Ariunbaatar Ganbaatar
Ariunbaatar Ganbaatar (Mongolian: Ганбаатарын Ариунбаатар; born April 8, 1988) is a Mongolian baritone. He was born as the middle child in a family of 3 at the west of Ulaanbaatar city, where his family used to live as nomads.[1] He attended the Mongolian State University of Culture and the Arts[1] and graduated in 2010 as an opera singer.[2] He subsequently became a traffic warden in Ulaanbaatar until he joined the Buryat National Opera in Ulan-Ude, Russia, in 2014.[1][2]
Career
He won the first prize in the male vocalist category and the Grand Prix at the 2015 International Tchaikovsky Competition.[1][2] In 2015, Ariunbaatar performed at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow and at the Cadogan Hall in London, and he sang Yeletsky's Aria from Tchaikovsky's The Queen of Spades at Buckingham Palace.[3] During 2016, he performed the roles of Escamillo (Carmen) and Baron Scarpia (Tosca) at the Mariinsky Theatre in Saint Petersburg.[3] He also performed for the 60th General Assembly of the World Federation of International Music Competitions in Yerevan, Armenia.[3] He was jointly awarded the Song Prize award at the 2017 BBC Cardiff Singer of the World competition, singing Rossini, Verdi, and Tchaikovsky, and in Mongolian.[4]
Honors
In 2016, on the occasion of the 854th birth anniversary of Genghis Khan which is marked as the National Pride Day, the top state prize of Mongolia, the Order of Genghis Khan, was awarded to Ganbaatar for his many great awards and achievements on the international stage.[5]
References
- ^ a b c d Frazier, Ian (November 16, 2015). "Prize-Winner". The New Yorker. Retrieved February 20, 2017.
- ^ a b c "Ariunbaatar Ganbaatar". Marinsky Theatre. Retrieved February 20, 2017.
- ^ a b c BBC Cardiff Singer of the World bio. Accessed 17 July 2017.
- ^ Molleson, Kate (2018-01-02). "How Mongolia went wild for opera". the Guardian. Retrieved 2018-06-01.
- ^ Ariunbaatar Ganbaatar awarded Order "Chinggis Khaan", 1 November 2016, Montsame
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- Karita Mattila (1983)
- David Malis (1985)
- Valeria Esposito (1987)
- Dmitri Hvorostovsky (1989)
- Lisa Gasteen (1991)
- Inger Dam-Jensen (1993)
- Katarina Karnéus (1995)
- Guang Yang (1997)
- Anja Harteros (1999)
- Marius Brenciu (2001)
- Tommi Hakala (2003)
- Nicole Cabell (2005)
- Shenyang (2007)
- Ekaterina Scherbachenko (2009)
- Valentina Nafornița (2011)
- Jamie Barton (2013)
- Nadine Koutcher (2015)
- Catriona Morison (2017)
- Andrei Kymach (2019)
- Gihoon Kim (2021)
- Adolfo Corrado (2023)
(formerly Lieder Prize)
- Bryn Terfel (1989)
- Neal Davies (1991)
- Paul Whelan (1993)
- Kirsi Tiihonen (1995)
- Christopher Maltman (1997)
- Dae-San No (1999)
- Marius Brenciu (2001)
- Ailish Tynan (2003)
- Andrew Kennedy (2005)
- Elizabeth Watts (2007)
- Jan Martinik (2009)
- Andrei Bondarenko (2011)
- Jamie Barton (2013)
- Jongmin Park (2015)
- Ariunbaatar Ganbaatar (2017)
- Catriona Morison (2017)
- Mingjie Lei (2019)
- Masabane Cecilia Rangwanasha (2021)
- Sungho Kim (2023)
- Angela Marambio (2003)
- Ha-Joung Lee (2005)
- Jacques Imbrailo (2007)
- Giordano Luca (2009)
- Valentina Nafornița (2011)
- Ben Johnson (2013)
- Amartuvshin Enkhbat (2015)
- Louise Alder (2017)
- Katie Bray (2019)
- Claire Barnett-Jones (2021)
- Julieth Lozano Rolong (2023)
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