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Classical concerts featuring
Colin Aikins

Overview

Quick overview of musician Colin Aikins by associated keywords

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These concerts featuring Colin Aikins became visible lately at Concert Pulse.

Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Salome

Sun, Oct 5, 2025, 18:00
Omer Meir Wellber (Musical Director), Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke (Herodes), Doris Soffel (Herodias), Ambur Braid (Salome), Kyle Ketelsen (Jochanaan), Aebh Kelly (Page), Oleksiy Palchykov (Narraboth), James Kryshak (1. Jude), Colin Aikins (2. Jude), Daniel Kluge (3. Jude), Mziwamadoda Sipho Nodlayiya (4. Jude), Keith Klein (5. Jude), Nicholas Mogg (1. Nazarener), William Desbiens (2. Nazarener), Hubert Kowalczyk (1. Soldat), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Under the face of the wandering moon, spirit and body quarrel in all their greatness and wretchedness until the blood of two bodies flows. Strauss remains close to Wilde's re-creation of the biblical material, which leads Salome from her mother's tool to autonomy. It is she who, in her unfulfilled desire for the liberatingly different, the body of the prophet Jochanaan, seeks revenge and demands his head - a price the male-dominated society around Herod is willing to pay for their dance. Now that Salome holds his severed head in her hands, she can kiss Jochanaan, possess him if not alive, then dead. As if under a burning glass, Strauss pours Oscar Wilde's demonic dramaturgy into sound like an eruption of the psyche, accompanying his protagonist from her failed escape from the decadence of her existence to her death. Production: Dmitri Tcherniakov Costumes: Elena Zaytseva Lighting: Gleb Filshtinsky Dramaturgy: Tatiana Verestchagina, Janina Zell
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Salome

Tue, Oct 7, 2025, 19:00
Omer Meir Wellber (Musical Director), Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke (Herodes), Doris Soffel (Herodias), Asmik Grigorian (Salome), Kyle Ketelsen (Jochanaan), Aebh Kelly (Page), Oleksiy Palchykov (Narraboth), James Kryshak (1. Jude), Colin Aikins (2. Jude), Daniel Kluge (3. Jude), Mziwamadoda Sipho Nodlayiya (4. Jude), Keith Klein (5. Jude), Nicholas Mogg (1. Nazarener), William Desbiens (2. Nazarener), Hubert Kowalczyk (1. Soldat), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Under the face of the wandering moon, spirit and body quarrel in all their greatness and wretchedness until the blood of two bodies flows. Strauss remains close to Wilde's re-creation of the biblical material, which leads Salome from her mother's tool to autonomy. It is she who, in her unfulfilled desire for the liberatingly different, the body of the prophet Jochanaan, seeks revenge and demands his head - a price the male-dominated society around Herod is willing to pay for their dance. Now that Salome holds his severed head in her hands, she can kiss Jochanaan, possess him if not alive, then dead. As if under a burning glass, Strauss pours Oscar Wilde's demonic dramaturgy into sound like an eruption of the psyche, accompanying his protagonist from her failed escape from the decadence of her existence to her death. Production: Dmitri Tcherniakov Costumes: Elena Zaytseva Lighting: Gleb Filshtinsky Dramaturgy: Tatiana Verestchagina, Janina Zell
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Salome

Thu, Oct 9, 2025, 19:30
Omer Meir Wellber (Musical Director), Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke (Herodes), Doris Soffel (Herodias), Asmik Grigorian (Salome), Kyle Ketelsen (Jochanaan), Aebh Kelly (Page), Oleksiy Palchykov (Narraboth), James Kryshak (1. Jude), Colin Aikins (2. Jude), Daniel Kluge (3. Jude), Mziwamadoda Sipho Nodlayiya (4. Jude), Keith Klein (5. Jude), Nicholas Mogg (1. Nazarener), William Desbiens (2. Nazarener), Hubert Kowalczyk (1. Soldat), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Under the face of the wandering moon, spirit and body quarrel in all their greatness and wretchedness until the blood of two bodies flows. Strauss remains close to Wilde's re-creation of the biblical material, which leads Salome from her mother's tool to autonomy. It is she who, in her unfulfilled desire for the liberatingly different, the body of the prophet Jochanaan, seeks revenge and demands his head - a price the male-dominated society around Herod is willing to pay for their dance. Now that Salome holds his severed head in her hands, she can kiss Jochanaan, possess him if not alive, then dead. As if under a burning glass, Strauss pours Oscar Wilde's demonic dramaturgy into sound like an eruption of the psyche, accompanying his protagonist from her failed escape from the decadence of her existence to her death. Production: Dmitri Tcherniakov Costumes: Elena Zaytseva Lighting: Gleb Filshtinsky Dramaturgy: Tatiana Verestchagina, Janina Zell

Upcoming Concerts

Concerts featuring Colin Aikins in season 2024/25 or later

Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Salome

Sun, Oct 5, 2025, 18:00
Omer Meir Wellber (Musical Director), Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke (Herodes), Doris Soffel (Herodias), Ambur Braid (Salome), Kyle Ketelsen (Jochanaan), Aebh Kelly (Page), Oleksiy Palchykov (Narraboth), James Kryshak (1. Jude), Colin Aikins (2. Jude), Daniel Kluge (3. Jude), Mziwamadoda Sipho Nodlayiya (4. Jude), Keith Klein (5. Jude), Nicholas Mogg (1. Nazarener), William Desbiens (2. Nazarener), Hubert Kowalczyk (1. Soldat), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Under the face of the wandering moon, spirit and body quarrel in all their greatness and wretchedness until the blood of two bodies flows. Strauss remains close to Wilde's re-creation of the biblical material, which leads Salome from her mother's tool to autonomy. It is she who, in her unfulfilled desire for the liberatingly different, the body of the prophet Jochanaan, seeks revenge and demands his head - a price the male-dominated society around Herod is willing to pay for their dance. Now that Salome holds his severed head in her hands, she can kiss Jochanaan, possess him if not alive, then dead. As if under a burning glass, Strauss pours Oscar Wilde's demonic dramaturgy into sound like an eruption of the psyche, accompanying his protagonist from her failed escape from the decadence of her existence to her death. Production: Dmitri Tcherniakov Costumes: Elena Zaytseva Lighting: Gleb Filshtinsky Dramaturgy: Tatiana Verestchagina, Janina Zell
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Salome

Tue, Oct 7, 2025, 19:00
Omer Meir Wellber (Musical Director), Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke (Herodes), Doris Soffel (Herodias), Asmik Grigorian (Salome), Kyle Ketelsen (Jochanaan), Aebh Kelly (Page), Oleksiy Palchykov (Narraboth), James Kryshak (1. Jude), Colin Aikins (2. Jude), Daniel Kluge (3. Jude), Mziwamadoda Sipho Nodlayiya (4. Jude), Keith Klein (5. Jude), Nicholas Mogg (1. Nazarener), William Desbiens (2. Nazarener), Hubert Kowalczyk (1. Soldat), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Under the face of the wandering moon, spirit and body quarrel in all their greatness and wretchedness until the blood of two bodies flows. Strauss remains close to Wilde's re-creation of the biblical material, which leads Salome from her mother's tool to autonomy. It is she who, in her unfulfilled desire for the liberatingly different, the body of the prophet Jochanaan, seeks revenge and demands his head - a price the male-dominated society around Herod is willing to pay for their dance. Now that Salome holds his severed head in her hands, she can kiss Jochanaan, possess him if not alive, then dead. As if under a burning glass, Strauss pours Oscar Wilde's demonic dramaturgy into sound like an eruption of the psyche, accompanying his protagonist from her failed escape from the decadence of her existence to her death. Production: Dmitri Tcherniakov Costumes: Elena Zaytseva Lighting: Gleb Filshtinsky Dramaturgy: Tatiana Verestchagina, Janina Zell
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Salome

Thu, Oct 9, 2025, 19:30
Omer Meir Wellber (Musical Director), Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke (Herodes), Doris Soffel (Herodias), Asmik Grigorian (Salome), Kyle Ketelsen (Jochanaan), Aebh Kelly (Page), Oleksiy Palchykov (Narraboth), James Kryshak (1. Jude), Colin Aikins (2. Jude), Daniel Kluge (3. Jude), Mziwamadoda Sipho Nodlayiya (4. Jude), Keith Klein (5. Jude), Nicholas Mogg (1. Nazarener), William Desbiens (2. Nazarener), Hubert Kowalczyk (1. Soldat), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Under the face of the wandering moon, spirit and body quarrel in all their greatness and wretchedness until the blood of two bodies flows. Strauss remains close to Wilde's re-creation of the biblical material, which leads Salome from her mother's tool to autonomy. It is she who, in her unfulfilled desire for the liberatingly different, the body of the prophet Jochanaan, seeks revenge and demands his head - a price the male-dominated society around Herod is willing to pay for their dance. Now that Salome holds his severed head in her hands, she can kiss Jochanaan, possess him if not alive, then dead. As if under a burning glass, Strauss pours Oscar Wilde's demonic dramaturgy into sound like an eruption of the psyche, accompanying his protagonist from her failed escape from the decadence of her existence to her death. Production: Dmitri Tcherniakov Costumes: Elena Zaytseva Lighting: Gleb Filshtinsky Dramaturgy: Tatiana Verestchagina, Janina Zell
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Salome

Sun, Oct 12, 2025, 19:30
Omer Meir Wellber (Musical Director), Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke (Herodes), Doris Soffel (Herodias), Asmik Grigorian (Salome), Kyle Ketelsen (Jochanaan), Aebh Kelly (Page), Oleksiy Palchykov (Narraboth), James Kryshak (1. Jude), Colin Aikins (2. Jude), Daniel Kluge (3. Jude), Mziwamadoda Sipho Nodlayiya (4. Jude), Nicholas Mogg (1. Nazarener), William Desbiens (2. Nazarener), Hubert Kowalczyk (1. Soldat), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Under the face of the wandering moon, spirit and body quarrel in all their greatness and wretchedness until the blood of two bodies flows. Strauss remains close to Wilde's re-creation of the biblical material, which leads Salome from her mother's tool to autonomy. It is she who, in her unfulfilled desire for the liberatingly different, the body of the prophet Jochanaan, seeks revenge and demands his head - a price the male-dominated society around Herod is willing to pay for their dance. Now that Salome holds his severed head in her hands, she can kiss Jochanaan, possess him if not alive, then dead. As if under a burning glass, Strauss pours Oscar Wilde's demonic dramaturgy into sound like an eruption of the psyche, accompanying his protagonist from her failed escape from the decadence of her existence to her death. Production: Dmitri Tcherniakov Costumes: Elena Zaytseva Lighting: Gleb Filshtinsky Dramaturgy: Tatiana Verestchagina, Janina Zell
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Ariadne auf Naxos

Sun, Nov 16, 2025, 19:00
Johannes Debus (Musical Director), Wolfram Koch (Theseus), Anja Kampe (Ariadne), Nadezhda Pavlova (Zerbinetta), Jamez McCorkle (Bacchus), Martin Gantner (Musiklehrer), Annika Schlicht (Komponist), Colin Aikins (Ein Offizier), William Desbiens (Perückenmacher), Keith Klein (Betrunkener Gast), Nicholas Mogg (Harlekin), Florian Panzieri (Scaramuccio), Daniel Kluge (Brighella), Olivia Warburton (Najade), Aebh Kelly (Dryade), Marie Maidowski (Echo), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
"It is a simple and tremendous problem of life: that of fidelity", is how Hugo von Hofmannsthal described the core of their third opera together, Ariadne auf Naxos, in a letter to Richard Strauss. To live does not mean to persevere and hold on to what has been lost. If you want to live, you have to let go, forget, get over yourself - constantly transform yourself. This is what a young opera composer experiences in this work when he is confronted with the stubborn wishes of his patron; just like the protagonist of his opera, Ariadne, who, abandoned by her lover, Theseus, expects only death. But things turn out differently... Strauss and Hofmannsthal let the opposites collide: Tragedy and comedy, light music and grand opera, playfulness and seriousness. Thus, in the mirroring of art and life, between gaze and gaze, the unfathomable mystery of transformation takes place. Musical Direction: Kent Nagano Production and stage: Dmitri Tcherniakov Costumes: Elena Zaytseva Light Design: Gleb Filshtinsky Dramaturgy: Angela Beuerle, Michael Sangkuhl, Tatiana Werestchagina
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Ariadne auf Naxos

Fri, Nov 21, 2025, 19:00
Johannes Debus (Musical Director), Wolfram Koch (Theseus), Anja Kampe (Ariadne), Jamez McCorkle (Bacchus), Martin Gantner (Musiklehrer), Annika Schlicht (Komponist), Colin Aikins (Ein Offizier), William Desbiens (Perückenmacher), Keith Klein (Betrunkener Gast), Nicholas Mogg (Harlekin), Florian Panzieri (Scaramuccio), Daniel Kluge (Brighella), Olivia Warburton (Najade), Aebh Kelly (Dryade), Marie Maidowski (Echo), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
"It is a simple and tremendous problem of life: that of fidelity", is how Hugo von Hofmannsthal described the core of their third opera together, Ariadne auf Naxos, in a letter to Richard Strauss. To live does not mean to persevere and hold on to what has been lost. If you want to live, you have to let go, forget, get over yourself - constantly transform yourself. This is what a young opera composer experiences in this work when he is confronted with the stubborn wishes of his patron; just like the protagonist of his opera, Ariadne, who, abandoned by her lover, Theseus, expects only death. But things turn out differently... Strauss and Hofmannsthal let the opposites collide: Tragedy and comedy, light music and grand opera, playfulness and seriousness. Thus, in the mirroring of art and life, between gaze and gaze, the unfathomable mystery of transformation takes place. Musical Direction: Kent Nagano Production and stage: Dmitri Tcherniakov Costumes: Elena Zaytseva Light Design: Gleb Filshtinsky Dramaturgy: Angela Beuerle, Michael Sangkuhl, Tatiana Werestchagina
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Ariadne auf Naxos

Fri, Nov 28, 2025, 19:00
Johannes Debus (Musical Director), Wolfram Koch (Theseus), Anja Kampe (Ariadne), Jamez McCorkle (Bacchus), Martin Gantner (Musiklehrer), Annika Schlicht (Komponist), Colin Aikins (Ein Offizier), William Desbiens (Perückenmacher), Keith Klein (Betrunkener Gast), Nicholas Mogg (Harlekin), Florian Panzieri (Scaramuccio), Daniel Kluge (Brighella), Olivia Warburton (Najade), Aebh Kelly (Dryade), Marie Maidowski (Echo), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
"It is a simple and tremendous problem of life: that of fidelity", is how Hugo von Hofmannsthal described the core of their third opera together, Ariadne auf Naxos, in a letter to Richard Strauss. To live does not mean to persevere and hold on to what has been lost. If you want to live, you have to let go, forget, get over yourself - constantly transform yourself. This is what a young opera composer experiences in this work when he is confronted with the stubborn wishes of his patron; just like the protagonist of his opera, Ariadne, who, abandoned by her lover, Theseus, expects only death. But things turn out differently... Strauss and Hofmannsthal let the opposites collide: Tragedy and comedy, light music and grand opera, playfulness and seriousness. Thus, in the mirroring of art and life, between gaze and gaze, the unfathomable mystery of transformation takes place. Musical Direction: Kent Nagano Production and stage: Dmitri Tcherniakov Costumes: Elena Zaytseva Light Design: Gleb Filshtinsky Dramaturgy: Angela Beuerle, Michael Sangkuhl, Tatiana Werestchagina
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Ariadne auf Naxos

Thu, Dec 4, 2025, 19:00
Johannes Debus (Musical Director), Wolfram Koch (Theseus), Anja Kampe (Ariadne), Nadezhda Pavlova (Zerbinetta), Jamez McCorkle (Bacchus), Martin Gantner (Musiklehrer), Annika Schlicht (Komponist), Colin Aikins (Ein Offizier), William Desbiens (Perückenmacher), Keith Klein (Betrunkener Gast), Nicholas Mogg (Harlekin), Florian Panzieri (Scaramuccio), Daniel Kluge (Brighella), Olivia Warburton (Najade), Aebh Kelly (Dryade), Marie Maidowski (Echo), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
"It is a simple and tremendous problem of life: that of fidelity", is how Hugo von Hofmannsthal described the core of their third opera together, Ariadne auf Naxos, in a letter to Richard Strauss. To live does not mean to persevere and hold on to what has been lost. If you want to live, you have to let go, forget, get over yourself - constantly transform yourself. This is what a young opera composer experiences in this work when he is confronted with the stubborn wishes of his patron; just like the protagonist of his opera, Ariadne, who, abandoned by her lover, Theseus, expects only death. But things turn out differently... Strauss and Hofmannsthal let the opposites collide: Tragedy and comedy, light music and grand opera, playfulness and seriousness. Thus, in the mirroring of art and life, between gaze and gaze, the unfathomable mystery of transformation takes place. Musical Direction: Kent Nagano Production and stage: Dmitri Tcherniakov Costumes: Elena Zaytseva Light Design: Gleb Filshtinsky Dramaturgy: Angela Beuerle, Michael Sangkuhl, Tatiana Werestchagina
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Il trovatore

Wed, Mar 18, 2026, 19:00
Matteo Beltrami (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Boris Pinkhasovich (Luna), Enea Scala (Manrico), Eleonora Buratto (Leonora), Clementine Margaine (Azucena), Alexander Roslavets (Ferrando), Elizaveta Kulagina (Inez), Colin Aikins (Ruiz), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
For Leonora, the song of the troubadour Manrico holds the promise and glow of love; Manrico's rival Count Luna perceives in it threat and danger. Verdi's opera is a celebration of Italian opera singing at its best - so it is no coincidence that the title character is a singer himself. And yet for the composer, Azucena, Manrico's mother, was the real protagonist. Il trovatore is rich in dramatic intricacies and intense emotions, which Verdi abruptly juxtaposes in images and scenes. Tragedy relentlessly unfolds before our eyes and ears until the truth is revealed in the opera's final seconds. Stage: Alex Eales Costumes: Herbert Murauer Lighting: James Farncombe Video: Philipp Contag-Lada Dramaturgy: Ralf Waldschmidt Chorus: Christian Günther
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Il trovatore

Fri, Mar 20, 2026, 19:00
Matteo Beltrami (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Boris Pinkhasovich (Luna), Enea Scala (Manrico), Eleonora Buratto (Leonora), Clementine Margaine (Azucena), Alexander Roslavets (Ferrando), Elizaveta Kulagina (Inez), Colin Aikins (Ruiz), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
For Leonora, the song of the troubadour Manrico holds the promise and glow of love; Manrico's rival Count Luna perceives in it threat and danger. Verdi's opera is a celebration of Italian opera singing at its best - so it is no coincidence that the title character is a singer himself. And yet for the composer, Azucena, Manrico's mother, was the real protagonist. Il trovatore is rich in dramatic intricacies and intense emotions, which Verdi abruptly juxtaposes in images and scenes. Tragedy relentlessly unfolds before our eyes and ears until the truth is revealed in the opera's final seconds. Stage: Alex Eales Costumes: Herbert Murauer Lighting: James Farncombe Video: Philipp Contag-Lada Dramaturgy: Ralf Waldschmidt Chorus: Christian Günther
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Lohengrin

Sun, Mar 22, 2026, 16:00
Omer Meir Wellber (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorus), Gábor Bretz (König Heinrich), Klaus Florian Vogt (Lohengrin), Sara Jakubiak (Elsa), Martin Gantner (Friedrich von Telramund), Yulia Matochkina (Ortrud), Szymon Mechli?ski (Heerrufer), Peter Galliard (1. Brabantischer Edler), Colin Aikins (2. Brabantischer Edler), Chao Deng (3. Brabantischer Edler), Keith Klein (4. Brabantischer Edler), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus)
Elsa of Brabant is suspected of having killed her younger brother Gottfried in the forest. This accusation is put forward by Friedrich of Telramund, Count of Brabant, whose wife Ortrud is secretly plotting against Elsa. When King Henry the Fowler asks Elsa to defend herself, she pleads for an imaginary knight to come to her aid. King Henry asks the men present to fight to defend the honour of Elsa of Brabant, but no one steps forward. Suddenly, Lohengrin, the Knight of the Swan, appears. He promises to fight for Elsa, but makes her promise beforehand never to question him about his identity or provenance. Director: Peter Konwitschny Set and Costume Designer: Helmut Brade Costume Design Collaboration: Inga von Bredow Lighting Designer: Manfred Voss Dramaturgy: Werner Hintze Premiere: 18.01.1998
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Il trovatore

Wed, Mar 25, 2026, 19:00
Matteo Beltrami (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Boris Pinkhasovich (Luna), Enea Scala (Manrico), Eleonora Buratto (Leonora), Clementine Margaine (Azucena), Alexander Roslavets (Ferrando), Elizaveta Kulagina (Inez), Colin Aikins (Ruiz), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
For Leonora, the song of the troubadour Manrico holds the promise and glow of love; Manrico's rival Count Luna perceives in it threat and danger. Verdi's opera is a celebration of Italian opera singing at its best - so it is no coincidence that the title character is a singer himself. And yet for the composer, Azucena, Manrico's mother, was the real protagonist. Il trovatore is rich in dramatic intricacies and intense emotions, which Verdi abruptly juxtaposes in images and scenes. Tragedy relentlessly unfolds before our eyes and ears until the truth is revealed in the opera's final seconds. Stage: Alex Eales Costumes: Herbert Murauer Lighting: James Farncombe Video: Philipp Contag-Lada Dramaturgy: Ralf Waldschmidt Chorus: Christian Günther
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Il trovatore

Fri, Mar 27, 2026, 19:00
Matteo Beltrami (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Boris Pinkhasovich (Luna), Enea Scala (Manrico), Eleonora Buratto (Leonora), Clementine Margaine (Azucena), Alexander Roslavets (Ferrando), Elizaveta Kulagina (Inez), Colin Aikins (Ruiz), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
For Leonora, the song of the troubadour Manrico holds the promise and glow of love; Manrico's rival Count Luna perceives in it threat and danger. Verdi's opera is a celebration of Italian opera singing at its best - so it is no coincidence that the title character is a singer himself. And yet for the composer, Azucena, Manrico's mother, was the real protagonist. Il trovatore is rich in dramatic intricacies and intense emotions, which Verdi abruptly juxtaposes in images and scenes. Tragedy relentlessly unfolds before our eyes and ears until the truth is revealed in the opera's final seconds. Stage: Alex Eales Costumes: Herbert Murauer Lighting: James Farncombe Video: Philipp Contag-Lada Dramaturgy: Ralf Waldschmidt Chorus: Christian Günther
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Lohengrin

Sat, Mar 28, 2026, 18:00
Omer Meir Wellber (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorus), Gábor Bretz (König Heinrich), Klaus Florian Vogt (Lohengrin), Sara Jakubiak (Elsa), Martin Gantner (Friedrich von Telramund), Yulia Matochkina (Ortrud), Szymon Mechli?ski (Heerrufer), Peter Galliard (1. Brabantischer Edler), Colin Aikins (2. Brabantischer Edler), Chao Deng (3. Brabantischer Edler), Keith Klein (4. Brabantischer Edler), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus)
Elsa of Brabant is suspected of having killed her younger brother Gottfried in the forest. This accusation is put forward by Friedrich of Telramund, Count of Brabant, whose wife Ortrud is secretly plotting against Elsa. When King Henry the Fowler asks Elsa to defend herself, she pleads for an imaginary knight to come to her aid. King Henry asks the men present to fight to defend the honour of Elsa of Brabant, but no one steps forward. Suddenly, Lohengrin, the Knight of the Swan, appears. He promises to fight for Elsa, but makes her promise beforehand never to question him about his identity or provenance. Director: Peter Konwitschny Set and Costume Designer: Helmut Brade Costume Design Collaboration: Inga von Bredow Lighting Designer: Manfred Voss Dramaturgy: Werner Hintze Premiere: 18.01.1998
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Lohengrin

Fri, Apr 3, 2026, 16:00
Omer Meir Wellber (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorus), Gábor Bretz (König Heinrich), Klaus Florian Vogt (Lohengrin), Sara Jakubiak (Elsa), Martin Gantner (Friedrich von Telramund), Yulia Matochkina (Ortrud), Szymon Mechli?ski (Heerrufer), Peter Galliard (1. Brabantischer Edler), Colin Aikins (2. Brabantischer Edler), Chao Deng (3. Brabantischer Edler), Keith Klein (4. Brabantischer Edler), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus)
Elsa of Brabant is suspected of having killed her younger brother Gottfried in the forest. This accusation is put forward by Friedrich of Telramund, Count of Brabant, whose wife Ortrud is secretly plotting against Elsa. When King Henry the Fowler asks Elsa to defend herself, she pleads for an imaginary knight to come to her aid. King Henry asks the men present to fight to defend the honour of Elsa of Brabant, but no one steps forward. Suddenly, Lohengrin, the Knight of the Swan, appears. He promises to fight for Elsa, but makes her promise beforehand never to question him about his identity or provenance. Director: Peter Konwitschny Set and Costume Designer: Helmut Brade Costume Design Collaboration: Inga von Bredow Lighting Designer: Manfred Voss Dramaturgy: Werner Hintze Premiere: 18.01.1998
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Il trovatore

Sat, Apr 4, 2026, 19:00
Matteo Beltrami (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Boris Pinkhasovich (Luna), Enea Scala (Manrico), Eleonora Buratto (Leonora), Clementine Margaine (Azucena), Alexander Roslavets (Ferrando), Elizaveta Kulagina (Inez), Colin Aikins (Ruiz), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
For Leonora, the song of the troubadour Manrico holds the promise and glow of love; Manrico's rival Count Luna perceives in it threat and danger. Verdi's opera is a celebration of Italian opera singing at its best - so it is no coincidence that the title character is a singer himself. And yet for the composer, Azucena, Manrico's mother, was the real protagonist. Il trovatore is rich in dramatic intricacies and intense emotions, which Verdi abruptly juxtaposes in images and scenes. Tragedy relentlessly unfolds before our eyes and ears until the truth is revealed in the opera's final seconds. Stage: Alex Eales Costumes: Herbert Murauer Lighting: James Farncombe Video: Philipp Contag-Lada Dramaturgy: Ralf Waldschmidt Chorus: Christian Günther
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Lohengrin

Mon, Apr 6, 2026, 16:00
Omer Meir Wellber (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorus), Gábor Bretz (König Heinrich), Klaus Florian Vogt (Lohengrin), Sara Jakubiak (Elsa), Martin Gantner (Friedrich von Telramund), Yulia Matochkina (Ortrud), Szymon Mechli?ski (Heerrufer), Peter Galliard (1. Brabantischer Edler), Colin Aikins (2. Brabantischer Edler), Chao Deng (3. Brabantischer Edler), Keith Klein (4. Brabantischer Edler), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus)
Elsa of Brabant is suspected of having killed her younger brother Gottfried in the forest. This accusation is put forward by Friedrich of Telramund, Count of Brabant, whose wife Ortrud is secretly plotting against Elsa. When King Henry the Fowler asks Elsa to defend herself, she pleads for an imaginary knight to come to her aid. King Henry asks the men present to fight to defend the honour of Elsa of Brabant, but no one steps forward. Suddenly, Lohengrin, the Knight of the Swan, appears. He promises to fight for Elsa, but makes her promise beforehand never to question him about his identity or provenance. Director: Peter Konwitschny Set and Costume Designer: Helmut Brade Costume Design Collaboration: Inga von Bredow Lighting Designer: Manfred Voss Dramaturgy: Werner Hintze Premiere: 18.01.1998
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Il trovatore

Wed, Apr 8, 2026, 19:00
Matteo Beltrami (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Boris Pinkhasovich (Luna), Enea Scala (Manrico), Eleonora Buratto (Leonora), Clementine Margaine (Azucena), Alexander Roslavets (Ferrando), Elizaveta Kulagina (Inez), Colin Aikins (Ruiz), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
For Leonora, the song of the troubadour Manrico holds the promise and glow of love; Manrico's rival Count Luna perceives in it threat and danger. Verdi's opera is a celebration of Italian opera singing at its best - so it is no coincidence that the title character is a singer himself. And yet for the composer, Azucena, Manrico's mother, was the real protagonist. Il trovatore is rich in dramatic intricacies and intense emotions, which Verdi abruptly juxtaposes in images and scenes. Tragedy relentlessly unfolds before our eyes and ears until the truth is revealed in the opera's final seconds. Stage: Alex Eales Costumes: Herbert Murauer Lighting: James Farncombe Video: Philipp Contag-Lada Dramaturgy: Ralf Waldschmidt Chorus: Christian Günther
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Lohengrin

Sat, Apr 11, 2026, 18:00
Omer Meir Wellber (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorus), Gábor Bretz (König Heinrich), Klaus Florian Vogt (Lohengrin), Sara Jakubiak (Elsa), Martin Gantner (Friedrich von Telramund), Yulia Matochkina (Ortrud), Szymon Mechli?ski (Heerrufer), Peter Galliard (1. Brabantischer Edler), Colin Aikins (2. Brabantischer Edler), Chao Deng (3. Brabantischer Edler), Keith Klein (4. Brabantischer Edler), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus)
Elsa of Brabant is suspected of having killed her younger brother Gottfried in the forest. This accusation is put forward by Friedrich of Telramund, Count of Brabant, whose wife Ortrud is secretly plotting against Elsa. When King Henry the Fowler asks Elsa to defend herself, she pleads for an imaginary knight to come to her aid. King Henry asks the men present to fight to defend the honour of Elsa of Brabant, but no one steps forward. Suddenly, Lohengrin, the Knight of the Swan, appears. He promises to fight for Elsa, but makes her promise beforehand never to question him about his identity or provenance. Director: Peter Konwitschny Set and Costume Designer: Helmut Brade Costume Design Collaboration: Inga von Bredow Lighting Designer: Manfred Voss Dramaturgy: Werner Hintze Premiere: 18.01.1998