SOPRANO
''This article is about the singing voice part. For other uses, see Soprano (disambiguation).''
A 'soprano' is a singer with a voice range from approximately middle C (C4) to "high A" (A5) in choral music, or to "soprano C" (C6, two octaves above middle C) or higher in operatic music. In four part chorale style harmony the soprano takes the highest part which usually encompasses the melody.
Male singers whose voices have not yet changed are known either as "boy sopranos" or in church traditions as trebles, whilst adult male sopranos are known as countertenors or sopranists.
Historically women were not allowed to sing in the Church so the soprano roles were given to young boys and later to castrati - men whose larynxes had been fixed in a pre-adolescent state through the process of castration.
More generally a soprano is a relatively high pitched member of a group of similar instruments.
| Contents |
| Types of soprano and soprano roles in opera |
| Lyric soprano |
| Dramatic soprano |
| Other soprano types |
| Soprano roles in operettas |
| Soprano roles in musicals |
| See also |
| External links |
Types of soprano and soprano roles in opera
In opera, the tessitura, vocal weight, and timbre of soprano voices, and the roles they sing, are commonly categorized into voice types, often called ''fächer'' (sg. ''fach'', from German ''Fach'' or ''Stimmfach'', "vocal category").
A note on vocal range vs. tessitura: Choral and pop singers are classified into voice parts based on range; solo classical singers are classified into voice types based in part on tessitura – where the voice has the best timbre and easy volume. For instance a soprano and a mezzo-soprano may have the same range, but their tessituras will lie in different parts of that range.
Soprano range:
The low extreme for sopranos is roughly B3 or A3 (just below middle C). Often low notes in higher voices project less, lack timbre, and tend to "count less" in roles (although some Verdi, Strauss and Wagner roles call for stronger singing below the staff). Rarely is a soprano simply unable to hit a low note.
The high extreme: at a minimum, non-coloratura sopranos have to reach "soprano C" (C6, two octaves above middle C), and many roles in the standard repertoire call for D6 or D-flat6. A couple of roles have optional E-flat6’s, as well. In the coloratura repertoire several roles call for E-flat6, and the ''Queen of the Night'' in ''The Magic Flute'' has several staccato F6’s, though few singers will have this role in their repertoire. While not necessarily within the tessitura, a good soprano will be able to sing her top notes full-throated, with timbre and dynamic control.
Following are the operatic soprano classifications, with their standard repertory roles:
===Coloratura soprano===
★ 'Lyric coloratura soprano' - A very agile voice with a high upper extension, capable of fast vocal coloratura. Bel canto roles were typically written for this voice, and a wide variety of other composers have also written coloratura parts. Baroque music, early music and baroque opera also have many roles for this voice.
:Singers include Natalie Dessay, Ruth Ann Swenson, Kristin Chenoweth, and Beverly Sills.
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★ Adina, ''L'elisir d'amore'' (Donizetti)
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★ Amina, ''La sonnambula'' (Bellini)
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★ Elvira, ''I puritani'' (Bellini)
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★ Gilda, ''Rigoletto'' (Verdi)
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★ Ilia, ''Idomeneo'' (Mozart)
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★ Lakmé, ''Lakmé'' (Delibes)
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★ Lucia, ''Lucia di Lammermoor'' (Donizetti)
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★ Olympia, ''The Tales of Hoffmann'' (Offenbach)
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★ Oscar, ''Un ballo in maschera'' (Verdi) -- trouser role
★ 'Dramatic coloratura soprano' - A coloratura soprano with a large voice which can sustain fast coloratura at full volume and sing over an orchestra, but does not necessarily have the upper extension of a lyric coloratura soprano. This is a very uncommon voice, as it needs thick vocal cords to produce the large sound, which would normally lessen the agility of the voice. Roles written specifically for this kind of voice include the heavier Mozart and bel canto roles and early Verdi.
:Singers include Diana Damrau, Joan Sutherland and June Anderson.
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★ Abigaille, ''Nabucco'' (Verdi) -- An early Verdi role with extreme range requirements, this is a soprano role requiring a very strong low range. This role is usually performed by dramatic sopranos, usually at the cost of some of the coloratura.
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★ Donna Anna, ''Don Giovanni'' (Mozart)
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★ Elettra, ''Idomeneo'' (Mozart)
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★ Fiordiligi, ''Così fan tutte'' (Mozart)
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★ Konstanze, ''The Abduction from the Seraglio'' (Mozart)
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★ Lady Macbeth, ''Macbeth'' (Verdi) -- An early Verdi role with a low tessitura. Can be performed by mezzo-sopranos who have an upper extension to D6.
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★ Leonora, ''Il trovatore'' (Verdi)
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★ Norma, ''Norma'' (Bellini)
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★ The Queen of the Night, ''The Magic Flute'' (Mozart) -- Although a dramatic role, it famously contains the highest notes (F6) in the standard repertoire and is usually performed by lyric coloratura sopranos.
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★ Violetta, ''La traviata'' (Verdi)
===Soubrette===
A light voice with a bright, sweet timbre and a tessitura in the mid-range. In opera, this voice often plays comedic, saucy, but likable characters, and some soubrettes can also sing lyric coloratura roles such as Gilda or Norina. In addition, baroque music, early music and baroque opera, as well as many art songs, all call for this kind of beautiful, light voice. Soubrette roles in turn may be performed by light lyric and lyric coloratura voices, and sometimes by mezzo-sopranos as well.
:Singers include Elisabeth Schumann, Kathleen Battle, Dawn Upshaw and Barbara Bonney.
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★ Amore, ''Orfeo ed Euridice'' (Gluck)
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★ Blondchen, ''The Abduction from the Seraglio'' (Mozart)
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★ Despina, ''Così fan tutte'' (Mozart) -- Sometimes performed by lyric mezzo-sopranos.
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★ Nannetta, ''Falstaff'' (Verdi)
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★ Sophie, ''Der Rosenkavalier'' (Richard Strauss)
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★ Susanna, ''The Marriage of Figaro'' (Mozart)
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★ Zerlina, ''Don Giovanni'' (Mozart) -- Sometimes performed by lyric mezzo-sopranos.
Lyric soprano
A warm voice with a bright, full timbre which can be heard over an orchestra. It generally has a higher tessitura than a soubrette and usually plays ingenues and other sympathetic characters in opera. There is a tendency to divide lyric sopranos into two groups:
★ 'Light Lyric' soprano - Light lyrics often have a “full package” of musicianship, appearance and stagecraft. This voice needs to be careful in its repertory choices, because smaller houses may offer them meatier (especially spinto) roles if they have good stage presence. Then as they become successful, if they take these heavier roles into larger houses they will damage their voices. There are a wide variety of roles written for this voice, and they may sing soubrette, baroque and other light roles as well.
:Singers include Lucrezia Bori, Hei Kyung-Hong, Anna Netrebko, Leontina Vaduva and Ileana Cotrubaş.
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★ Euridice, ''Orfeo ed Euridice'' (Gluck)
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★ Gretel, ''Hänsel und Gretel'' (Humperdinck)
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★ Manon, ''Manon'' (Massenet) also Full Lyric Soprano
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★ Marzelline, ''Fidelio'' (Beethoven)
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★ Pamina, ''Die Zauberflote'' (Mozart)
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★ Sophie, ''Der Rosenkavalier'' (Richard Strauss)
★ 'Full Lyric' soprano - Some full lyrics may have a more mature sound than light lyrics, making them less suitable for some of the lighter roles. Occasionally a full lyric will have a big enough voice that she can take on much heavier roles, using volume in place of vocal weight. This is done when a more lyric timbre is desired in an otherwise heavier role. Otherwise full lyric sopranos need be judicious with spinto and other heavy roles to prevent vocal deterioration.
:Singers include Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, Victoria de los Ángeles, Lisa della Casa, Anna Moffo, Mirella Freni, Teresa Stratas Kiri Te Kanawa, Angela Gheorghiu, Eleanor Steber, Montserrat Caballé and Renee Fleming.
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★ Antonia, ''The Tales of Hoffmann'' (Offenbach)
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★ Juliette, ''Roméo et Juliette'' (Gounod)
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★ La Countessa, ''The Marriage of Figaro'' (Mozart)
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★ Liù, ''Turandot'' (Puccini)
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★ Magda, ''La Rondine'' (Puccini)
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★ Marguerite, ''Faust'' (Gounod)
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★ Mimì, ''La bohème'' (Puccini)
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★ Micaëla, ''Carmen'' (Bizet)
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★ Nedda, ''Pagliacci'' (Leoncavallo) also Spinto Soprano
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★ Rusalka, ''Rusalka'' (Dvořák)
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★ Tatyana, ''Yevgeny Onegin'' (Tchaikovsky)
===Spinto soprano===
Also 'lirico-spinto', Italian for "pushed lyric". It has the brightness and height of a lyric soprano, but can be "pushed" to dramatic climaxes without strain, and may have a somewhat darker timbre. It generally uses ''squillo'' to "slice" through a full orchestra (rather than singing over it like a dramatic soprano). It also handles dynamic changes very well. The spinto repertoire includes many Verdi, verismo and Puccini roles, some of which are very popular in opera. The fact that spinto sopranos are uncommon means that these popular roles are often performed by singers from other classifications, and more than a few lyric sopranos have damaged their voices singing spinto roles.
:Singers include Zinka Milanov, Leontyne Price and Aprile Millo.
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★ Adriana, ''Adriana Lecouvreur'' (Cilea) -- Although a spinto role, it has a relatively small range and is often performed by lyric sopranos in their later careers.
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★ Aïda, ''Aïda'' (Verdi)
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★ Alice Ford, ''Falstaff'' (Verdi)
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★ Butterfly, ''Madama Butterfly'' (Puccini)
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★ Desdemona, ''Otello'' (Verdi)
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★ Elisabetta, ''Don Carlos'' (Verdi)
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★ Leonora, ''La forza del destino'' (Verdi)
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★ Lisa, ''The Queen of Spades'' (Tchaikovsky)
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★ Maddalena, ''Andrea Chénier'' (Giordano)
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★ Manon, ''Manon Lescaut'' (Puccini)
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★ Margherita, ''Mefistofele'' (Boito)
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★ Maria/Amelia, ''Simon Boccanegra'' (Verdi)
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★ The Marschallin, ''Der Rosenkavalier'' (Richard Strauss)
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★ Rusalka, ''Rusalka'' (Dvořák)
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★ Tatiana, ''Eugene Onegin'' (Tchaikovsky)
Dramatic soprano
A powerful, rich, emotive voice that can sing over a full orchestra. Thicker vocal folds in dramatic voices usually mean less agility than lighter voices but a sustained fuller sound. Usually (but not always) this voice has a lower tessitura than other sopranos, and a darker timbre. Used for heroic, tragic women of opera.
:Singers include Maria Callas, Leyla Gencer, Nina Stemme, Ghena Dimitrova, Jessye Norman, Karita Mattila and Deborah Voigt.
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★ Cassandre, ''Les Troyens'' (Berlioz) -- Can be performed by mezzo-sopranos as well.
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★ Chrysothemis, ''Elektra'' (Richard Strauss)
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★ Elisabeth, ''Tannhäuser'' (Wagner)
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★ Elsa, ''Lohengrin'' (Wagner)
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★ Eva, ''Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg'' (Wagner)
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★ Gioconda, ''La Gioconda'' (Ponchielli)
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★ Leonore/Fidelio, ''Fidelio'' (Beethoven)
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★ Sieglinde, ''Die Walküre'' (Wagner)
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★ Floria Tosca, ''Tosca'' (Puccini)
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★ Turandot, ''Turandot'' (Puccini)
★ 'Wagnerian soprano' - A dramatic voice that can assert itself over a large orchestra (over eighty pieces); substantial, very powerful and even throughout the registers. Usually plays a mythic heroine. Successful Wagnerian sopranos are rare, only one or two appear in a generation; most knowledgable people agree that there are no true Wagnerians singing today.
:Singers include Kirsten Flagstad and Birgit Nilsson.
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★ Brünnhilde, ''Die Walküre, Siegfried, Götterdämmerung'' (Wagner)
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★ Elektra, ''Elektra'' (Richard Strauss)
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★ Isolde, ''Tristan und Isolde'' (Wagner)
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★ Kundry, ''Parsifal'' (Wagner) -- Can be performed by mezzo-sopranos as well.
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★ Salome, ''Salome'' (Richard Strauss)
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★ Senta, ''Der fliegende Holländer'' (Wagner)
Other soprano types
Two types of soprano especially dear to the French are the ''Dugazon'' and the ''Falcon'', which are intermediate voice types between the soprano and the mezzo soprano: a Dugazon is a darker-colored soubrette, a Falcon a darker-colored soprano drammatico.
Soprano roles in operettas
★ Adele (Die Fledermaus)
★ Cunegonde (Candide)
★ Hanna (Die lustige Witwe)
★ Rosalinda (Die Fledermaus)
Also the Gilbert and Sullivan Savoy operas have prominent soprano roles.
Soprano roles in musicals
★ Carlotta (The Phantom of the Opera)
★ Cosette (Les Misérables)
★ Christine Daae (The Phantom of the Opera)
★ Eileen (Wonderful Town)
★ Glinda (Wicked)
★ Emma (Jekyll and Hyde)
★ Hope (Anything Goes)
★ Johanna (Sweeney Todd)
★ Julie (Show Boat)
★ Julie Jordan (Carousel)
★ Laurey (Oklahoma!)
★ Maria (The Sound of Music)
★ Maria (West Side Story)
★ Marian Paroo (The Music Man)
★ Sarah (Guys and Dolls)
★ Teresa (The Maid of the Mountains)
★ Maggie (A Chorus Line)
See also
★ Opera
★ List of important operas
★ Voice type
★ Fach, the German system for classifying voices
★ Music
★ Bel canto
★ Boy soprano
External links
★ Collection of public domain scores (Indiana U)
★ International Music Score Library Project
★ Smaller collection of public domain scores (Harvard)
★ Aria database
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