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

Thomas Hampson / Orchester Wiener Akademie / Martin Haselböck

Date & Time
Sun, Feb 23, 2025, 11:00
The American star baritone Thomas Hampson is regarded as one of the best opera singers in the world. His operatic repertoire comprises more than 80 roles and his discography includes more than 170 albums. He has been honoured countless times with prestigious awards for his outstanding artistic work, including the Met Mastersinger Award, the Concertgebouw Prize and the Grammy Award. In the Elbphilharmonie, opera star Thomas Hampson presents an exciting programme of works by Mozart, Schubert and Beethoven together with conductor Martin Haselböck and the Wiener Akademie orchestra.

Keywords: Symphony Concert, Vocal Music

Artistic depiction of the event

Musicians

Orchester Wiener Akademie
Thomas HampsonBariton
Martin HaselböckConductor

Program

Coriolan Overture, Op. 62Ludwig van Beethoven
Hai già vinta la causa ... Vedrò, mentr’io sospiro / Der Prozeß schon gewonnen / Rezitativ und Arie des Grafen aus »Le nozze di Figaro« KV 492Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Rivolgete a lui lo sguardo KV 584Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Kontretanz C-Dur KV 587 »Der Sieg vom Helden Coburg«Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Ein deutsches Kriegslied KV 539 »Ich möchte wohl der Kaiser sein«Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Kontretanz C-Dur KV 535 »La Bataille«Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Ganymed D 544Franz Schubert
»Sei mir gegrüßt, o Sonne«, aus: Alfonso und Estrella / Arie von Troila aus »Alfonso und Estrella« D 732Franz Schubert
Symphony No. 3 in E-flat major, Op. 55 »Eroica«Ludwig van Beethoven
Give feedback
Last update: Wed, Dec 11, 2024, 10:15

Similar events

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

Artistic depiction of the event

THOMAS HAMPSON & WOLFRAM RIEGER

Sun, Feb 16, 2025, 16:00
Hampson Thomas (Bariton), Rieger Wolfram (Piano)
“No other composer has had a more profound influence on me and taught me more than Gustav Mahler,” says Thomas Hampson. Having won universal acclaim for his performances of Mahler’s songs, the baritone has also immersed himself in the composer’s life more thoroughly than almost any other singer. Joined by his longtime piano partner Wolfram Rieger, he takes the audience on a musical journey to Mahler’s eventful times that also includes works by his contemporaries Alban Berg, Arnold Schoenberg, Alexander Zemlinsky, Anton Webern, and Richard Strauss, as well as his personal companion and wife Alma Mahler.
Artistic depiction of the event

Thomas Hampson and Ksenija Sidorova: Schubert's Winterreise

Tue, Mar 4, 2025, 20:15
Thomas Hampson (Bariton), Ksenija Sidorova (Accordion)
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

NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra / Thomas Hampson / Alan Gilbert

Fri, Apr 26, 2024, 20:00
Elbphilharmonie, Großer Saal (Hamburg)
NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester, Prager Philharmonischer Chor, Thomas Hampson (Bariton), Lukáš Vasilek (Choir rehearsal), Alan Gilbert (Conductor)
»Peace, peace on Earth!« Arnold Schönberg’s message in his choral work »Friede auf Erden« is unequivocal. But it’s also an illusion: the composer was not the only one to admit as much after he had completed the score. Recent events in the political arena make this plain to us all. But the improbability of achieving peace on earth makes it all the more important to repeat these words as often as possible. And this prompted Alan Gilbert to choose this Late Romantic work to open the Hamburg International Music Festival 2024. »War and Peace« is the motto this time, taken from Leo Tolstoy’s famous and timeless novel. The opening concert with the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra sees the return to the Elbphilharmonie of star baritone Thomas Hampson to sing Kurt Weill’s »Walt Whitman Songs«, which he wrote in American exile in 1941, shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Whitman – whom Weill regarded as the USA’s first original poetic talent – wrote the song texts, some defiant, some moving, during the American Civil War. The concert comes to an end with Charles Ives’s Fourth Symphony, described by Alan Gilbert as the »big bang of modern American music«. With this 1925 work, the great pioneer of musical collages made his boldest dreams come true: how many different tempos, keys and rhythms can be played at the same time without total chaos resulting? Ives’s exciting score supplies a spectacular answer to this question. Performing the symphony is a great challenge for any orchestra – so great that the composer never lived to hear the four-movement piece played in its entirety. Now Alan Gilbert and his musicians join forces with the Prague Philharmonic Choir in this musical adventure.
Artistic depiction of the event

NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra / Thomas Hampson / Alan Gilbert

Sat, Apr 27, 2024, 20:00
Elbphilharmonie, Großer Saal (Hamburg)
NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester, Prager Philharmonischer Chor, Thomas Hampson (Bariton), Lukáš Vasilek (Choir rehearsal), Alan Gilbert (Conductor)
»Peace, peace on Earth!« Arnold Schoenberg’s message in his choral work »Friede auf Erden« is unequivocal. But it’s also an illusion: the composer was not the only one to admit as much after he had completed the score. Recent events in the political arena make this plain to us all. But the improbability of achieving peace on earth makes it all the more important to repeat these words as often as possible. And this prompted Alan Gilbert to choose this Late Romantic work to open the Hamburg International Music Festival 2024. »War and Peace« is the motto this time, taken from Leo Tolstoy’s famous and timeless novel. The opening concert with the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra sees the return to the Elbphilharmonie of star baritone Thomas Hampson to sing Kurt Weill’s »Walt Whitman Songs«, which he wrote in American exile in 1941, shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Whitman – whom Weill regarded as the USA’s first original poetic talent – wrote the song texts, some defiant, some moving, during the American Civil War. The concert comes to an end with Charles Ives’s Fourth Symphony, described by Alan Gilbert as the »big bang of modern American music«. With this 1925 work, the great pioneer of musical collages made his boldest dreams come true: how many different tempos, keys and rhythms can be played at the same time without total chaos resulting? Ives’s exciting score supplies a spectacular answer to this question. Performing the symphony is a great challenge for any orchestra – so great that the composer never lived to hear the four-movement piece played in its entirety. Now Alan Gilbert and his musicians join forces with the Prague Philharmonic Choir in this musical adventure.
Artistic depiction of the event

Wiener Philharmoniker / Igor Levit / Thomas Adès

Sat, May 24, 2025, 20:00
Elbphilharmonie, Großer Saal (Hamburg)
Wiener Philharmoniker, Igor Levit (Piano), Thomas Adès (Conductor)
The classical prelude is a symphony by Joseph Haydn, followed by Thomas Adès’ piano concerto, which has already been performed around 60 times since its premiere in 2019 – a remarkable amount for a contemporary work. Given the fame that the multi-talented British composer enjoys, this success is hardly surprising. A New York Times critic wrote about the premiere of the concerto: »As ever, the craft is astounding, the orchestration ceaselessly brilliant. The voice is wholly his own — dissonant, offbeat, whiplash, wry — even as it whispers to musics past. This breathless concerto comes across as zesty and accessible. But don’t be fooled. Just below the surface, the music sizzles. I can’t wait to hear it again.« The classical prelude is a symphony by Joseph Haydn, followed by Thomas Adès’ piano concerto, which has already been performed around 60 times since its premiere in 2019 – a remarkable amount for a contemporary work. Given the fame that the multi-talented British composer enjoys, this success is hardly surprising. A New York Times critic wrote about the premiere of the concerto: »As ever, the craft is astounding, the orchestration ceaselessly brilliant. The voice is wholly his own — dissonant, offbeat, whiplash, wry — even as it whispers to musics past. This breathless concerto comes across as zesty and accessible. But don’t be fooled. Just below the surface, the music sizzles. I can’t wait to hear it again.« Adès, whose music is full of musical echoes from baroque to jazz yet refuses to follow any dogmas, sets the tone for the second half of the concert featuring Leoš Janácek, whose musical language around a century ago was equally undogmatic. His rhapsody »Taras Bulba« sets Nikolai Gogol’s tragic tale of the same name about a father and his two sons to music. So vividly that a film inevitably unfolds in the mind’s eye of the listener. By way of a prelude, two miniatures pay tribute to Pierre Boulez as the spotlighted composer of the International Music Festival.
Artistic depiction of the event

Wiener Klassik

Thu, Apr 10, 2025, 19:30
Lisa Wittig (Soprano), Nataliia Kukhar (Mezzo-Soprano), Mykhailo Kushlyk (Tenor), Baurzhan Anderzhanov (Bass), Philharmonischer Chor Essen, Essener Philharmoniker, Richard Egarr (Conductor)
Haydn's "Missa in angustiis," his only mass in a minor key, reflects the turbulent times of the Napoleonic Wars. Beethoven's Symphony No. 2, written as his deafness began, is surprisingly playful and full of contrast. Mozart's Symphony No. 1, composed at the age of eight, reveals a composer brimming with energy, imagination, and original ideas.
Artistic depiction of the event

Wiener Klassik

Fri, Apr 11, 2025, 19:30
Lisa Wittig (Soprano), Nataliia Kukhar (Mezzo-Soprano), Mykhailo Kushlyk (Tenor), Baurzhan Anderzhanov (Bass), Philharmonischer Chor Essen, Essener Philharmoniker, Richard Egarr (Conductor)
Haydn's "Missa in angustiis," his only mass in a minor key, reflects the turbulent times of the Napoleonic Wars. Beethoven's Symphony No. 2, written as his deafness began, is surprisingly playful and full of contrast. Mozart's Symphony No. 1, composed at the age of eight, reveals a composer brimming with energy, imagination, and original ideas.
Artistic depiction of the event

Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin

Tue, Oct 22, 2024, 20:00
Konzerthaus Berlin, Großer Saal (Berlin)
Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, Carlo Vistoli (Countertenor), Xenia Löffler (Oboe), Georg Kallweit (Violin)
In their first joint programme, Akamus and the up-and-coming star of the countertenor scene Carlo Vistoli dedicate themselves to key works of church music: Vivaldi set religious texts such as the psalm ‘Nisi Dominus’ to music with bittersweet sadness and operatic verve. The Venetian composer's ‘Stabat mater’, on the other hand, is one of the darkest baroque settings of the pain of Mary, the ‘Mater dolorosa’ and mother of Jesus. ‘I have had enough’ is also one of Bach's most moving cantatas.
Artistic depiction of the event

Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin

Thu, Jan 23, 2025, 20:00
Konzerthaus Berlin, Großer Saal (Berlin)
Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, Voces Suaves, Georg Kallweit (Violin)
In their first joint programme, Akamus and the award-winning Basel vocal ensemble Voces Suaves present musical highlights from the generation of German composers before Johann Sebastian Bach and thus the impressive musical world into which he was born. The programme includes works by the extended Bach family as well as by composers who are largely unknown today and who preceded the later Thomaskantor in his important positions in Mühlhausen, Weimar and Leipzig. From the oeuvre of Johann Sebastian Bach, the double-choir motet ‘Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf’ will be performed..