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Dorle Soria

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Name
  
Dorle Soria

Alma mater
  
Columbia University

Role
  
Publicist

Books
  
The Metropolitan Opera

Died
  
July 7, 2002

Spouse
  
Dario Soria (m. 1942)


Born
  
14 December 1900 (
1900-12-14
)
New York, New York

Occupation
  
Record producer Talent manager Journalist

Organization
  
New York Philharmonic Cetra-Soria Records Angel Records

Similar People
  
Giorgia Fumanti, Roberta Flack, Anoushka Shankar, Graeme Bell, Liza Minnelli

Record labels founded
  
Angel Records

Dorle Jarmel Soria (December 14, 1900 – July 7, 2002) was a publicist, producer of classical music recordings, and journalist. With her husband Dario Soria, she co-founded Cetra-Soria Records and Angel Records.

Contents

Early career, artists' manager

A graduate of Columbia University, she worked as a journalist before the concert manager Arthur Judson hired her to manage publicity for his company (which later became the talent management company Columbia Artists Management). She was press manager and publicist of the New York Philharmonic which Judson managed. She played a significant role in establishing the stature of Arturo Toscanini, then the music director, during the orchestra's 1930 European tour. She promoted events such as Leonard Bernstein's 1943 Philharmonic debut and the orchestra's 1951 European tour. In 1942, she married Dario Soria, who had emigrated to the United States from Italy several years earlier.

In 1946, as part of her efforts at promotion at Columbia Artist Management, she co-founded with Nelson Lansdale Artist Life, a magazine intended for managers and other heads of music organizations and agencies. Columbia's board of directors put an end to Artist Life in the fall of 1949, citing 6,000 readers but a deficit of between $6,000 and $7,000. When Boris Morros asked her opinion on which instrumentalist to include in his forthcoming film Carnegie Hall, Soria suggested the cellist Gregor Piatigorsky, not realizing that Morros had been one of Piatigorsky's teachers.

Record producer

In 1948, Dario Soria established the Cetra-Soria label to press and distribute opera recordings from the Italian Cetra label in the United States. Taking advantage of what was available in Italy, the label distributed rarely performed operas in America for the first time. At Soria's insistence, Cetra-Soria releases included both complete Italian librettos and English translations, setting the standard to which fans of recorded opera are now accustomed.

In 1953, the Sorias launched Angel Records, producing and distributing acclaimed classical recordings for EMI, its corporate parent. During her time with Angel records, Dorle Soria used her promotional skills to spotlight their roster of artists. She produced opera balls highlighting Maria Callas at her Lyric Opera of Chicago and Metropolitan Opera debuts. The high quality of the series was noted, with one critic later describing it as "a classy product all the way."

Having produced nearly 500 albums, the Sorias left the company in 1958 after EMI merged it with its American subsidiary, Capitol Records. The Sorias then began producing a "deluxe" series of classical recordings for RCA under the title "Soria Series." Also in 1958, the Sorias worked with the composer Gian Carlo Menotti to launch his Festival of Two Worlds in Spoleto, Italy.

In the 1960s, Dorle Soria wrote a weekly column for the Carnegie Hall concert programs. Never entirely abandoning her journalist training, she wrote for the magazines High Fidelity, Opera News, and Musical America for which she wrote a monthly column called "Artist Life" (the same name as her short-lived publication of the 1940s). In 1982 she authored a monograph titled The Metropolitan Opera: A Guide. A producer of the MET's "Historic Opera" series, she received an award in 1986 for her work on issuing the 1939 broadcast of Simon Boccanegra on long playing records.

Dorle Soria died in New York City on July 7, 2002, at the age of 101.

References

Dorle Soria Wikipedia