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Wednesday, 24 June 2026

The 2026 Opus Klassik Awards: Kaufmann Brings Wagnerian Heft to Schubert


 By Charles P Arden

24 June 2026

The Opus Klassik jury has once again descended from the mountain to deliver its annual verdicts on the state of the recording industry. The 2026 roster of winners, announced yesterday, offers the usual smorgasbord of the predictable and the genuinely deserving. Yet, for those of us tracking the broader currents of dramatic voice, there is one name that immediately eclipses the rest of the ledger: Jonas Kaufmann.

For obvious reasons, our critical gaze naturally gravitates towards the pre-eminent Heldentenor of his generation. While there are no Wagner recordings taking the laurels in the vocal categories this year, Kaufmann has nonetheless secured the award for Audiovisual Music Production of the Year. He does so not with a sword in hand as Siegmund, nor in the brooding contemplation of Parsifal, but alongside pianist Helmut Deutsch in Claus Guth’s startling, theatrical staging of Schubert’s Schwanengesang, titled Doppelgänger.



Recorded during its run at the Park Avenue Armory in New York, Doppelgänger places Schubert’s final, harrowing lieder within the bleak expanse of a First World War triage ward. It is a premise that risks buckling under its own conceptual weight, yet Kaufmann anchors it with the same dramatic intensity and darkened vocal colours he routinely deploys in Bayreuth. To see a tenor so intrinsically linked to the immense architecture of Wagnerian drama scale down—or perhaps, scale in—to the psychological terror of Schubert’s final songs is a testament to his sheer stagecraft. The Opus Klassik jury, rightly for once, recognised the theatrical audacity of this release.

Elsewhere in the vocal categories, the awards paint a picture of an industry leaning heavily into established excellence whilst nodding to historically informed performance. The Opera Recording of the Year goes to a formidable assembly: Joyce DiDonato, Michael Spyres, and Maxime Emelyanychev leading Il Pomo d’Oro in Purcell’s Dido & Aeneas. It is a lean, fiercely intelligent reading that fully deserves its accolades.

In the recital and solo fields, Anna Lucia Richter claims Female Singer of the Year for Gustav Mahler – Songs of Fate, an album that confirms her highly successful migration to the mezzo-soprano repertoire, whilst Andrè Schuen takes Male Singer of the Year for his robust, elegantly phrased Mozart.

The Solo Recording (Singing) of the Year is split between two distinct temperaments. Christian Gerhaher, whose baritone remains one of the most meticulously deployed instruments in the world of lieder, takes the prize for his Brahms Songs. Alongside him, Katharina Konradi is recognised for Franz Liszt: Un Cycle Imaginaire, a delightfully curated exploration of Liszt’s francophone sensibilities.

The podium honours are no less notable. Andris Nelsons—despite the relentless churn of boardroom drama currently surrounding him in Boston—has been named Conductor of the Year for his Felix Mendelssohn: Symphonies & Oratorios cycle with the Gewandhausorchester. Meanwhile, the Young Talent of the Year awards have been judiciously handed to bass-baritone Marcel Brunner for Remembrance and soprano Shira Patchornik for Bella Furia.

It is a solid, if safe, year for the Opus Klassik. But for those of us who track the theatrical evolution of the modern dramatic tenor, Kaufmann’s triumph with Doppelgänger serves as a stark reminder: true dramatic intelligence does not always require a pit orchestra of a hundred and twenty. Sometimes, a piano, an empty hospital bed, and a voice steeped in shadows are more than enough.

Jonas Kaufmann: Emotional scene from Schubert's "Doppelgänger" This footage illustrates Claus Guth's stark, war-torn staging at the Park Avenue Armory, demonstrating exactly how Kaufmann translates his formidable operatic stage presence into the psychological terror of Schubert's lieder.