Reginald Mobley (born 21 October 1977) [1] is an African-American countertenor. He was raised singing jazz and gospel music, but trained in the classical repertoire. He is best known for singing the works of Henry Purcell and Johann Sebastian Bach. [2] In 2023 he sang at the coronation of Charles III as well as at the BBC Proms. [3] He currently lives in Boston, Massachusetts. [4]
Mobley was born in Gainesville, Florida, [1] [4] where he attended Eastside High School. [5] As a boy he sang at Gainesville's Bethel Seventh-day Adventist Church, and he discovered Bach while a high school student. He was also interested in art, and won an art scholarship to Davidson College in North Carolina. However a bout of carpal tunnel syndrome led him to change artistic direction and he moved to the Seventh-day Adventist-affiliated Oakwood University in Huntsville, Alabama. [1] There he studied tenor singing. He later studied at the University of Florida in Gainesville with Jean Ronald LaFond and at the Florida State University in Tallahassee with Roy Delp. [4] [6]
Mobley has performed with the Baroque ensemble Apollo's Fire, and is a regular guest with the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, the Washington Bach Consort, Seraphic Fire, and Agave Baroque. With the latter, Mobley created the project Peace in our Time – music of love and loss in the shadow of the Thirty Years’ War, which included concerts for the San Francisco Early Music Society and a new recording. [7] Mobley also recorded a collection of spirituals with Agave Baroque entitled American Originals that was nominated for a 2022 GRAMMY Award. His first solo album, in May 2023 is also a selection of spirituals, performed in collaboration with pianist Baptiste Trotignon, entitled Because. [8]
Mobley has also taken roles in several musical theatre productions, including the title role in Rupert Holmes' Mystery of Edwin Drood, and Jacey Squires in Meredith Willson's The Music Man. In addition he has performed many cabaret shows and sets of jazz standards and torch songs in jazz clubs in and around Tokyo, Japan. [4]
Mobley holds the position of visiting artist for diversity outreach with Apollo's Fire. [9] He has a strong interest in researching and performing the work of forgotten black composers, [10] particularly Ignatius Sancho. [2]
In 2019 he collaborated with composer Jonathan Woody in developing and performing a choral piece entitled Nigra Sum Sed Formosa: A Fantasia on Microaggressions. [11]
In March 2020, he became the first-ever programming consultant for the Handel and Haydn Society, working to diversify the group’s repertoire. The job evolved from his earlier annual projects with the group, beginning with organizing a 2015 program along with the Museum of African American History in Boston. [6]
Johann Sebastian Bach composed Vergnügte Ruh, beliebte Seelenlust, BWV 170, a church cantata for the sixth Sunday after Trinity in Leipzig. It is a solo cantata for alto that he first performed on 28 July 1726.
Sir John Eliot Gardiner is an English conductor, particularly known for his performances of the works of Johann Sebastian Bach, especially the Bach Cantata Pilgrimage of 2000, performing Bach's church cantatas in liturgical order in churches all over Europe, and New York City, with the Monteverdi Choir, and recording them at the locations.
The English Concert is a baroque orchestra playing on period instruments based in London. Founded in 1972 and directed from the harpsichord by Trevor Pinnock for 30 years, it is now directed by harpsichordist Harry Bicket. Nadja Zwiener has been orchestra leader (concertmaster) since September 2007.
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Russell Keys Oberlin was an American singer and founding member of the New York Pro Musica Antiqua ensemble who became the first, and for years the only, countertenor in the United States to attain general recognition—in The New Yorker's words, "America's first star countertenor." A pioneering figure in the early music revival in the 1950s and 1960s, Oberlin sang on both sides of the Atlantic, and brought a "full, warm, vibrato-rich tone" to his recitals, recordings, and his performances in works ranging from the thirteenth-century liturgical drama The Play of Daniel to the twentieth-century opera A Midsummer Night's Dream.
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The Monteverdi Choir was founded in 1964 by Sir John Eliot Gardiner for a performance of the Vespro della Beata Vergine in King's College Chapel, Cambridge. A specialist Baroque ensemble, the Choir has become famous for its stylistic conviction and extensive repertoire, encompassing music from the Renaissance period to Classical music of the 20th century. They often appear with the English Baroque Soloists and Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique, also founded by John Eliot Gardiner.
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Bejun Mehta is an American countertenor. He has been awarded the Echo Klassik, the Gramophone Award, Le Diamant d’Opera Magazine, the Choc de Classica, the Traetta Prize, and been nominated for the Grammy Award, the Laurence Olivier Award, and the Preis der Deutschen Schallplattenkritik. Writing in the Süddeutsche Zeitung, Michael Stallknecht called him "arguably the best counter tenor in the world today."
Robin Blaze is a British countertenor.
John Joseph Elwes, is an English tenor singer.
Matthew White is a Canadian countertenor.
Philip Turbett is a British bassoonist and clarinettist also specialising in historically informed performance.
Yoshikazu Mera is a Japanese countertenor. His range is three and a half octaves.
Patrick Van Goethem is a Belgian countertenor, known for performing early music.
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David Erler is a German countertenor, a male classical singer in the alto vocal range, specialising in Baroque music in historically informed performance. He is also a music editor for Breitkopf & Härtel.