
Nadine Sierra, 2018 winner of the Metropolitan Opera’s prestigious
Beverly Sills Artist Award, has made her first album for Deutsche
Grammophon and Decca Gold, having signed an exclusive contract with the
labels last year. Recorded with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra under
the baton of Robert Spano, There’s a Place for Us is scheduled
for international release on 24 August 2018, in time to mark the 100th
anniversary of Leonard Bernstein’s birth the following day. The album
presents the soprano’s stunning vocal abilities in an eclectic choice of
American classical music – as well as works by Bernstein, the
repertoire ranges from Stephen Foster and Douglas Moore to Stravinsky
and Villa-Lobos, and on again to Ricky Ian Gordon, Osvaldo Golijov and
Christopher Theofanidis, with texts in Spanish and Portuguese as well as
English. After singing the role of Norina (Don Pasquale) at the
Paris Opéra in June and July, Nadine Sierra will perform music from the
album at this summer’s major US festivals, including an appearance at
Tanglewood’s star-studded Bernstein Centennial Celebration.
America’s founding colonists were sustained by the belief that they
were building “a city on the hill”, a place that would serve as a model
to all mankind. Countless migrants have journeyed there since to share
the American dream. Nadine Sierra’s story stands for the stories of
millions whose families have made a fresh start in the United States.
The critically acclaimed lyric soprano and Fort Lauderdale native, who
celebrated her 30th birthday in May, understands the essential
contribution made by migrants to the nation’s growth. Her mother is
Portuguese, while her father’s family hails from Puerto Rico and Italy.
There’s a Place for Us,
Sierra’s Deutsche Grammophon and Decca Gold debut album, pays tribute
to the diverse backgrounds and creative energy of America’s classical
composers. It also presents a timely reminder of unity and equality, of
integration and optimism, at a time when anti-immigrant rhetoric is
increasing, and fault-lines are widening between divided communities in
the US and beyond.
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