Jonas Kaufmann feeds his inner Austrian

Jonas Kaufmann feeds his inner Austrian

News

norman lebrecht

July 28, 2022

We reported six months ago that the German tenor had moved to Salzburg and taken Austrian citizenship.

Now he’s showing he means it.

From a new online profile:
Jonas Kaufmann has long been a musical ambassador for the cultural heritage of our country, which he carries out into the world with his music and his outstanding voice. On our walk, however, we were able to discover the culinary preferences and another great “talent” of the star tenor. Once a star, always a star? At least that is true for the likeable singer more than for many other people: making coffee, cooking, handicrafts – the star tenor is a perfectionist not only on stage.
The first stop in Salzburg’s old town was the “Konditorei Schatz” where the legend of Salzburg’s patisserie, Erich Winkler, not only perfectly stages the cardinal slices. His version of the well-known pastry is a reason for Jonas Kaufmann to enjoy it here again and again or to take it home. It is originally a creation of the Viennese pastry shop L. Heiner and was invented on the occasion of the Catholic Day in 1933 to commemorate the colours of the Vatican (white and yellow) and the cardinal dignity (red). The red does not exist in the “treasure” version, because Erich Winkler’s slice has no currant jam layer. But who needs a “cardinal’s dignity” when one of the most famous singers in the world pays tribute to the heavenly dessert?
LOVE OF COFFEE
Jonas Kaufmann has another culinary love: Italian “caffè”. And Italy, of course. But love of coffee is actually an understatement, because what connects the star tenor with coffee is much, much more. He is a gifted barista, a connoisseur, a perfectionist here too. And when you listen to him talk about Robusta and Arabica, about water pressure, the grind of coffee beans, about absolute taste and preparation, you suddenly know exactly why he is also such a great singer. Skill, perfection and love for what you do are definitely the secret of everything that makes Jonas Kaufmann a singer and a person. In the “220Grad” in the Rupertinum Museum in the Festival District, where coffee culture is at home, we were able to experience his passion for the elixir of coffee. You could listen to him for hours and watch him sing the praises of 100 per cent Robusta beans, move the complicated levers on the enormous machine with an expert hand or set the perfect foam for a cappuccino on the cup. Only the question of whether he could win his wife over with a delicious coffee was laughingly not answered by him. But we do know that he often drinks six espressos in the morning, prepared of course on his perfect machine at home. And that his wife is a little “addicted” to his coffees, too.

… THE ROMA OF THE NORTH
And now Salzburg as a place to live. The “Roma of the North” suits Jonas Kaufmann well, and many places are also home for the pleasure he enjoys so much. Gin, for example. At the Sporer in Getreidegasse, Falstaff led him to a new gin creation by Michael Sporer. And here, too, his expertise was the “motor of pleasure” for Jonas Kaufmann, he discussed technical matters and tasted the new London Dry Gin Batch No. 01 with the landlord. When asked “wine or beer?” he says with a laugh that he loves red wine but finds that he can’t sing sensibly the next day, which is probably due to the tannin. So he often drinks beer because it agrees better with his voice. “At home, however, I have a well-stocked wine cellar and ‘unfortunately’ I always have to make sure that the stock is reduced,” he says. Kaufmann, the world star of classical music since he made his debut at New York’s Metropolitan Opera in 2006 in “La Traviata”, is a demanding artist and connoisseur. High enjoyment, but also simple pleasures like a hearty snack are part of his life. This life also includes the love of his children and Christiane, his wife.
SUMMER IN SALZBURG
In the Mediterranean, herb-scented guest garden of the “Blaue Gans” we meet Christiane and her little son Valentin at the end of our walk. She reveals to us that Summer would begin for her with a first Campari soda, heralding the lightness of being and many enjoyable sunny days. On this warm early evening, Salzburg shows itself from its very best side and the topics of conversation about food, wines, espresso and the dolce vita never run out…”
 

Comments

  • A.L. says:

    Profound reading. Enlightening. I am speechless out of awe.

  • NorCalMichael says:

    Might need an antacid after reading that …

    • Butterfly says:

      Well, you know what Thomas Bernhard said about Salzburg. Stay there more than three days and your brain starts to decline… it was actually ruder than that.

  • BB says:

    Too bad he didn’t become French and switch to lettuce and Perrier. It would have been better for his health and silhouette. Austria is a nightmare country. Pretty as a picture, but underneath that picture full of very unsympathetic things.

    • MJA says:

      @BB – out of interest, what’s your locus for judging an entire country? Are you stateless yourself?

    • Vienna calling says:

      Nightmare city Vienna, year after year after year voted city with the highest standard of living in the world. Nightmare healthcare, nightmare education, nightmare social system, nightmare culture, capital of a nightmare country. Hope you live in a better place.

    • Stefano says:

      I don’t understand. What are the very unsympathetic things?

      • TomPhillips says:

        Perhaps their pro-Nazi heritage which -unlike Germany – they have never fully accounted for or repudiated. Less true of Vienna of course than the more rural (and inevitably Catholic) regions.

        • Matt D says:

          Socialist Vienna accepted the Nazis with much greater gusto than rural Austria. There was one district in the southwest of Austria that decisively rejected the annexation by plebiscite. The same was true for Germany, where the heavily Catholic areas were the last to fall in line with the Nazi vote.

          The eastern Germans were the first to join the madness, then the central and north, then the southwest, then the southeast and west. The trend was unmistakable – the more Catholic, the less support among commoners for the Nazis, until 1933 when the choice was Nazi or commie

          Even in Bavaria, the heavily predominant Protestants in the central region were among the fiercest pro-Nazis, while the Catholic south and northwest were reluctant adopters. This has been verified with a multitude of studies – the repeatedly validated election maps that destroy the myth of Catholic Nazi support are almost hard to believe.

          German militarism and obedience were the result of the Reformed House of Hohenzollern. As any real Bavarian will tell you, “Anybody north of the Danube is a Prussian.”

    • Henrik says:

      Austria is good, but the best countries are in Scandinavien . ..

  • Gustavo says:

    Hipster

  • Edoardo Saccenti says:

    Salzburg the Rome of the north?? HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

  • Bobby says:

    Must be the age…if he ever was a great singer and not a marketing product, now he sounds like a permanent ad of himself and that second wife of his. Too busy to sing in London, I guess.

  • waltraud riegler says:

    ….and the foto is from Salzburg as well as the text in the magazine…..

  • Gustavo says:

    London dry ging…pffff

    Gordon’s haha

  • Fjodor says:

    I read this article quite superficially, despite this, so many questions arise!
    Is Mister Kaufmann = Mister Feelgood?
    Wherever he speaks he talks about happiness; Mister Kaufmann seems to be obsessed with happiness or maybe it is rather the happy couple Kaufmann’s obsession with happiness?
    But I wonder, miserable me, how does it happen?
    Do they wake up every morning, yes already in the state between sleep and wakefulness with the INEVITABLE question on their lips: Are we happy today? Let’s rate our happiness on a scale of 1 – 5 !
    As in all Marathon races only the winner counts, so it MUST be 5!
    Therefore we, happy couple, seek PERFECTION.
    We seek perfection in our acquisition, in our daily bread, in our appearance, in our constant dazzling white smiles, in our little angel for children ( completely understandable ) , we seek perfection in our exquisite sophisticated design taste, in our gourmet taste, yes, our happiness is in all our wealth.
    We love being us!

    It is said, and I, Fjodor, also believe so, that one should not strive too much for happiness, it makes you deeply unhappy!
    Happiness may arise where you least expect it, as a BONUS!

    So what does this happy couple do with all their happiness when they wake up on scale 5?
    Falling asleep again?

  • Horlacher says:

    Leider wird ihm der Erfolg nicht bekommen. AllĂĽren. Nun ja – halt ein Tenor.

  • Rossana says:

    Fedor, you are right at all!

  • Bloom says:

    Not more than a promo for his Jonas Kaufmann Summer Tour. They also release Jonas Kaufmann Summer Tour bags, as useful as the piece above.

  • Doc Martin says:

    The move to Austria does make sense. Healthcare is miles better than in Germany, Med Univ Wien is excellent. I did some ENT (HNO) training there many moons ago.

    He is not the only one to move countries. Since Brexit, in 2016, the applications from Brits for Irish citizenship have increased 1200% from GB!

    https://www.irishtimes.com/ireland/2022/06/27/applications-from-britons-for-irish-citizenship-soaring-since-brexit/

  • Mike says:

    Mehr schmeicheln geht nicht

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