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Canadian tenor Jon Vickers dies at 88

Jon Vickers, right, pictured with Roberta Knie in 1976. The Associated Press

LONDON – Canada-born opera singer Jon Vickers, nicknamed “God’s tenor” for his inimitable voice and strong Christian beliefs, has died. He was 88.

The Royal Opera House opera cited a statement from Vickers’ family, which said he died Friday after a struggle with Alzheimer’s disease.

Born in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan in 1926, Vickers sang as a child in church choirs but originally aspired to study medicine. He turned to music full-time after winning a scholarship to the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto.

Vickers made his Royal Opera debut in 1957. A year later, he performed at Germany’s Bayreuth festival, going on to become one of the world’s leading performers of Richard Wagner, acclaimed for roles including Siegmund in Die Walkuere.

From 1960 on, he was a regular at New York’s Metropolitan Opera, where his signature roles included Benjamin Britten’s Peter Grimes.

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Vickers was a standout among dramatic tenors for the intensity of his performances and his richly powerful voice, described by critic John Ardoin as “holding a hundred colours and inflections.”

“Art is a wrestling with the meaning of life,” Vickers once said, and his strong faith informed his artistic choices.

Despite his association with the works of Wagner, he found the German composer – whose anti-Semitism made him a favourite of the Nazis – morally objectionable. In 1977, Vickers pulled out of a production of Wagner’s Tannhauser, saying he considered it anti-Christian.

For three decades Vickers performed around the world, collecting devoted fans, numerous honorary degrees, companionship in the Order of Canada and two Grammy Awards.

Vickers retired in 1988. His wife, Henrietta, died in 1991. He is survived by a sister, five children, 11 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

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