The American mezzo-soprano, Mary Nessinger, obtained her Bachelor of Music degree, cum laude, at Saint Mary's College, Notre Dame, and afterwards studied at the Eastman School with Seth McCoy and Jan DeGaetani, and in New York with Chloë Owen.
Mary Nessinger, has been heard in concert and recital throughout the USA and Europe. She is rapidly gaining attention for her critically acclaimed performances of some of last and this century's most dynamic works and for her astute interpretions of standard repertoire. Of recent performances, The New York Times has praised her "remarkable fluidity and beauty of tone", and described her interpretive skills as "a tour de force of characterization"; the New Yorker has heralded "her "exacting musicianship and quiet dignity (which) have made her a fixture of the New York scene". Nessinger has been heard as a soloist in some of this country's finest venues, including Carnegie, Alice Tully, Avery Fisher and Merkin Halls, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art; the Freer Gallery in Washington D.C.; Jordan Hall and the Gardner Museum in Boston; and she has appeared internationally at the Wigmore Hall in London, the Kammermusiksaal der Philharmonie in Berlin, the Queen's Hall in Edinburgh, and the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall.
In addition to works from the standard repertoire, Mary Nessinger has devoted herself to the performance of new music. She has enjoyed a close working relationship with some of contemporary music's brightest and most innovative composers including Lee Hyla, John Harbison, Haflidi Hallgrimsson, Harold Meltzer, Earl Kim, George Rochberg, Bernard Rands, George Crumb, Simon Bainbridge, Mathew Rosenblum, Jason Eckardt, Eric Moe, Pia Gilbert, and Ezra Sims.
As a chamber musician Mary Nessinger has collaborated with many fine artists, including Peter Serkin, Mitsuko Uchida, Robert Spano, Ida Kavafian, Fred Sherry, David Shiffrin, Daniel Phillips, Peter Wiley, and Martin Lovett (Amadeus Quartet). As a recitalist, she has worked very closely with pianist Jeanne Golan, and in the coming season the duo will premiere Innocence Lost; the Berg/Debussy project, the first in a series of commissioning projects called Cycles and Sequels. Devised as a way to resuscitate the voice recital, Cycles and Sequels pairs each song of an existing and 'standard' song cycle with a newly composed song inspired by the original, thus creating a new and surprising group of songs, expanding our understanding of the old cycle and creating a new one in the process.
In Mary Nessinger's work with orchestra, she has been a soloist with the Baltimore Symphony, Grand Rapids Symphony, Jacksonville Symphony, London Symphony Orchestra, Brooklyn Philharmonic, Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, and the newly formed Boston Modern Orchestra Project. Her collaborative work has found her performing with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, New Millennium Ensemble, the Hebrides Ensemble (Scotland), the Brentano, Colorado, Pacifica, and Orion String Quartets, the Endellion String Quartet (London), and as a guest artist at the Tanglewood Music Festival and the Ravinia Festival. She has participated in the Santa Fe Festival, Chamber Music Northwest Festival, Marlboro Festival, Music from Angel Fire, Aspen Festival, International Musicians' Seminar Open Chamber Music, Skaneateles Festival, Music from Salem, Tannery Pond Festival, Salt Bay Chamberfest, Kingston Festival (RI), Crested Butte Festival, Portland (Maine) Chamber Music Festival, and New England Bach Festival; and has toured under the auspices of "Musicians from Marlboro" and the International Musicians' Seminar in England.
Mary Nessinger has recorded for Deutsche Grammophon, Nonesuch, CRI, New World, Naxos, Ondine, Mode, and Koch International labels, and looks forward to the imminent release of three monodramas written specifically for her; Lee Hyla's Lives of the Saints and Suma Beach; and Eric Moe's Tri-Stan.
Mary Nessinger now serves on the voice faculty of Princeton University and Vassar College. Since January 2013, she is Voice Teacher at Special Music School at Kaufman Music Center. She lives in New York city with her husband, cellist Ted Mook, and two beautiful daughters. |