Heather Harper, one of the most recorded singers of her time, made an extraordinary transition from a lyric soprano in the English pastoral tradition to a spinto-weight artist of great power and authority. While her earliest appearances and recordings brought to mind such other singers as
Isobel Baillie and
Jennifer Vyvyan, her prime years showed a voice that had grown in size and roundness while retaining its initial flexibility. Many critics have opined that her 1966 recording of
Handel's Messiah remains unequaled. While she chose to avoid most of the Italian spinto repertory, her work in the mid-weight German operas of
Wagner and Strauss was exemplary, as were her concert and
oratorio performances.
Harper premiered several works by both
Benjamin Britten and
Michael Tippett and was outstanding in the works of both composers.
Harper studied at the Trinity School of Music in London and made her operatic debut as
Verdi's Lady Macbeth at Oxford University in 1954 -- an undertaking that was both out of step with her initial repertory and a precursor of things to come. Her first appearance at
the Glyndebourne Festival took place in 1957 when she sang the First Lady in
Mozart's Die Zauberflöte. She returned to the Sussex countryside in 1960 in the same role and, in 1963, added the role of Anne in
Stravinsky's The Rake's Progress. In 1966, she sang 12
Glyndebourne performances of
Handel's Jephtha with such colleagues as
Richard Lewis and
Margaret Price. In 1960, she sang the role of Helena in
Britten's Midsummer's Night Dream at Covent Garden with a cast handpicked by the composer and subsequently recorded.
The Bayreuth Festival heard her Elsa in Lohengrin in 1967, not long after she had begun a series of collaborations with
Sir George Solti, who was music director at Covent Garden from 1961 to 1971. Her long delayed Metropolitan Opera debut in 1977 offered her Countess in
Mozart's Le Nozze di Figaro. She also sang her sympathetic and warm-voiced Ellen Orford in Peter Grimes there.
Harper was a distinguished singer of the concert repertory. It was to her that
Britten turned in 1963 when authorities in the Soviet Union refused to grant travel permission to Russian soprano
Galina Vishnevskaya, for whom the composer had written the soaring soprano part in his War Requiem.
Harper stepped in and was acclaimed for her performance. Throughout the 1960s,
Harper also recorded numerous works of
Handel (Theodora, Judas Maccabaeus) as well as
classical period works by
Haydn (The Seasons and several masses) and
Beethoven (Missa Solemnis and the Symphony No. 9). Her recorded performances of
Vaughan Williams (Symphonies 1 and 3) and
Delius (Mass of Life and Requiem) achieved a fine balance between magisterial distance and passionate involvement. Her participation in
Solti's recording of
Mahler's Resurrection Symphony alerted many to a burgeoning instrument which was ideal for the lighter German dramatic repertory. She later sang with that conductor on his recording of
Mahler's Symphony No. 8.
In the 1960s,
Harper was brought to Chicago, where
Solti was the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra's music director, for many celebrated performances. She repeated the
Mahler Symphony No. 2, sang in
Haydn's Creation, performed
Bach's Saint Matthew Passion on two separate occasions and participated with
Carlo Maria Giulini in
Rossini's Stabat Mater. In the latter, her two electrifying, perfectly-placed high Cs attested to the size and thrust of the mature voice.
Harper sang the premieres of both
Britten's television opera, Owen Wingrave and
Tippett's The Ice Break. ~ Erik Eriksson, All Music Guide