Miriam
Dubrow, soprano
Miriam
Dubrow, a dynamic interpreter of 17th and 18th century music, inspired
the Washington Post to describe her singing as "radiant," and to
write that she "clearly has a true affinity for the Baroque style."
Her repertoire ranges from Sephardic ballads to opera and oratorio.
Opera
highlights include Aricie in Rameau's Hippolyte et Aricie, Bellezza
in Stradella's Academia d'Amore, Amour in Charpentier's Les Arts
Florissants and Anacreon, Eurydice and Musica in Monteverdi's Orfeo
and Miles in Britten's Turn of the Screw. Ms.
Dubrow has been an invited performer at festivals and concert series
worldwide, including the Tanglewood Music Festival, Redwoods Festival,
International Festival for Arts and Ideas, Boston Early Music Festival,
Kennedy Center, Hudson River Concert Series, Internationale Musick
Festival, and the British Council Recital Series with Martin Isepp.
She performs often with The Four Nations Ensemble, Stephen Stubbs,
Max van Egmond, the Violins of Lafayette, Opera Lafayette, Bach
Sinfonia and her early music trio, Marley's Head. She has also been
a featured artist on National Public Radio's Marc Steiner Show and
Curtain Call with Charles Sepos. Ms. Dubrow currently lives in Paris,
France. |