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

Classical concerts featuring
Manfred Honeck

Overview

Quick overview of musician Manfred Honeck by associated keywords

New Arrivals

These concerts featuring Manfred Honeck became visible lately at Concert Pulse.

Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Amsterdam

Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5 and Renaud Capuçon plays Mozart

Thu, Aug 28, 2025, 20:00
Gustav Mahler Jugendorchester, Manfred Honeck (Conductor), Renaud Capuçon (Violin)
The SummerConcerts powered by VriendenLoterij presents two months of wonderful concerts, from classical to jazz and from pop to film music. Top musicians from the Netherlands and around the world bring you all your favourite classical pieces, as well as video game music and hits from Broadway musicals.We also present a host of young talent in our summer concerts, including youth orchestras from Greece, Australia and Cuba, 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!

Upcoming Concerts

Concerts featuring Manfred Honeck in season 2024/25 or later

Artistic depiction of the event
Next month
In München

Manfred Honeck & Paul Lewis

Thu, Apr 3, 2025, 20:00
Manfred Honeck (Conductor), Paul Lewis (Piano), Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks
Paul Lewis and the BRSO had actually planned to make up for Edvard Grieg’s Piano Concerto in these concerts, which was canceled due to the pandemic. Due to a vertebral injury, the British pianist is now playing Beethoven’s Fourth Piano Concerto – instead of the young Norwegian’s unabashedly romantic piece, a work that opens the door to the Romantic era. And it would be hard to find a better interpreter than the proven Beethoven specialist Paul Lewis. In conductor Manfred Honeck’s conception, Schulhoff’s Five Pieces for String Quartet will be brought to life with a more expressive, or, to be precise, more Dadaist character: rhythmically concise, ecstatically pulsating – a playful new territory for the BRSO musicians. And, indeed, every concert that includes the Eroica is bound to be one of the highlights of an orchestral season.
Artistic depiction of the event
Next month
In München

Manfred Honeck & Paul Lewis

Fri, Apr 4, 2025, 20:00
Manfred Honeck (Conductor), Paul Lewis (Piano), Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks
Paul Lewis and the BRSO had actually planned to make up for Edvard Grieg’s Piano Concerto in these concerts, which was canceled due to the pandemic. Due to a vertebral injury, the British pianist is now playing Beethoven’s Fourth Piano Concerto – instead of the young Norwegian’s unabashedly romantic piece, a work that opens the door to the Romantic era. And it would be hard to find a better interpreter than the proven Beethoven specialist Paul Lewis. In conductor Manfred Honeck’s conception, Schulhoff’s Five Pieces for String Quartet will be brought to life with a more expressive, or, to be precise, more Dadaist character: rhythmically concise, ecstatically pulsating – a playful new territory for the BRSO musicians. And, indeed, every concert that includes the Eroica is bound to be one of the highlights of an orchestral season.
Artistic depiction of the event
Next month
In Leipzig

Gewandhausorchester, Manfred Honeck Dirigent

Thu, Apr 10, 2025, 19:30
Gewandhaus Leipzig, Großer Saal (Leipzig)
Gewandhausorchester (Orchestra), Manfred Honeck (Conductor), Francesco Piemontesi (Piano)
Beethoven believed in music's power to transform individuals and society. His symphonies, including the Third, Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh, convey this through themes of life, liberation, nature, religion, time, and rhythm. He felt his Seventh Symphony needed no explanation, although the true meaning remains a mystery. Brahms, similarly, uses irony and understatement to describe his Second Piano Concerto, acknowledging the difficulty of capturing music's essence in words.
Artistic depiction of the event
Next month
In Leipzig

Gewandhausorchester, Manfred Honeck Dirigent

Fri, Apr 11, 2025, 19:30
Gewandhaus Leipzig, Großer Saal (Leipzig)
Gewandhausorchester (Orchestra), Manfred Honeck (Conductor), Francesco Piemontesi (Piano)
Beethoven believed in music's power to transform individuals and society. His symphonies, including the Third, Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh, convey this through themes of life, liberation, nature, religion, time, and rhythm. He felt his Seventh Symphony needed no explanation, although the true meaning remains a mystery. Brahms, similarly, uses irony and understatement to describe his Second Piano Concerto, acknowledging the difficulty of capturing music's essence in words.
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Berlin

Casual Concert with Manfred Honeck

Fri, May 23, 2025, 20:00
Philharmonie Berlin, Main Auditorium (Berlin)
Manfred Honeck (Conductor), freekind (Live Act), Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
A composer buffeted about by a dictatorship, writing music with subtexts – dancing on the edge of a volcano. Nothing is unambiguous in Shostakovich’s Fifth. Manfred Honeck presents the legendary work at a Casual Concert as conductor and moderator: equally exciting for newbies and nerds. And then the perfect contrast in the Lounge afterwards – with a live act and a DJ.
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Berlin

Honeck & Rana

Sat, May 24, 2025, 20:00
Manfred Honeck (Conductor), Beatrice Rana (Piano), Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
Who’s the bigger star here: the composer or the interpreter? The Italian pianist Beatrice Rana has often entered into the competition with Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto. Though his mentor Nikolai Rubinstein considered it »bad, trivial, vulgar«, for almost 150 years now, it is one of the most widely performed hits whatsoever. No wonder when you consider its ingredients: gripping virtuosity, catchy tunes, and melodies that are worked up into a never-ending rapture.
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Bad Kissingen

Guest in Bad Kissingen with our honorary conductor Manfred Honeck

Sat, Jul 19, 2025, 19:30
Manfred Honeck (Conductor)
Apart from further performances at summer festivals, which only publish their programmes at a later date, our orchestra is a regular guest at the Kissinger Sommer. At the end of the season, we will be travelling on to Ottobeuren with our Honorary Conductor Manfred Honeck. The concerts in the basilica, a marvel of baroque sacred architecture, are always a celebration and are traditionally concluded with the ringing of bells. »I have taken this orchestra to my heart from the very beginning – I love it!« Manfred Honeck said this shortly after announcing that he would be our new Honorary Conductor. The chemistry between him and us is perfect. The programme includes two compositions that are in our orchestra’s core repertoire. In addition to Schubert’s »Unfinished«, the programme also features Brahms, who wasn’t able to finish a symphony until he was 43: a highly romantic masterpiece from the opening fateful conflict to the passionate overcoming in the finale – and including a melody that Brahms picked up in the Alps and embedded as a love greeting to Clara Schumann.
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Ottobeuren

Guest in Ottobeuren with our honorary conductor Manfred Honeck

Sun, Jul 20, 2025, 15:00
Manfred Honeck (Conductor)
Apart from further performances at summer festivals, which only publish their programmes at a later date, our orchestra is a regular guest at the Kissinger Sommer. At the end of the season, we will be travelling on to Ottobeuren with our Honorary Conductor Manfred Honeck. The concerts in the basilica, a marvel of baroque sacred architecture, are always a celebration and are traditionally concluded with the ringing of bells. »I have taken this orchestra to my heart from the very beginning – I love it!« Manfred Honeck said this shortly after announcing that he would be our new Honorary Conductor. The chemistry between him and us is perfect. The programme includes two compositions that are in our orchestra’s core repertoire. In addition to Schubert’s »Unfinished«, the programme also features Brahms, who wasn’t able to finish a symphony until he was 43: a highly romantic masterpiece from the opening fateful conflict to the passionate overcoming in the finale – and including a melody that Brahms picked up in the Alps and embedded as a love greeting to Clara Schumann.
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Amsterdam

Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5 and Renaud Capuçon plays Mozart

Thu, Aug 28, 2025, 20:00
Gustav Mahler Jugendorchester, Manfred Honeck (Conductor), Renaud Capuçon (Violin)
The SummerConcerts powered by VriendenLoterij presents two months of wonderful concerts, from classical to jazz and from pop to film music. Top musicians from the Netherlands and around the world bring you all your favourite classical pieces, as well as video game music and hits from Broadway musicals.We also present a host of young talent in our summer concerts, including youth orchestras from Greece, Australia and Cuba, 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!