Samuel Ramey life and biography

Samuel Ramey  picture, image, poster

Samuel Ramey biography

Date of birth : 1942-03-28
Date of death : -
Birthplace : Colby, Kansas,U.S.
Nationality : American
Category : Arts and Entertainment
Last modified : 2012-01-11
Credited as : operatic bass, , A Date with the Devil tour

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Samuel Edward Ramey is an American operatic bass with a long, distinguished career. During his best years, he was greatly admired for his range and versatility, having possessed a sufficiently accomplished bel canto technique to enable him to sing the music of Handel, Mozart, Rossini, yet power enough to handle the more overtly dramatic roles written by Verdi and Puccini.

Samuel Ramey became one of American opera's major stars in the last quarter of the twentieth century. He is said to be the most-often recorded artist of all the operatic basses. Ramey is compelling as a physical presence, and has been featured, nearly alone among opera stars, in the likes of People and Vogue magazines. He developed his voice carefully and has enjoyed an unusually long career. Although he specializes in portrayals of the Devil and other demonic figures who appear as characters in numerous operas, Ramey is actually a friendly small-town prairie Midwesterner by birth, who has become unusually well-liked by his associates in the often cutthroat world of top-level opera.

Ramey was born on March 28, 1942, in Colby, Kansas. As a child, he was hardly aware that opera existed. His father was a meatcutter and deputy sheriff. He played football and basketball, and he favored Elvis Presley and Pat Boone when it came to music. "When an opera singer came on the Ed Sullivan Show, I'd think 'Turn this off,'" he told Opera News. Nevertheless, he sang in the local Methodist church choir, and was aware that he had an unusual talent. "My voice already had vibrato, and I stifled it when I sang solos," he told Time. "I didn't want to be made fun of."

Ramey was later bitten by the opera bug when he heard a record by vocalist Ezio Pinza, and while he was studying at Kansas State University, a friend suggested that he audition for a summer workshop at Colorado's Central City Opera. He was accepted, and was thrilled with what he saw and heard while singing in the chorus in two opera productions. He then transferred to Wichita State University because it had a better music program, and studied with former New York City Opera performer Arthur Newman. After he finished his degree, he spent a year with the Grass Roots Opera Company in North Carolina, and then moved to New York in 1969.

Job opportunities were slim at first, and Ramey supported himself and his first wife, Carrie, as an advertising copywriter for a book publisher. But he found a voice teacher, Armen Boyajian, and remained his student for more than 30 years, continuing to develop his skills. In the 1972 auditions for New York's Metropolitan Opera, the epicenter of American opera and one of the world's great opera houses, he reached the finals. The following year he made his debut at the New York City Opera (NYCO) with a small role in Bizet's Carmen, and later that season he took one of the major roles, that of Don Basilio, in Rossini's The Barber of Seville.

It was the melodic, highly ornamented music of Italian opera that attracted Ramey early in his career; he often performed in works by Verdi and Bellini, as well as in a host of Rossini roles. After the death of long-ensconced NYCO bass Norman Treigle in 1975, Ramey essentially took his place and was cast in lead roles for the bass voice. Two of those roles were as Mephistopheles (the name of a personification of the Devil in the Germanic Faustian legend) in operas by Charles Gounod (Faust) and Arrigo Boito (Mefistofele). NYCO conductor Julius Rudel suggested the satanic turn, but "I didn't have to be talked into it," Ramey told the Newark, New Jersey, Star-Ledger. "These were parts I felt born to do."

During the 1970s and early 1980s, Ramey's career took on worldwide reach. He appeared in Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro at England's Glyndebourne Festival in 1976 and made debuts in Chicago and San Francisco in 1979. In 1981 he appeared for the first time at the king of all opera houses, La Scala in Milan, Italy, and sang the role of Figaro in Mozart's opera at the Vienna State Opera, in the city where the work was created. He sang at other venerable European houses such as London's Covent Garden and the Paris Opéra. But one major prize eluded him: many observers wondered why he had never appeared at the Metropolitan Opera (the "Met") in New York City, a decade after reaching the finals of its open audition process.

Some blamed the predilection of Met conductor James Levine in favor of singers that he had discovered himself. In any event, Ramey's belated Met debut came in January of 1984, when he appeared as Argante in George Frideric Handel's opera Rinaldo, opposite famed diva Marilyn Horne. Horne had demanded that Ramey be cast in the role, and he came through with what was generally acknowledged to be a showstopping performance.

By that time Ramey had already attracted unusual attention for an opera singer. Dubbed a male sex symbol by People magazine, Ramey didn't reject the title. "I hope they know I don't ask for these barechested costumes," he told Stereo Review (as quoted in Opera News). "But I don't mind that kind of attention. How many opera singers get to be sex symbols?" In 1984 Ramey sang the part of Figaro on the soundtrack of the hit Mozart film biography Amadeus, and for the rest of the 1980s and 1990s he was unstoppable. He appeared as Mozart's arch-seducer Don Giovanni at Austria's Salzburg Festival in 1987 and made several return visits to the Met.

In 1995 Ramey went on tour with a concert called "A Date with the Devil," featuring many of the demonic arias he had performed on stage over the years. Despite protests by fundamentalist Christians, the concerts proved so successful that Ramey was still performing them in the early 2000s, and he made a Date with the Devil recording on the Naxos label in 2002. "I have always enjoyed playing the real sinister, evil characters the most," Ramey explained to Time in 1987. "The bad guys always have more fun, I guess."

By the early 2000s Samuel Ramey had become one of opera's true greats, and he had commitments booked years ahead, at an age when many opera singers are thinking about retirement. He has spoken of a desire to perform in a Broadway musical, and to take on roles in operas by Wagner and other German-language composers he has hitherto avoided. Married for a second time, to singer Lindsey Rae Larsen in 2002, Ramey became a father for the first time; his son, Samuel Guy, was named after Ramey's own father. Making his home in Chicago, Ramey is considered to be at the peak of his operatic career.

Selected discography:
-Gounod: Faust Teldec, 1994.
-Mussorgsky: Boris Godunov Sony, 1994.
-Rossini: Il Barbiere di Siviglia Teldec, 1996.
-Meyerbeer: Robert le Diable Adonis, 1999.
-Amadeus (Special Edition: Director's Cut) Fantasy, 2002.
-A Date with the Devil Naxos, 2002.
-Handel: Ariodante Philips, 2003.

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