A CHANGE IS GONNA COME AMONG GRAMOPHONE'S "CRITIC'S CHOICE 2024"
“Nicholas Phan is a fine protagonist, steering this provocative course between cantata and musical theatre. His fervent, crystalline diction fuels the revolution, not that the electrically democratic Palaver Strings are short of ideas. Phan gives Farayi Malek the final word, and it’s a soulful call to action”
CHICAGO CLASSICAL REVIEW HIGHLIGHTS COLLABORATIVE WORKS FESTIVAL IN 'BEST OF 2021' YEAR-IN-REVIEW
CAIC's 2021 Collaborative Works Festival: Strangers in a Strange Land was highlighted twice among Chicago Classical Review's 'Best of 2021'.
The opening concert of the festival, Songs of the New World, was listed as number three on Chicago Classical Review's "Top Ten Performances of 2021" and the closing concert of the festival, The Songs We Carried, was listed amongst the review's round-up of honorable mentions.
CHICAGO TRIBUNE LISTS 2021 COLLABORATIVE WORKS FESTIVAL IN TOP 10 FALL CRITIC'S PICKS
“…The Collaborative Arts Institute of Chicago (CAIC) — the city’s prized art-song outfit — is back with an in-person festival, and it’s managed to outdo itself yet again on the programming front…”
NICK EARNS GRAMMY NOMINATION & PLACES ON NEW YORK TIMES & BOSTON GLOBE'S “Best of 2020” LISTS
“As the year draws to a close, tenor Nicholas Phan continues to win accolades for his most recent recording, Clairières, an homage to composers Lili and Nadia Boulanger. As well as being featured on the New York Times’ list of Best Classical Music Tracks of 2020, the album has been nominated for a 2021 Grammy Award in the Best Classical Solo Vocal Album category, for which the final round of voting ends on January 4. This marks the second Grammy nomination for Phan and his regular collaborator, pianist Myra Huang, who were previously nominated in 2017 for their Romantic collection Gods & Monsters. The tenor remains the first and only Asian singer to be nominated in the history of the Best Classical Solo Vocal Album category, which has been awarded since 1959.”
BEST OF 2015
Those qualities that make Phan such an idiomatic interpreter of Benjamin Britten's songs guarantee him success in the early English vocal repertory that inspired Britten. He brings exquisite tonal purity and subtle expressive shadings to his thoughtful journey through lute songs by Dowland, Blow, Purcell and others…