Concerts with works byFranz Schubert
Franz Schubert was an Austrian composer known for his lyrical melodies and emotional depth. Though his life was short, he created over 600 songs, as well as symphonies, chamber music, and piano works. Schubert’s ability to convey profound feelings with simplicity and grace has made him a beloved figure in the Romantic era.
Overview
Quick overview of Franz Schubert by associated keywords
CitiesFrequently performed in
In Germany
Berlin
88In Germany
Hamburg
56In The Netherlands
Amsterdam
36In France
Paris
20In Germany
München
19MusiciansFrequently performed by
conductor
Paavo Järvi
19orchestra
Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks
14conductor
Riccardo Muti
11Musician
Janine Jansen
10orchestra
Wiener Philharmoniker
10orchestra
Gewandhausorchester
8Musician
Leipziger Ballett
8Musician
Louis Stiens
8Musician
Sofia Nappi
8orchestra
Berliner Philharmoniker
7ProgramFrequently performed along with
Works by
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
76Works by
Johannes Brahms
75Works by
Ludwig van Beethoven
63Works by
Robert Schumann
43Works by
Gustav Mahler
36New Arrivals
These concerts with works by Franz Schubert became visible lately at ConcertPulse.
Ombres et lumière, récital de lieders allemands
Upcoming Concerts
Concerts in season 2024/25 or later where works by Franz Schubert is performed
Today
Concert de midi et demi avec Ye XIN, Spyros THOMAS, Jianyu SONG
Tomorrow
Joshua Bell and Shai Wosner: Mozart, Schubert and Fauré
Het Concertgebouw, Recital Hall (Amsterdam)
For lovers of chamber music the Recital Hall is the venue of choice. You can hear the musicians breathe and you can practically touch them. This hall is also cherished by musicians for its beautiful acoustics and direct contact with the audience. In the Recital Hall you can hear the best musicians of our time. Buy your tickets now and experience the magic of the Recital Hall for yourself!
January 24, 2025
Kammermusik des Konzerthausorchesters
Konzerthaus Berlin, Kleiner Saal (Berlin)
Mozart's Hoffmeister Quartet was written a year after he began composing „Figaro“ and was published by Hoffmeister in 1786. A strange mixture of cheerfulness and melancholy connects the great quartet with the opera. Alfred Einstein said of the Adagio that it „speaks of suffering never before heard in such depth“. Schubert's Quartet in G major D 887 from 1826 was ahead of its time - it took almost half a century for this „uncompromising exploration of the themes of major and minor, life and death, hope and despair“ to find an appropriate response from critics and audiences.
January 26, 2025
Verborgene Tiefe unter der scheinbaren Einfachheit
Tabakquartier, Halle 1 (Bremen)
Mit Herz und Seele
The Frankfurt Radio Symphony is bringing its chamber concerts to Heppenheim's Forum Kultur this season. The program features unjustly overlooked female composers like Clara Schumann, Isabella Leonarda, and Marie Jaëll, alongside music from two renowned male composers. It promises to be an interesting afternoon.
January 27, 2025
Amatis Trio: Schubert, Korngold and Haydn
Het Concertgebouw, Recital Hall (Amsterdam)
For lovers of chamber music the Recital Hall is the venue of choice. You can hear the musicians breathe and you can practically touch them. This hall is also cherished by musicians for its beautiful acoustics and direct contact with the audience. In the Recital Hall you can hear the best musicians of our time. Buy your tickets now and experience the magic of the Recital Hall for yourself!
January 28, 2025
Concert de midi et demi avec Shizuka KIMURA, Mone KITASHIRO et Marina MISE
Julia Kleiter and Michael Gees: Wolf and Schubert
Het Concertgebouw, Recital Hall (Amsterdam)
For lovers of chamber music the Recital Hall is the venue of choice. You can hear the musicians breathe and you can practically touch them. This hall is also cherished by musicians for its beautiful acoustics and direct contact with the audience. In the Recital Hall you can hear the best musicians of our time. Buy your tickets now and experience the magic of the Recital Hall for yourself!
January 29, 2025
Concert de midi et demi avec Xinying FU, Samuel BACH, Vincent Pengkung YANG et Zoé HOYBEL
Memoirs of a Geisha and other gems of cinematography
Narodowej Orkiestry Symfonicznej Polskiego Radia, Chamber Hall (Katowice)
This is the essence of chamber musicianship – we play what we like. We play for pleasure - our own and that of our listeners. The idea of chamber music is summarised in the Italian term da camera, which means playing for a chamber, a room, or a small hall. It denotes semi-private, intimate music. It is lovely when such a mood is carried into the concert hall. Today, there is an opportunity to do so because we love the tunes we already know, and there are plenty of them here. Most listeners will recognise Sting's Roxanne, Satie's Gnosienne or Barber's Adagio. Exactly like in the programme Name That Tune, after two sounds, we will already know what's coming next. Concert hall goers, on the other hand, will once again be seduced by gripping Schubert's Andante or Arvo Pärt's Fratres. Lovers of cinematic melodramas will get a handful of John Williams tunes, while refined musical gourmets will get Glass's Mishima, Vasks' Meditation and Schnittke's waltz. Not a single note goes to waste here! Adam Suprynowicz
Amatis Trio: Schubert, Korngold and Haydn
Het Concertgebouw, Recital Hall (Amsterdam)
For lovers of chamber music the Recital Hall is the venue of choice. You can hear the musicians breathe and you can practically touch them. This hall is also cherished by musicians for its beautiful acoustics and direct contact with the audience. In the Recital Hall you can hear the best musicians of our time. Buy your tickets now and experience the magic of the Recital Hall for yourself!
January 30, 2025
Instrumental music at its finest
February 1, 2025
HUMANS
Leipzig Ballet, under Rémy Fichet, presents "Humans," a double bill exploring creative and abstract dance narratives. Louis Stiens examines dance's embodiment, its impact on choreography, and Leipzig Ballet's history, linking to Schubert's "Unfinished" Symphony. Sofia Nappi blends ballet, contemporary dance, and performance, exploring Baroque and modern elements with music by Clara Schumann and Henry Purcell, reflecting on femininity across eras.
February 2, 2025
Symphoniker Hamburg / Chamber Concert
Laeiszhalle, Kleiner Saal (Hamburg)
This recital opens with Bach's trio sonatas for violin and harpsichord, highlighting the harpsichord's novel equality. Schubert's C-Major Fantasy for violin and piano, written for Josef Slavík, challenged audiences with its length and free form. Sibelius's Nocturne from "Belshazzar's Feast" follows Leschanah's palace dialogue with the stars. Saint-Saëns's first violin sonata, announced with humor, became a hit. Kroll's "Banjo and Fiddle" captures American folk music and gained popularity through Jascha Heifetz.
Guest performance
Philharmonie Berlin, Main Auditorium (Berlin)
armonia ensemble
Gewandhaus Leipzig, Mendelssohn-Saal (Leipzig)
February 3, 2025
STAATSKAPELLE BERLIN & FINNEGAN DOWNIE DEAR
From January 2025, the Staatsoper Unter den Linden will present György Kurtág’s only opera Fin de partie, based on Samuel Beckett’s Endgame. During the run of performances, the Staatskapelle and a group of vocal soloists bring Kurtág’s 1990 Beckett homage What Is the Word to the Pierre Boulez Saal, continuing the annual tradition of the orchestra’s guest concerts. Kurtág’s fascinating score is framed by works of Béla Bartók and Franz Schubert. Young British conductor Finnegan Downie Dear, who led the Staatskapelle’s previous Pierre Boulez Saal appearance, returns to the podium. Presented by the Staatsoper Unter den Linden in cooperation with the Pierre Boulez Saal. Tickets are available exclusively from the Staatsoper Unter den Linden: staatsoper-berlin.de
February 8, 2025
Teatime Classics
Laeiszhalle, Kleiner Saal (Hamburg)
Guido Sant’Anna »has charisma, stage presence and an astonishing maturity and depth in his playing,« wrote the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung after the young Brazilian violinist had opened the Rheingau Music Festival in 2023 together with the hr-Sinfonieorchester. Be it large concert stages or prestigious competitions – at not even 20 years old, Guido Sant’Anna wins over audiences, the press and judges equally. With Martina Consonni, sponsored by star pianist Sir András Schiff, who celebrated her debut at the Elbphilharmonie in 2024, he presents a programme from Schubert to Ravel, which entertains both with breakneck virtuosity and expansive melody arcs – and even blues. Both Guido Sant’Anna and Martina Consonni study at the prestigious Kronberg Academy. Guido Sant’Anna was born in São Paulo, Brazil, in 2005. He achieved international recognition when he was the first South American violinist to win the prestigious International Fritz Kreisler Competition in 2022. A historic success had already preceded this triumph in Vienna in 2018 when he was the first Brazilian violinist to be invited to the International Yehudi Menuhin Competition in Geneva and won both the audience prize and the chamber music prize. In October 2022, he filled in for Christian Tetzlaff at the Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen in São Paulo for which he received rave reviews. Praised for her innate musicality and overwhelming sensitivity, combined with exceptional instrumental technique and brilliant sound, Martina Consonni has established herself as one of the most promising young pianists of her generation. Born in Como in 1997, she achieved two Masters degrees at the Pavia Conservatory and at the HMTM in Hanover. She also received a Masters degree in chamber music at the National Academy »Santa Cecilia« in Rome and an Artist Diploma at the Barenboim-Said Akademie in Berlin under Sir András Schiff. She has been selected to participate in several master classes where she encountered musicians of international standing, such as Daniel Barenboim, Kirill Gerstein, Steven Isserlis and Christoph Eschenbach.
February 9, 2025
HUMANS
Leipzig Ballet, under Rémy Fichet, presents "Humans," a double bill exploring creative and abstract dance narratives. Louis Stiens examines dance's embodiment, its impact on choreography, and Leipzig Ballet's history, linking to Schubert's "Unfinished" Symphony. Sofia Nappi blends ballet, contemporary dance, and performance, exploring Baroque and modern elements with music by Clara Schumann and Henry Purcell, reflecting on femininity across eras.
February 10, 2025
YCAT-Collective (Young Classical Artists Trust)
A diverse international group of outstanding soloists, sponsored by the UK's Young Classical Artists Trust (YCAT), is causing a stir. Schubert's magnificent Octet demonstrates a beautiful complement of wind and string instruments, bridging to the present. Inspired by it, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor composed his romantic Nonet. YCAT-Collective musicians continue to inspire audiences.
February 12, 2025
HUMANS
Leipzig Ballet, under Rémy Fichet, presents "Humans," a double bill exploring creative and abstract dance narratives. Louis Stiens examines dance's embodiment, its impact on choreography, and Leipzig Ballet's history, linking to Schubert's "Unfinished" Symphony. Sofia Nappi blends ballet, contemporary dance, and performance, exploring Baroque and modern elements with music by Clara Schumann and Henry Purcell, reflecting on femininity across eras.
February 13, 2025
Guest performance
Philharmonie Berlin, Chamber Music Hall (Berlin)
Mozarts Klavierkonzert Nr. 21 | Schuberts Große C-Dur-Sinfonie
Schubert's Great C Major Symphony, unearthed by Robert Schumann, premiered posthumously in 1839 at Leipzig's Gewandhaus, conducted by Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy. Mozart's Piano Concerto KV 467, featuring Angela Hewitt, also celebrates C major, "our harmonic home."
Khatia Buniatishvili
Philharmonie de Paris, Grande salle Pierre Boulez (Paris)
The fiery pianist Khatia Buniatishvili possesses not only talent but also the rare gift of charisma. At ease in the spotlight, her exuberance, showmanship and communication skills have won her a wide audience.
February 14, 2025
Echo Rising Stars with piano
Konserthuset Stockholm, The Grünewald Hall (Stockholm)
Pianist Lukas Sternath is on the path to a brilliant career. He has performed in renowned concert halls such as Vienna's Musikverein, Elbphilharmonie in Hamburg, and Tonhalle in Zurich. Sternath was a member of the famous Vienna Boys' Choir and later trained at the Conservatory in Vienna, as well as studying under Igor Levit in Germany.Sternath eagerly tackles the hyper-virtuosic repertoire, including Franz Schubert's heroic and extremely challenging Wanderer Fantasy. Schubert himself couldn't play it well enough and is said to have remarked, "The devil can play this piece!" In addition to a newly composed piece, Sternath also takes on Franz Liszt's monumental B minor Sonata, a captivating and forward-looking work filled with drama, beauty, power, and contemplation.Rising Stars is a unique and forward-looking collaboration between 24 of Europe’s leading concert halls, all members of the European Concert Hall Organisation (ECHO). A handful of young musicians and ensembles from various countries are selected each year and given the opportunity to tour the concert halls and perform before international audiences. Experience shows that those who are selected as Rising Stars also have internationally successful careers.Lukas Sternath was nominated by Vienna’s Musikverein and Konzerthaus, and Philharmonie du Luxembourg.
My Bloody Valentine
Cité de la musique, Amphithéâtre (Paris)
From a recital by an Aphrodite on the eve of Valentine’s Day, one might expect a classic ode to romantic love, but singer Aphrodite Patoulidou has something else in mind.
Schubert's Octet
Het Concertgebouw, Recital Hall (Amsterdam)
For lovers of chamber music the Recital Hall is the venue of choice. You can hear the musicians breathe and you can practically touch them. This hall is also cherished by musicians for its beautiful acoustics and direct contact with the audience. In the Recital Hall you can hear the best musicians of our time. Buy your tickets now and experience the magic of the Recital Hall for yourself!