- Kenneth Heath, Alfreda Hodgson, Benjamin Britten, Charles Brett, Hervey Alan, Norma Burrowes, Mary Wells, Owen Brannigan, Ian Partridge, Jennifer Vyvyan, John Shirley-Quirk, Dennis Egan, Philomusica of London, James Bowman, Anthony Lewis, Sir Philip Ledger, William Herbert, Peter Graeme, Martin Gatt, Sir Peter Pears
- Benjamin Britten, Sir Peter Pears, Aldeburgh Festival Strings, Jennifer Vyvyan, English Chamber Orchestra, Dame Janet Baker, The Ambrosian Singers, Steuart Bedford
Charles Brett
Biography
English countertenor Charles Brett is one of the leading specialists of the Baroque choral and oratorio repertoire. He studied at King's College, Cambridge, making his London debut in 1965 in a performance of Bach's Magnificat. In 1983, he co-founded the Amaryllis Consort, of which he was also the director. He has made numerous recordings, including Purcell's Fairy Queen (under the baton of Benjamin Britten) and birthday odes, Bach's Mass in B minor, and several Handel oratorios. Brett has been less active on the opera stage, but even there he has appeared in some notable productions. His operatic debut was at Graz in 1984, in a revival of Angelica vincitrice di Alcina by J.J. Fux. At the Ludwigsburg Festival, he sang Athamas in a German-language version of Handel's Semele. He toured France with Gluck's La clemenza di Tito with the conductor Jean-Claude Malgoire, and sang Britten's Oberon in 1987 at Aachen.