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Dorothee Mields Tickets

Soprano
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4 Apr 2026, Sat
Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
Cast: Florian Boesch , Philippe Herreweghe , .... + 9

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About

The German soprano, Dorothee (Blotzky-) Mields, was born to German/Ukrainian parents.

As a child she learned violin and piano. She received her first singing lesson from Therese Maxsein in Essen and thereafter acquired experience in various choruses. She later studied at the College of Arts in Bremen (Hochschule für Künste Bremen) with Elke Holzmann. There she discovered her love for the music of the 17th and 18th centuries. She continued her studies in Stuttgart with Harry van der Kamp and Gabriele Schreckenbach. After passing successfully her graduate examinations, she studied with Julia Hamari in Stuttgart.

Dorothee Mields is one of the leading interpreters of 17th- and 18th-century music and is beloved by audiences and critics alike for her unique timbre and moving interpretations. Her flawless technique and the ethereal clarity of her voice also make her ideally suited for works by contemporary composers. In addition to numerous concerts in Germany and abroad, including appearances with the Telemann-Kammerorchester Michaelstein and the Balthasar-Neumann-Chor and Ensemble, her intensive collaboration with Ludger Rémy and Thomas Hengelbrock has resulted in favourably reviewed CD recordings, such as Georg Philipp Telemann’s oratorios Die Auferstehung and Der Tod Jesu. Contemporary music also forms an increasingly important part of her repertoire. Her wide-ranging repertoire comprises works of Monteverdi, J.S. Bach and W.A. Mozart to compositions by Pierre Boulez, Grisey and Beat Furrer.

Dorothee Mields has sung and played in many opera and theatre productions under important directors, such as Euridice in Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo with the Viennese Festival Weeks and co-operated with conductors such as Thomas Hengelbrock, Philippe Herreweghe and Gustav Leonhardt.

Dorothee Mields' special inclination however applies for the Lieder singing. Among her companions on the piano can be found Ludger Rémy and Grigori Pantijelew. With them she has unfolded the different connections of language and music in the Lieder literature, from the 17th century into the modern time. Outside of the Baroque genre, her great love is the late-romantic French art-song. She has successfully performed the moving song-cycle Clairières dans le ciel by composer Lili Boulanger.

Dorothee Mields has become a much sought-after soloist - and interpreter of Baroque music, in particular - and is in demand at many international festivals, including the Bachwoche Ansbach; Köthener Bach Festtage, Bachfest Leipzig, Halle and Göttingen Händel Festivals, Suntory Music Foundation Summer Festival, Boston Early Music Festival, Tanglewood Festival, Music Festival of Bremen, Vienna Festival Weeks, Flanders Festival in Bruges; and various other festivals in Feldkirch, Rheingau, Schleswig-Holstein, Schwetzingen, and Vienna. 

Dorothee Mields appears regularly with Collegium Vocale Gent, Bach Collegium Japan, Nederlandse Bachvereniging, Freiburger Barockorchester, RIAS-Kammerchor, Orchestra of the 18th Century, L'Orfeo Barockorchester (Director: Michi Gaigg), Lautten Compagney Berlin, Flanders Recorder Quartet, Ensemble Orchestral de Paris, Leipziger Concert Ensemble, and Klangforum Vienna, under such conductors as Stefan Asbury, Ivor Bolton, Frans Brüggen, Beat Furrer, Paul Goodwin, Martin Haselböck, Wolfgang Helbich, Philippe Herreweghe, Gustav Leonhardt, Kenneth Montgomery, Helmut Müller-Brühl, Emilio Pomárico, Hans-Christoph Rademann, Stephen Stubbs, Masaaki Suzuki and Jos van Veldhoven.

Highlights of concerts during the early 2000’s included recordings of Joseph Schuster’s opera Demofoonte under the baton of Ludger Rémy; Haydn’s Creation with Thomas Hengelbrock (2001); chamber cantatas of Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel; J.S. BachBWV 91, BWV 121 & BWV 133 with Philippe Herreweghe (2001); and W.A. Mozart’s Exsultate Jubilate at the Rheingau Music Festival. Additionally, Dorothee Mields produced her first recording for the Naxos Label - a performance of two Te-DeumGeorge Frideric Handel under the direction of Wolfgang Helbich (2001). In January 2003, she toured Europe with Philippe Herreweghe and the Collegium Vocale Gent, performing Monteverdi’s Marienvesper. Further projects are planned, including W.A. Mozart in Tokyo as well as numerous CD productions. She sang the role of Phaedra in ’s Ariadne at the Boston Early Music Festival. In 2004 she sang the title role in the premiere of Johannes Maria Staud's opera at the Munich Biennale. She premiered Beat Furrer's Invocation III (the third scene of invocation) for soprano and ensemble on words from the 16th century on September 17, 2004, in Innsbruck, with the Klangforum Wien conducted by the composer.

2006-2007 season's highlights included J.S. Bach's St. John Passion (BWV 245) with Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra in Canada, Grisey Quatre Chants pour franchir le seuil with Klangforum Vienna under the baton of Simone Young in Hamburg, J.S. Bach’s Cantata Weichet nur, betrübte Schatten with Freiburger Barockorchester, Igor Stravinsky’s Threni with the RIAS-Kammerchor and the Deutsches Symphonieorchester Berlin under the direction of Stefan Asbury, as well as Gustav Mahler’s Symphony N° 4 with the Orchestre des Champs Elysées under Philippe Herreweghe's baton. Engagements 2007-2008 include her debut at the Salzburg Festival with Klangforum Vienna (August 2007/Grisey Quatre Chants/conductor: Emilio Pomárico), a solo recital with Sinfonieorchester Aachen (October 2007/G.F. Handel arias) as well as concert tours with Collegium Vocale Gent (November 2007 and May 2008/conductor: Philippe Herreweghe; December 2007/conductor: Masaaki Suzuki) and the Nederlandse Bachvereniging (March 2008/conductor: Jos van Veldhoven). ///In 2009 Dorothee Mields and the tenor Andreas Karasiak were the soloists in the requiem composition Schwarz vor Augen und es ward Licht by Harald Weiss dedicated to the Knabenchor Hannover, premiered on October 31, 2009, with the North NDR Sinfonieorchester Hamburg.

Besides several concert tours with Collegium Vocale Gent and the Nederlandse Bachvereniging, highlights of the 2012-2013 season include appearances at the Vézelay Festival, Musikfest Erzgebirge, Utrecht Oude Muziek Festival, Mendelssohn Festtage Leipzig, Handel Festival Halle, a recital with Ludger Rémy in Dresden, as well as her debut with the Tonhalle Orchestra Zürich (May 2013, J.S. Bach's Cantatas BWV 51 und BWV 207a).

Today a steadily growing discography of over 40 recordings and many broadcast productions, some of which have won awards, documents Dorothee Mields' active concert career and wide repertoire. Numerous international radio stations (e.g., BBC, Evangelische Omroep Holland, Klara Belgien and several broadcasting services of the ARD) and CD-labels (e.g., Sony Classical, BIS, BMG, Harmonia Mundi, DHM, MDG, HMF, cpo, Naxos and Koch) are currently broadcasting and recording her work. She has already produced first-edition recordings of heretofore unknown treasures from the Baroque period, including operas, oratorios and cantatas. Her recordings of Baroque oratorios and cantatas, including those of G.P. Telemann, Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel, Rolle and Benda, for the label cpo - all performed under the direction of Ludger Rémy - were positively received by the critics, as was her production of Requiem, performed under Thomas Hengelbrock’s baton. Recent releases of “In Darkness Let me Dwell” and “Loves Alchymie” (with Hille Perl and Lee Santana, Sony/dhm) and Purcell “Love Songs” (with the Lautten Compagney Berlin, Carus) have received great critical acclaim. A recording of Frédéric Chopin Lieder (with pianist Nelson Goerner) for the Fryderyk Chopin Institute Warszawa has been released in summer 2011.

Dorothee Mields currently lives with her daughter near Hagen, Germany. She taught Baroque vocal technique at the Hochschule für Musik "Franz Liszt" in Weimar until the early 2000’s.

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