Garnet Brooks
Garnet Brooks was a Canadian tenor and vocal pedagogue who performed with opera companies and orchestras across North America and Europe.
Birth
Garnet Brooks was born on September 4, 1937, in London, Ontario, to parents James and Sylvia Brooks.Education
As a teenager, while working at his father's gas station, Brooks began to study music privately. After two years he received a scholarship to attend The Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto from 1960-1964, where his teachers included Mary Raze, Dorothy Allan Park, John Coveart, and Douglas Bodle.In 1965 Brooks furthered his voice studies under the tutelage of Robert Weede at the Merola Opera Program in San Francisco.
Professional career
Performing
While still a student at the RCM, Brooks began singing professionally. Early performances included roles with the Stratford Festival, and the Canadian Opera Company. After an appearance with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra in 1963, critics began referring to Brooks as "the greatest tenor Canada has produced since Jon Vickers."In 1967, Brooks received a Canada Council grant to travel to Europe to audition for various opera houses. In 1968 he joined the Glyndebourne Touring Company, and during the 1968-1969 season also toured with the Western Opera Theater. Brooks would remain in Europe until 1982. From 1974-1976 he lived in Switzerland, performing at the Stadttheater Bern, following which he moved to Vienna in 1976 to perform with the Salzburg Opera Company. During these years he continued to sing with the Glyndebourne Opera, and at various opera houses in West Germany.
While based in Europe, Brooks continued to perform regularly with the Canadian Opera Company and make guest appearances with other North American companies. Besides his performances in the standard operatic repertoire, Brooks was involved in the world premieres of operas by Canadian composers Derek Healey, Harry Somers and Charles Wilson. In 1969 he sang the title role in the North American premiere of Benjamin Britten's The Prodigal Son at the Guelph Spring Festival, conducted by Nicholas Goldschmidt.
In addition to his career as an opera singer, Brooks performed in solo recitals, oratorios, TV programs, and in concert with every major Canadian symphony orchestra. He continued to perform into the early 2000s.