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Classical concerts featuring
Groot Omroepkoor

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Upcoming Concerts

Concerts featuring Groot Omroepkoor in season 2024/25 or later

January 25, 2025
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!
February 16, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet, Rachmaninoff and Franck

Sun, Feb 16, 2025, 11:00
Radio Filharmonisch Orkest, Groot Omroepkoor, Gergely Madaras (Conductor), Boris Pinkhasovich (Bariton), Yuval Weinberg (Choral conductor)
The Sunday Morning Concert brings you wonderful and much-loved compositions, performed by top musicians from the Netherlands and abroad. Enjoy the most beautiful music in the morning! You can make your Sunday complete by enjoying a delicious post-concert lunch in restaurant LIER.The Royal Concertgebouw is one of the best concert halls in the world, famous for its exceptional acoustics and varied programme. Attend a concert and have an experience you will never forget. Come and enjoy inspiring music in the beautiful surroundings of the Main Hall or the intimate Recital Hall.
March 7, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Concertgebouw Orchestra: Polyphonic Amsterdam

Fri, Mar 7, 2025, 20:15
Concertgebouw Orchestra, Groot Omroepkoor, Bas Wiegers (Conductor), Katrien Baerts (Soprano), Tania Kross (Mezzo-Soprano), Anneke Brassinga (Presentation)
Amsterdam has been harbouring outside influences for 750 years. The more diverse the mix, the stronger the city’s character. Amsterdam is a city of many voices, a polyphony that is echoed in its music. Bas Wiegers leads the Concertgebouw Orchestra, the Netherlands Radio Choir and soloists in a unique programme of many voices. Tania Kross sings songs from several cultures, and evokes the rich culture of the Antilles in arias from Randal Corsen’s Katibu di shon, the first opera in Papiamentu. In addition, the orchestra performs a work by the Surinamese composer Eddy Vervuurt (1928-1988) and three Dutch composers.In Theo Verbey’s Notturno, the whole world resonates in an Amsterdam appartment. In Louis Andriessen’s opera De stad van Dis (The City of Dis), we board the Ship of Fools and enter a hellish city, one of water and fire. Andriessen was an inspiring composition teacher, drawing young composers from all over the world to Keizersgracht in Amsterdam for lessons. Some stayed on to further enrich musical life here, such as the former Composer Laureate of the Netherlands Calliope Tsoupaki, a citizen of Amsterdam since 1988. This programme features her newly commissioned Another Day, based on a poem by Anneke Brassinga.This concert will be enriched by surtitles and images by Frouke ten Velden
March 8, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Amsterdam: 750 Years

Sat, Mar 8, 2025, 14:15
Concertgebouw Orchestra, Groot Omroepkoor, Bas Wiegers (Conductor), Benjamin Goodson (Choral conductor), Maxim Februari (Voice), Anneke Brassinga (Voice), Katrien Baerts (Soprano), Paul Jussen (Timpani)
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!
March 22, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Karina Canellakis conducts Janáček's From the House of the Dead

Sat, Mar 22, 2025, 14:15
Radio Filharmonisch Orkest, Groot Omroepkoor, Karina Canellakis (Conductor), Jeremy Bines (Choral conductor), Joshua Bloom (Alexandr Petrovi Gorjanikov), Bekhzod Davronov (Aljeja), Roland Wood (Siskov), Jan Martiník (Placmajor), Alexey Dolgov (Sapkin), Alexey Dolgov (Opily vezen), Alexey Dolgov (Vesely vezen), Tim Kuypers (Vezen maly), Tim Kuypers (Urputny Vezen), Stephan Rügamer (Luka), Maria Warenberg (Pobehlice), Sam Carl (Don Juan), Julian Hubbard (Skuratov), Zbigniew Malak
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!
April 12, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Wim T. Schippers’ Egmont

Sat, Apr 12, 2025, 14:15
Radio Filharmonisch Orkest, Groot Omroepkoor, Kevin John Edusei (Conductor), ntb (Choral conductor), Wim T. Schippers (Narrator), Nikki Treurniet (Klärchen)
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!
April 20, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Mendelssohn's ‘Lobgesang’

Sun, Apr 20, 2025, 11:00
Radio Filharmonisch Orkest, Groot Omroepkoor, Diego Fasolis (Conductor), Camilla Tilling (Soprano), Lucia Cirillo (Mezzo-Soprano), Kieran Carrel (Tenor), Klaas-Jan de Groot (Choral conductor)
The Sunday Morning Concert brings you wonderful and much-loved compositions, performed by top musicians from the Netherlands and abroad. Enjoy the most beautiful music in the morning! You can make your Sunday complete by enjoying a delicious post-concert lunch in restaurant LIER.The Royal Concertgebouw is one of the best concert halls in the world, famous for its exceptional acoustics and varied programme. Attend a concert and have an experience you will never forget. Come and enjoy inspiring music in the beautiful surroundings of the Main Hall or the intimate Recital Hall.
May 10, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Mahler Festival: Budapest Festival Orchestra and Iván Fischer - Mahler's Symphony No. 2

Sat, May 10, 2025, 20:15
Boedapest Festival Orkest, Groot Omroepkoor, Iván Fischer (Conductor), Christiane Karg (Soprano), Anna Lucia Richter (Mezzo-Soprano)
'Mahler's beauty always hurts', conductor Iván Fischer said recently. Tonight he conducts his own Budapest Festival Orchestra in Mahler's Symphony No. 2, full of passion, lyricism and brightly shining melodies. Mahler is in good hands with Fischer and the Budapest Festival Orchestra. Fischer knows like no other how to get Mahler's music flowing, there is no composer he understands better. As early as 2006, Fischer and the orchestra recorded Mahler's Symphony No. 2. 'Impressive', wrote Gramophone.He who calls us gives us eternal life - sings the choir towards the end of Mahler's Symphony No. 2. In this emotionally charged work, Mahler expresses his ideas about life after death. Bliss and melancholy are both given space. Pure, insinuatingly and moving.
May 11, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Mahler Festival: Budapest Festival Orchestra and Iván Fischer - Mahler's Symphony No. 2

Sun, May 11, 2025, 11:00
Boedapest Festival Orkest, Groot Omroepkoor, Iván Fischer (Conductor), Christiane Karg (Soprano), Anna Lucia Richter (Mezzo-Soprano)
'Mahler's beauty always hurts', conductor Iván Fischer said recently. Tonight he conducts his own Budapest Festival Orchestra in Mahler's Symphony No. 2, full of passion, lyricism and brightly shining melodies. Mahler is in good hands with Fischer and the Budapest Festival Orchestra. Fischer knows like no other how to get Mahler's music flowing, there is no composer he understands better. As early as 2006, Fischer and the orchestra recorded Mahler's Symphony No. 2. 'Impressive', wrote Gramophone.He who calls us gives us eternal life - sings the choir towards the end of Mahler's Symphony No. 2. In this emotionally charged work, Mahler expresses his ideas about life after death. Bliss and melancholy are both given space. Pure, insinuatingly and moving.
May 16, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Mahler Festival: Concertgebouworkest and Klaus Mäkelä - Mahler's Symphony No. 8

Fri, May 16, 2025, 20:15
Concertgebouw Orchestra, Groot Omroepkoor, Laurens Symfonisch, Le Chœur de l'Orchestre de Paris, Nationaal Kinderkoor, Klaus Mäkelä (Conductor), Hailey Clark (Soprano), Golda Schultz (Soprano), Miriam Kutrowatz (Soprano), Jennifer Johnston (Alto), Okka von der Damerau (Alto), Giorgio Berrugi (Tenor), Michael Nagy (Bariton), Tareq Nazmi (Bass)
Klaus Mäkelä has been artistic partner of the Concertgebouw Orchestra since 2022 and will become chief conductor in 2027. Earlier in this festival, he already conducted the First Symphony, today the Eighth. The Concertgebouw Orchestra shares the stage with no fewer than four vocal ensembles: the National Radio Choir, Laurens Symphonic, the Choeur de l'Orchestre de Paris and the National Children's Choir.Mahler wrote to his friend Willem Mengelberg that his Eighth Symphony was his greatest work ever. 'All the other symphonies were anticipating this.' Moreover, he experienced it as if the piece of music was dictated to him in a vision. In two monumental movements, Mahler says he sings of the entire universe. 'There are no longer human voices sounding. They are planets and suns, revolving in their orbits.' Practically speaking, it is also a rather voluminous work. Mahler did often need very many performers, and in this Mahler's 'symphony of a thousand', there are close to four hundred. Or more: in 1912, Mengelberg conducted a version with two thousand musicians and singers.
May 18, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Mahler Festival: Concertgebouworkest and Klaus Mäkelä - Mahler's Symphony No. 8

Sun, May 18, 2025, 13:30
Concertgebouw Orchestra, Groot Omroepkoor, Laurens Symfonisch, Le Chœur de l'Orchestre de Paris, Nationaal Kinderkoor, Klaus Mäkelä (Conductor), Hailey Clark (Soprano), Golda Schultz (Soprano), Miriam Kutrowatz (Soprano), Jennifer Johnston (Alto), Okka von der Damerau (Alto), Giorgio Berrugi (Tenor), Michael Nagy (Bariton), Tareq Nazmi (Bass)
Klaus Mäkelä has been artistic partner of the Concertgebouw Orchestra since 2022 and will become chief conductor in 2027. Earlier in this festival, he already conducted the First Symphony, today the Eighth. The Concertgebouw Orchestra shares the stage with no fewer than four vocal ensembles: the National Radio Choir, Laurens Symphonic, the Choeur de l'Orchestre de Paris and the National Children's Choir.Mahler wrote to his friend Willem Mengelberg that his Eighth Symphony was his greatest work ever. 'All the other symphonies were anticipating this.' Moreover, he experienced it as if the piece of music was dictated to him in a vision. In two monumental movements, Mahler says he sings of the entire universe. 'There are no longer human voices sounding. They are planets and suns, revolving in their orbits.' Practically speaking, it is also a rather voluminous work. Mahler did often need very many performers, and in this Mahler's 'symphony of a thousand', there are close to four hundred. Or more: in 1912, Mengelberg conducted a version with two thousand musicians and singers.
June 7, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Otto Ketting's Ithaka

Sat, Jun 7, 2025, 14:15
Radio Filharmonisch Orkest, Groot Omroepkoor, Antony Hermus (Conductor), Gijs Leenaars (Choral conductor), Derek Welton (Journalist), Iris van Wijnen (Star), Eliza Boom (Angel), James Newby (Poet), Ilse Eerens (Mother of the Dead Sailor), AJ Glueckert (Macho), AJ Glueckert (Manikin), AJ Glueckert (Second Friend)
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!