Hide player

Hyperion Records

Unger-Sabatier, Karoline (1803-1877)  
Lithograph by Ferdinand von Lütgendorf (1823)

Karoline Unger-Sabatier

born: 28 October 1803
died: 23 March 1877
country: Austria

Karoline Unger-Sabatier was one of the most famous singers of the age, a mezzo-soprano who sang in the first performance of Beethoven’s ninth symphony and whom Schubert coached in the role of Dorabella (Così fan tutte) during the short time he worked as a répétiteur at the Kärntnertor Theatre in 1821. Karoline, a splendid interpreter of Schubert’s songs, was the daughter of Johann Karl Unger who was a Schubert enthusiast and patron, and also something of a composer. She left Vienna in 1825—her father missed her terribly—and returned to the city only for the 1839–1840 season when she was once again engaged by the Kärntnertor Theatre.

Karoline Unger retired from the stage in 1843 when she married the French scholar François Sabatier. Her book of songs in autograph, prefaced by a dedicatory poem by Franz Schober in his own hand, contains a number of French romances, but also lieder in her native language. Her career as a composer, such as it was, dates from the years of her marriage and her residence in France.

from notes by Graham Johnson © 2006

Show: MP3 FLAC ALAC
   English   Français   Deutsch
over £20 for 10% discount on whole order
over £40 for 15% discount on whole order
over £59 for 25% discount on whole order
over £200 for 35% discount on whole order
(P&P free on almost all orders.)
Your basket:
There are no items in your basket.
Use the Buy buttons across the site.

The following discounts will be applied for CD purchases:
ms'); ' %>