The American tenor and voices instructor, Kyle Stegall, obtained his Bachelor of Music degree in Voice Performance from the University of Missouri-Columbia (2004-2009), where he sang with the University Singers and Show-Me Opera; his Master of Music degree in Voice Performance from the University of Michigan (2009-2011), where he attended the School of Music, Theatre, and Dance UMS; and his AD degree in Voice Performance from Yale University (2012-2014), where he attended the Institute of Sacred Music and sang with Yale Schola Cantorum.
Kyle Stegall is an independent tenor soloist since 2012. As a soloist and chamber musician, he enjoys a career spanning the worlds of concert, opera, recital, and small ensemble music. His successful solo debuts in Japan, Australia, Vienna, Italy, Singapore, and Canada as well as on major stages across America have been in collaboration with many of the world’s most celebrated artistic directors including Manfred Honeck, Joseph Flummerfelt, William Christie, Stephen Stubbs, and Nicholas McGegan, among others. His performances around the world have been met with accolade for his “blemish-free production” (Sydney Morning Herald), “lovely tone and ardent expression” (New York Times), as well as his “lively and empathetic delivery” (San Francisco Classical Voice). An artist who communicates equally well on concert, opera, and recital stages, his performances are characterized by an unfailing attention to style and detail, and a penetrating directness of communication.
Heard frequently as Evangelist and tenor soloist in the passions and cantatas of J.S. Bach, Kyle Stegall made his Lincoln Center debut as the Evangelist in J.S. Bach's St. John Passion (BWV 245) under the direction of The Bach Collegium Japan’s artistic director, Masaaki Suzuki. In demand as a symphonic soloist, his seasons often include the oratorios of George Frideric Handel and Haydn, the great masses of W.A. Mozart and L.v. Beethoven, and works from the Bel Canto and 20th century concert canon.
Holding a special relationship with the music of Benjamin Britten, Kyle Stegall was twice invited to participate as a fellow at the Aldeburgh Music Festival, in the composer’s hometown of Suffolk, England. There, he performed in recital and studied B. Britten song and Schubert Lieder under the guidance of Ian Bostridge and Malcolm Martineau. Kyle has been heard in recital singing all of the composer’s cycles for tenor, including Britten’s Serenade for Tenor, Horn, and Strings. A dedicated proponent of the song recital, he personally curates recitals each season which reveal the vast colors and emotional range the collected repertoire has to offer. Recent recitals have included the complete sacred works for tenor and piano by B. Britten (presented by the Yale Center for British Art), English and French song in the 20th century, and Schumann and his contemporaries with fortepianist Eric Zivian at the Valley of the Moon Music Festival.
Praised for possessing an “ability to absorb viewers into the action, something which is rarely achieved in opera,” (San Francisco Classical Voice), Kyle Stegall's stage skills have made him a popular choice for the leading lyric tenor roles in the works of W.A. Mozart as well as in operas of the Bel Canto era.
This season’s highlights (2018-2019) include his return to the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society, singing the title role in Rameau’s Hippolyte et Aricie under the direction of Stephen Stubbs, a solo recital at the Green Music Center in Sonoma, and J.S. Bach Evangelists with a number of prominent Baroque orchestras.
Kyle Stegall is a dedicated teacher of singing and maintains a private studio year-round. |