Richard Salter (baritone)
{{Short description|English baritone}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
Richard Jeffrey Salter (Hindhead, Surrey, on 12 November 1943 – Karlsruhe, 1 February 2009) was an English baritone, known as a founder member of The King's Singers before moving to Austria and Germany to take leading roles in many contemporary operas.{{cite web|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/4788792/Richard-Salter.html|publisher=telegraph.co.uk|title=Richard Salter - Telegraph | Obituary |accessdate=2016-11-12}}
After the King's Singers' first concerts and recording in 1969, Salter was awarded a Richard Tauber Scholarship and moved to Vienna where he successfully established himself as an opera singer. Among his signature roles were Bernd Alois Zimmermann's Requiem for a Young Poet, Schoenberg's Von heute auf morgen, the baritone lead in operas by Manfred Trojahn and Wolfgang Rihm, the main character K. in Aribert Reimann's Das Schloß after Kafka (1996), and Philip Glass' Waiting for the Barbarians (2005).
References
{{reflist}}
{{authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Salter, Richard}}
Category:English operatic baritones
Category:20th-century English male opera singers
Category:Choral Scholars of the Choir of King's College, Cambridge