salzburg Festival. Her U.S. debut was at the 2000 Santa Fe Opera Festival production of Rossini's Ermione, where she sang Anromaca. Mingardo has developed a strong international following over the years and has thus been in demand on recordings. Two solo albums appeared in 2003 and 2004, respectively, on the Opus III label. The first, titled Sara Mingardo, featured works by Pergolesi, Vivaldi, Scarlatti, and Handel, and the second, works by Monteverdi, Vivaldi, Handel, and others. Other recordings include Monteverdi's L'Orfeo, Vivaldi's Stabat Mater and Armida, Pergolesi's Stabat Mater, and Verdi's Falstaff. Her 2002 recording of Berlioz's Les Troyens won a Gramophone Award and Grammy Awards for Best Opera Recording and Best Classical Album.