Set your preferred locations for a better search. You can sign up here.

Classical Concerts in
Eastbourne

Overview

Explore classical music in Eastbourne by keywords associated with it.

New Arrivals

These concerts in Eastbourne became visible lately at ConcertPulse.

Nothing found for now.

Upcoming Concerts

Concerts in Eastbourne in season 2024/25 or later

February 23, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

New World Symphony

Sun, Feb 23, 2025, 15:00
Matthew Lynch (Conductor), Juliette Bausor (Flute), Alexander Boldachev (Harp)
The movie Chevalier popularised the incredible life story of Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, but his music is even more exciting, and today it’s just the start of an adventure that begins in 18th-century Paris, and ends with the glorious melodies of Dvořák’s ‘New World’ Symphony.It’s popular for a reason, but for pure elegance and enchantment it’s hard to top Mozart’s Concerto for Flute and Harp, performed by LPO Principal Flute Juliette Bausor plus the incredible Alexander Boldachev – a harpist with the charisma of a rock star. LPO 2024/25 Fellow Conductor Matthew Lynch completes a dream team: this should be magical.
March 9, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Beethoven & Brahms

Sun, Mar 9, 2025, 15:00
Adam Hickox (Conductor), Hyeyoon Park (Violin)
True romance: for the composers of the Romantic era, music was about gazing into the human soul and transforming raw passion into timeless beauty.And music doesn’t get much more beautiful than Beethoven’s radiant Violin Concerto: a sunlit, soaring masterpiece in which the soloist almost seems to take flight. There’s certainly nothing earthbound about our soloist – the award-winning Korean violinist Hyeyoon Park has been described as ‘a marvel’. Her performance is the big, warm heart of a concert that opens with Schumann’s swashbuckling overture and ends with Brahms’s last symphony – tragedy, tenderness and defiance, told straight from the heart.
April 13, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Jan Lisiecki plays Beethoven

Sun, Apr 13, 2025, 15:00
Tarmo Peltokoski (Conductor), Jan Lisiecki (Piano)
Imagine a swelling river of sound; a musical voyage that begins amid the tranquillity of nature and ends in a surge of triumph.That’s Sibelius’s Second Symphony, and there are few experiences in classical music more invigorating, or more stirring. For the young Finnish conductor Tarmo Peltokoski, Sibelius is a national hero, and Canadian pianist Jan Lisiecki takes centre stage to showcase the grandeur and glory of Beethoven’s mighty ‘Emperor’ Concerto – a work dedicated to the composer’s patron and friend, Archduke Rudolf.