One of the world's foremost tenors specializing in Baroque opera and choral music, Scottish-born
Paul Agnew has a long vocal resumé that includes works of many nationalities and time periods. He has also turned to conducting in the second half of his career, becoming the first conductor other than founder
William Christie to lead the noted French Baroque ensemble
Les Arts Florissants.
Agnew was born in Glasgow in 1964. He attended Magdalen College at Oxford University as a choral scholar, performing in the school's famous chapel choir in addition to his academic studies. When he graduated, London's early music scene was burgeoning, and there were plenty of opportunities for a young singer. He performed in the
Consort of Musicke and also sang at various times with
the Sixteen, the
Gothic Voices, and
the Tallis Scholars choirs. Launching a career as a soloist in the early 1990s,
Agnew attracted
Christie's attention and was offered the chance to move to France to perform with
Les Arts Florissants. He was soon the group's lead vocal soloist, performing lead roles in such operas as
Rameau's Hippolyte et Aricie, in a production that traveled around France and as far as New York.
Agnew was a tenor, but he also sang in a high register in a voice known in French as the haute-contre. He has sometimes been described as a countertenor as well as a tenor, but the haute-contre, of which
Agnew was one of the few exponents when he began taking such roles in the 1990s, has a different vocal quality that involves less falsetto than a true countertenor voice. Although
Agnew has devoted much of his career to
Les Arts Florissants, he has also sung in English and has recorded a wide variety of material, including songs of
Ivor Gurney and, in 2001,
Beethoven's settings of English-language folk songs. He has also performed in large choral works by
Bach and others, and recorded English voice and lute music with lutenist
Christopher Wilson.
In 2007,
Agnew began leading
Les Arts Florissants as associate conductor; he began to conduct the group more and more often, and later he was named joint music director. In 2018, conducting
Les Arts Florissants, he released
an album devoted to little-known French Baroque motet composers Sébastien de Brossard and Pierre Bouteiller.