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

Wim T. Schippers’ Egmont

Date & Time
Sat, Apr 12, 2025, 14:15
The Concertgebouw’s famous Main Hall is one of the best concert halls in the world, well-known for its exceptional acoustics and special atmosphere. In the Main Hall, you will feel history. Here, Gustav Mahler conducted his own compositions, as did Richard Strauss and Igor Stravinsky. Sergei Rachmaninoff played his own piano concertos in the Main Hall. This is also where musicians such as Leonard Bernstein, Vladimir Horowitz and Yehudi Menuhin gave legendary performances. Right up to now, the Main Hall... Read full text

Keywords: Contemporary, Symphony Concert, Vocal Music

Artistic depiction of the event

Musicians

Radio Filharmonisch Orkest
Groot Omroepkoor
Kevin John EduseiConductor
ntbChoral conductor
Wim T. SchippersNarrator
Nikki TreurnietKlärchen

Program

Symphony No. 4 'Love and the fever' (Commissioned by NTR SaturdayMatinee, MDR Leipzig, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Brno Philharmonic Orchestra and Bregenzer Festspiele)Larcher
EgmontBeethoven, Schippers
Give feedback
Last update: Fri, Nov 22, 2024, 12:40

Similar events

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

Artistic depiction of the event

Tan Dun conducts Beethoven's Symphony No. 9

Sat, Aug 31, 2024, 20:00
Bundesjugendorchester, World Youth Choir, Tan Dun (Conductor), Iris Hendrickx (Soprano), Jo-Pei Weng (Mezzo-Soprano), Xavier Moreno (Tenor), Johannes D. Schendel (Bass)
The SummerConcerts powered by VriendenLoterij present two months of wonderful concerts, from classical to jazz and from pop music to film scores. Top musicians from the Netherlands and around the world bring you all your favourite classical pieces, as well as tributes to Leonard Cohen and The Beatles, and all your favourite film music.We also present a host of young talent in our summer concerts, including youth orchestras from South Africa and Turkey, and top young classical soloists. After many of the concerts, we offer a meet-and-greet with the artists in an informal setting, or an afterparty with DJ in the Entrance Hall. In one of the world’s finest concert halls, there’s something for everyone this summer at The Concertgebouw!
Artistic depiction of the event

Kochanovsky conducts Bruckner's Symphony in d

Sat, Jan 25, 2025, 14:15
Radio Filharmonisch Orkest, Groot Omroepkoor, Stanislav Kochanovsky (Conductor), Benjamin Goodson (Choral conductor)
The Concertgebouw’s famous Main Hall is one of the best concert halls in the world, well-known for its exceptional acoustics and special atmosphere. In the Main Hall, you will feel history. Here, Gustav Mahler conducted his own compositions, as did Richard Strauss and Igor Stravinsky. Sergei Rachmaninoff played his own piano concertos in the Main Hall. This is also where musicians such as Leonard Bernstein, Vladimir Horowitz and Yehudi Menuhin gave legendary performances. Right up to now, the Main Hall offers a stage to the world’s best orchestras and musicians. Buy your tickets now and experience the magic of the Main Hall for yourself!
Artistic depiction of the event

musica viva: Matthias Hermann

Fri, Jun 23, 2023, 20:00
Matthias Hermann (Conductor), Gitarren-Duo Scheidegger/Schmidt:, Mats Scheidegger (Guitar), Stephan Schmidt (Guitar), Yuko Kakuta (Soprano), Pierre-Laurent Aimard (Piano), Horngruppe des Symphonieorchesters des Bayerischen Rundfunks, Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks
A feast of sound for Helmut Lachenmann: The horn section and the BRSO, conducted by Matthias Hermann, will present the world premiere of the final version of My Melodies. The composition opens up an enormous range of performing possibilities and reveals new dimensions of sound, transforming the music to an “object of observation” and the concert hall to a “place of adventure” (Lachenmann). Pierre-Laurent Aimard and Yuko Kakuta will perform Lachenmann’s Got Lost: a highly virtuosic piece in which verses by Friedrich Nietzsche and Fernando Pessoa are juxtaposed with a short note about a lost laundry basket. The three texts are “stripped of their emotive, poetic, mundane diction […], and sent into a constantly changing intervallic field of sound, resonance, and movement” (Lachenmann).
Artistic depiction of the event

Simone Young conducts Bruckner and Rihm

Sun, Dec 8, 2024, 19:00
Philharmonie Berlin, Main Auditorium (Berlin)
Berliner Philharmoniker (Orchestra), Simone Young (Conductor), Vida Miknevičiūtė (Soprano)
When Simone Young conducts Bruckner, she prefers to perform the original versions of his symphonies: “Perhaps they are not as perfect as the later versions,” she explains. “But they have a modernity that the later ones lack.” In this concert, she presents the original version of the Second Symphony from 1872, and combines it with Wolfgang Rihm’s one-act opera Das Gehege. This dark and enigmatic piece depicts a woman who, on the eve of German reunification, frees an eagle from captivity, tries to seduce it, and ultimately kills it.
Artistic depiction of the event

Simone Young conducts Bruckner and Rihm

Sat, Dec 7, 2024, 19:00
Philharmonie Berlin, Main Auditorium (Berlin)
Berliner Philharmoniker (Orchestra), Simone Young (Conductor), Vida Miknevičiūtė (Soprano)
When Simone Young conducts Bruckner, she prefers to perform the original versions of his symphonies: “Perhaps they are not as perfect as the later versions,” she explains. “But they have a modernity that the later ones lack.” In this concert, she presents the original version of the Second Symphony from 1872, and combines it with Wolfgang Rihm’s one-act opera Das Gehege. This dark and enigmatic piece depicts a woman who, on the eve of German reunification, frees an eagle from captivity, tries to seduce it, and ultimately kills it.
Artistic depiction of the event

Simone Young conducts Bruckner and Rihm

Fri, Dec 6, 2024, 20:00
Philharmonie Berlin, Main Auditorium (Berlin)
Berliner Philharmoniker (Orchestra), Simone Young (Conductor), Vida Miknevičiūtė (Soprano)
When Simone Young conducts Bruckner, she prefers to perform the original versions of his symphonies: “Perhaps they are not as perfect as the later versions,” she explains. “But they have a modernity that the later ones lack.” In this concert, she presents the original version of the Second Symphony from 1872, and combines it with Wolfgang Rihm’s one-act opera Das Gehege. This dark and enigmatic piece depicts a woman who, on the eve of German reunification, frees an eagle from captivity, tries to seduce it, and ultimately kills it.
Artistic depiction of the event

NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra / Ingo Metzmacher

Sat, Nov 9, 2024, 20:00
Elbphilharmonie, Großer Saal (Hamburg)
NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester, Ingo Metzmacher (Conductor), Solist:innen in »Messe Nr. 1«, Claire de Sévigné (Soprano), Avery Amereau (Alto), Toby Spence (Tenor), Michael Nagy (Bariton), Solist:innen in »Die Jakobsleiter«, Brenden Gunnell (Tenor), Bernard Richter (Tenor), Jens Persson Hertzman (Bariton), Sean Michael Plumb (Bariton), Anne Schwanewilms (Soprano), Miriam Kutrowatz (Soprano), Marie Maidowski (Soprano), Solist:innen des NDR Vokalensembles, Lucy De Butts (Soprano), Sophia Körber (Soprano), Alexandra Hebart (Mezzo-Soprano), Solist:innen des MDR-Rundfunkchors, Ramona Laxy (Soprano), Lisa Germeshausen (Soprano), Falk Hoffmann (Tenor), Oliver Kaden (Tenor)
Ingo Metzmacher is one of the great explorers among conductors. He tirelessly explores new and little-known areas of the repertoire. His curiosity already characterised him during his time as General Music Director in Hamburg between 1997 and 2005. And this also characterises the vocal symphonic programme with which he returns to the podium of the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra in November. One day before his 67th birthday, Metzmacher conducts two rarely performed works by two jubilarians from the Romantic and modern eras with a round birthday in 2024 – and fills the stage in the Grand Hall with an opulent line-up that, alongside the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra, includes the MDR-Rundfunkchor and nine vocal soloists.
Artistic depiction of the event

NDR Radiophilharmonie Hannover / Anja Petersen / Pierre Bleuse

Fri, Feb 14, 2025, 20:00
Elbphilharmonie, Großer Saal (Hamburg)
NDR Radiophilharmonie, Anja Petersen (Soprano), Pierre Bleuse (Conductor)
As part of the »Elbphilharmonie Visions« festival, the NDR Radiophilharmonie and conductor Pierre Bleuse present a work by Italian composer Clara Iannotta, who continues to explore the boundaries between noise and composition, as well as Arnulf Herrmann’s »Tour de Trance« for soprano and orchestra. As at the latter’s world premiere, the solo part will be performed by opera singer Anja Petersen.
Artistic depiction of the event

Bang on a Can All-Stars / Trio Mediaeval

Mon, Feb 17, 2025, 20:00
Elbphilharmonie, Großer Saal (Hamburg)
Vicky Chow (Piano), Vicky Chow (Melodica), David Cossin (Drums), David Cossin (Percussion), Arlen Hlusko (Cello), Mark Stewart (Electric Guitar), Mark Stewart (Banjo), Mark Stewart (Mountain dulcimer), Mark Stewart (Jaw harp), Mark Stewart (Harmonica), Ken Thomson (Clarinet), Ken Thomson (Harmonica), Kebra-Seyoun Charles (Double bass), Linn Andrea Fuglseth (Soprano), Anna Maria Friman (Soprano), Jorunn Lovise Husan (Alto)
Even for the state of the art, there are legends – such as the Bang on a Can All-Stars, who are always in search of very up-to-date, exciting music, regardless of genre categories. Steve Reich, Philip Glass, Meredith Monk and Ornette Coleman are just a few of the artists who have already collaborated with the New York collective. For their Elbphilharmonie debut, the musicians have chosen a work by founding member and Pulitzer prizewinner Julia Wolfe, which traces the myth surrounding the American folk hero John Henry as an oratorio between minimal music and country. There are hundreds of versions of this story, passed down by word of mouth and already cast in music many times whether by Johnny Cash, Van Morrison or Bruce Springsteen: at the end of the 19th century, a worker is supposed to have competed against a new kind of steam-driven hammer in railway construction with his muscle strength and won – to pay with his life as a result. Julia Wolfe has composed a meta myth with »Steel Hammer«: »The work is inspired by my love of legends and the music of the Appalachian Mountains. I fragmented the many different and somewhat contradictory versions of the ballad and wove it into a completely new format. The music often circles around individual words or phrases to tell the ultimate story and its different paths.« The Appalachian dulcimer (a kind of zither) joins the usual line-up of Bang on a Can with clarinet, a lot of percussion, guitars, piano, cello and double bass and provides for the American country sound. Trio Mediæval, a top-class a-cappella ensemble from Norway, completes the overall sound with its clear soprano and alto voices, which Julia Wolfe particularly appreciates for their great wealth of experience in the vocal tradition of their homeland.