KIRSTIN M CHAVEZ portrait
  • Director of Opera and Voice, International Performing Arts Institute, International Performing Arts Institute
  • Associate Professor, School Of Music
  • Director of Opera and Voice for IPAI GAP, Svpaa-Academics, International Performing Arts Institute
  • ARTIST IN RESIDENCE, School Of Music
  • Director of Voice and Opera, International Performing Artists Institute
  • Professor, School Of Music

Education

  • Bachelor of Music, Vocal Performance, NEW MEXICO STATE UNIVERSITY
  • Master of Music, EASTMAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC

Biography

Kirstin Chávez is considered one of the most riveting and significant performing mezzo-sopranos today. The combination of her magnificent voice with its expansive range, the dramatic intensity of her acting, and her natural physical beauty, make her an arresting and unique presence on the operatic and concert stage.

Ms. Chávez has captured attention and acclaim in her signature roles and is recognized as one of the definitive Carmens of today; a role that she has performed with great success throughout the United States, and around the world. Opera News reported that her Carmen in Graz, Austria was “the Carmen of a lifetime. With her dark, generous mezzo, earthy eroticism, volcanic spontaneity and smoldering charisma, Chávez has it all, including a superb command of French and a sense of humor.” Ms Chávez has also showed great success in various pants roles, including Octavian in Der Rosenkavalier (Florentine Opera), Hansel in Hansel and Gretel (Atlanta Opera), and Orfeo in Gluck's Orfeo (Metropolitan Opera)

Kirstin Chávez has earned praise for her performances in modern American Operas, as well, with her Jo in Adamo’s Little Women (Opera Pacific), Thérèse, in Tobias Picker’s Thérèse Raquin (San Diego Opera) and for Sondra Finchley in Picker’s An American Tragedy, which was her Metropolitan Opera principal debut in 2005. And now she has added two more modern roles to the list: Sister Helen Prejean in Dead Man Walking, of which the Tulsa World reviewer referred to her performance as “Searing and Incandescent,” and Sharon Falconer in Aldridge’s Elmer Gantry, of which the Tulsa World reviewer spoke of the “otherworldy quality to her singing; a mix of the earthy and the ethereal”

Ms. Chavez' recent engagements have brought her to Australia as Carmen at the Opera Queensland and to Italy for The Rape of Lucretia at Maggio Musicale Fiorentino. She has now also made her debut with two major companies in the United Kingdom: The Welsh National Opera, as Carmen, and The Royal Opera House in London with the role of Marquise de Merteuil in the contemporary opera Quartett by Luca Francesconi; a production with which she also recently made her Swedish debut with Malmö Opera. And now, Ms. Chavez is making her role debut as Amneris in Verdi’s Aida with Opera Southwest in the United States.

Kirstin is also well known on the concert stage, having performed in numerous oratorios and concert productions, including such works as Beethoven’s 9th Symphony, Mozart’s Requiem, Bach’s Magnificat, Rossini’s Stabat Mater, Verdi’s Requiem, the Mahler 2nd Symphony and Rückert Lieder, and Manuel de Falla’s “El Amor Brujo.” Now expanding her concert career, Kirstin is performing in recital through the United States and now in France and the UK with unique and engaging programs on subjects dear to her heart: Love, Nature, and songs from her Spanish heritage.

Kirstin Chávez was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, but spent most of her formative years in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, where her parents worked as English and Music teachers. She received a Bachelor of Music degree, with Honors, from New Mexico State University, and a Master of Music degree in Performance, and the Performer’s Certificate, from the Eastman School of Music. After beginning an Artistic Residency with the Orlando Opera, Ms. Chávez won several major international competitions, including The Sullivan Foundation, The George London Foundation, the Licia Albanese-Puccini Foundation, the Opera Index Foundation, The Gerda Lissner Foundation, the Jensen Foundation, and the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions (National Finalist).