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

Insight Piano with Lukas Sternath

Date & Time
Tue, Jan 28, 2025, 18:00
Be it a piano recital, lieder recital, piano trio or piano concerto – as soon as a concert grand is involved, one thing is essential: tuning the piano’s strings. When the instruments have been tuned correctly, you only perceive this consciously in the rarest cases. But even the minutest imperfection can turn the long-awaited musical experience into an acoustic nightmare. That this is not the case in the professional music business is thanks to outstanding piano tuners who fine tune... Read full text
Artistic depiction of the event

Musicians

Lukas SternathPiano
Simon RempeTalk
Anne KussmaulModerator

Program

Information not provided
Give feedback
Last update: Sun, Nov 3, 2024, 19:45

Similar events

These events are similar in terms of concept, place, musicians or the program.

Artistic depiction of the event

Lukas Sternath, piano

Wed, Jan 29, 2025, 19:30
Elbphilharmonie, Kleiner Saal (Hamburg)
Lukas Sternath (Piano)
In 2025, giving the closing concert of the Rising Stars Festival and thereby bringing a crowning finale to a whole week of concerts by the most exciting young stars of the classical music world is the task of a young Viennese musician at his peak. Since Lukas Sternath discovered his love of music as a member of the Vienna Boys Choir, he soon arrived at the piano and so on the path to success. At the ARD International Music Competition in 2022, he did not just achieve first prize, but was also awarded with seven special prizes – unique in the history of the prestigious competition! He has since studied with Igor Levit and provides his recital with a challenging programme for the piano. Sternath goes all out and opens the programme with the »Chaconne« by Sofia Gubaidulina – a highly concentrated piece which evokes the spirit of Johann Sebastian Bach in a modern tonal language. Sternath does not seem to want to indulge in breaks and proceeds with the Handel variations by Johannes Brahms. He made a joke out of taking an artlessly dancing topic as the starting point of an absurdly virtuoso work. PatKop, as star violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja calls herself when she composes, writes the work commissioned for Lukas Sternath’s Rising Star concerts. Her works are consequently just as full of surprises as are her unconventional interpretations of other composers. With Franz Liszt’s legendary Sonata in B minor, the evening finds its brilliant end point with another pinnacle of the piano repertoire.
Artistic depiction of the event

Rising Stars: Lukas Sternath

Wed, Feb 12, 2025, 20:15
Lukas Sternath (Piano)
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!
Artistic depiction of the event

Andrew Manze, Lukas Sternath

Fri, May 9, 2025, 18:00
Konzerthalle Bamberg, Joseph-Keilberth-Saal (Bamberg)
Andrew Manze (Conductor), Lukas Sternath (Piano)
»My career feels a bit like the history of conducting: from a standing violinist to concertmaster and eventually with just a baton in my hand.« Andrew Manze was a celebrated baroque violinist in the early music scene for a long time, then decided in favour of the conductor’s podium – and is now also passionately immersing himself in the great romantic scores. He fell in love with music and his current profession at an early age: as a child, he simply plucked a branch from his parents’ garden and swung it to symphonies from the radio. Today, our guest conductor is known as a creative free spirit and exudes a lot of British charm. We are pleased that he is once again conducting one of his favourite programmes with us: Grieg wrote his famous piano concerto in 1868 as a newlywed – a very vivacious piece with memorable melodies and typical Norwegian rhythms, for which we welcome the young artist Lukas Sternath as soloist. There is also the colourful and compelling work »Transit Underground« by Swedish composer Tobias Broström, born in 1978. We will conclude with Sibelius’ Symphony No. 5, which he began in the middle of the First World War. It nevertheless carries a largely optimistic tone in a sea full of superb soundscapes – including the »swan theme«, sounding like film music. It will be a thrilling musical experience with Andrew Manze, because his overflowing joy in the compositions is inspiring and his impulses spark new ways of playing – and when everything works together in harmony, he is happy: »For me, the act of making music is everything. I love the magic when musicians come together, think about music and then something fantastic emerges.«
Artistic depiction of the event

Andrew Manze, Lukas Sternath

Sat, May 10, 2025, 20:00
Konzerthalle Bamberg, Joseph-Keilberth-Saal (Bamberg)
Andrew Manze (Conductor), Lukas Sternath (Piano)
»My career feels a bit like the history of conducting: from a standing violinist to concertmaster and eventually with just a baton in my hand.« Andrew Manze was a celebrated baroque violinist in the early music scene for a long time, then decided in favour of the conductor’s podium – and is now also passionately immersing himself in the great romantic scores. He fell in love with music and his current profession at an early age: as a child, he simply plucked a branch from his parents’ garden and swung it to symphonies from the radio. Today, our guest conductor is known as a creative free spirit and exudes a lot of British charm. We are pleased that he is once again conducting one of his favourite programmes with us: Grieg wrote his famous piano concerto in 1868 as a newlywed – a very vivacious piece with memorable melodies and typical Norwegian rhythms, for which we welcome the young artist Lukas Sternath as soloist. There is also the colourful and compelling work »Transit Underground« by Swedish composer Tobias Broström, born in 1978. We will conclude with Sibelius’ Symphony No. 5, which he began in the middle of the First World War. It nevertheless carries a largely optimistic tone in a sea full of superb soundscapes – including the »swan theme«, sounding like film music. It will be a thrilling musical experience with Andrew Manze, because his overflowing joy in the compositions is inspiring and his impulses spark new ways of playing – and when everything works together in harmony, he is happy: »For me, the act of making music is everything. I love the magic when musicians come together, think about music and then something fantastic emerges.«
Artistic depiction of the event

Rising Star: Lukas Sternath

Sun, Jan 12, 2025, 16:00
Lukas Sternath (Piano)
Lukas Sternath, born in 2001, began his career as a Vienna Boys' Choir member before studying piano in Vienna and Hanover under Igor Levit. He won first prize and seven special awards at the 2022 ARD Music Competition. He has performed at prestigious venues like Vienna's Musikverein and Hamburg's Elbphilharmonie. As a Rising Star, he returns to Cologne's Philharmonie for a solo recital, featuring Liszt's challenging sonata.
Artistic depiction of the event

Lukas Sternath spielt Schuberts "Wanderer­fantasie"

Sun, Oct 6, 2024, 11:00
Theater und Philharmonie Essen, RWE PavillonAlfried Krupp Saal (Essen)
Lukas Sternath (Piano)
Lukas Sternath, a young Viennese pianist, won the prestigious ARD Music Competition in 2022 despite a broken elbow. His teacher, Igor Levit, expressed immense pride in his achievement. Sternath will perform in Essen, playing Schubert's "Wandererfantasie," Liszt's B minor Sonata, and "Négy tárgy" by Márton Illés. A post-concert discussion with Daniel Finkernagel will follow.
Artistic depiction of the event

Lukas Geniušas / Piano Recital

Mon, Apr 8, 2024, 19:30
Elbphilharmonie, Kleiner Saal (Hamburg)
Lukas Geniušas (Piano)
With virtuosic aplomb and an unusually broad repertoire, the Lithuanian Lukas Geniušas is making his mark as an exceptional young pianist. Geniušas combines Franz Liszt’s Sonata in B Minor, a familiar milestone of the piano repertoire despite its many difficulties, with an exciting and rarely performed work by Frederic Rzewski, in which Geniušas takes on the role of speaking pianist. Frederic Rzewski’s »De profundis« (From the Depths) refers to a letter written by Oscar Wilde. Wilde wrote this forbidden love letter from prison after being convicted and incarcerated for his homosexuality. Spoken elements from Wilde’s text and instrumental passages become a psychological profile in word and music, through the performance of which Geniušas showcases his acting talent too. What links Rzewski’s work and Liszt’s Sonata in B Minor is their shared existential expression and revolutionary power.
Artistic depiction of the event

Lukas Geniušas / Piano Recital

Wed, May 28, 2025, 19:30
Elbphilharmonie, Kleiner Saal (Hamburg)
Lukas Geniušas (Piano)
Machines, speed and progress promised a glorious future in the early 20th century. The general buzz around technology soon spilled over into art as the movement of the Futurists. They explored new topics and forms of expression – for instance, in Russia, which was also on the verge of political upheaval. Russian-Lithuanian pianist Lukas Geniušas, who was most recently celebrated in the »Pianomania« series at the Elbphilharmonie, presents important representatives of this brief, but all the more exciting, period. Alexander Scriabin was a musical forerunner to the Russian Futurists with his groundbreaking piano works, such as his 5 Preludes. Arthur Lourié ultimately became the musical spokesperson of the movement and sought the »autonomy of tempi and rhythms«. In his »Eight Scenes of Russian Childhood«, he sets the movements of children, footballs or contemporary dances to music. The huge impact Futurism had on Russian music is clear in the early works of three of the most important composers of the 20th century: both Shostakovich and Prokofiev as well as Stravinsky got enthusiastic about the new spirit of the age. While Stravinsky was already living in Paris and by turns outraging and delighting audiences with his works, his two colleagues experienced their artistic breakthrough shortly thereafter.