• There is no instrument more personal to a musician than the human voice. And there is no better place to hear the subtle nuance and sheer beauty of this delicate instrument than at Carnegie Hall.

    This season, connect with some of the world’s finest singers in the world’s greatest concert hall. These intrepid artists perform both vocal and choral masterworks in intimate recitals and with esteemed orchestras, blending their vocal fireworks, unmatched finesse, and overall artistic excellence to forge deep connections with the audiences they captivate.

    View a full list of the 2012–2013 vocal performances at Carnegie Hall >

  • Exclusive Carnegie Hall Interviews


  • Stephanie Blythe on the importance of art song in a singer's career.

  • Renée Fleming and Susan Graham discuss friendship, cases of mistaken identity, and performing Der Rosenkavalier together.

  • Stephanie Blythe explains why audience reaction is so important to the artist.

  • Renée Fleming and Susan Graham chat about their friendship, career, and music, they reveal where they met, discuss the parallels between their personalities and careers.
  • Recent Blog Posts

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    May 4, 2013
    WATCH: Tonight sees the finale of Renée Fleming's Perspectives series at Carnegie Hall with Vienna: Window to Modernity. Here, Ms. Fleming, composer and conductor André Previn, and conductor and music historian Leon Botstein discuss how several of the major Viennese composers of the period spent a lot of time in Los Angeles and how their experiences there differed widely.
    May 3, 2013
    WATCH: In the final video of our short series which features Renée Fleming and Leon Botstein discussing Vienna at the turn of the 20th century, they talk about the "simple and heartbreaking" music of Richard Strauss—a composer close to the soprano's heart and one who she believes has been ever popular but not always respected, particularly in Europe.
    May 2, 2013
    WATCH: In the second of a series of three videos in which soprano Renée Fleming and conductor and music historian Leon Botstein discuss Vienna at the turn of the 20th century, they examine audience reactions to 20th-century music and explore how audiences should approach music by Viennese composers of the period.
  • Upcoming Vocal Performances

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