Lockdown listening: classical music and opera to stream at home

With concert halls and opera houses closed, organisations and musicians across the world are livestreaming concerts and opening up their digital archives

Please note: this page is updated regularly. New entries and updated details to existing entries are flagged.

Ermonela Jaho as Sister Angelica in Suor Angelica, part of Puccini’s Il Trittico. The Royal Opera House’s production is available on demand until 19 June.
Ermonela Jaho as Sister Angelica in Suor Angelica, part of Puccini’s Il Trittico. The Royal Opera House’s production is available on demand until 19 June. Photograph: Tristram Kenton/The Guardian

Upcoming live streams

[NEW] Ben Frost’s new opera, The Murder of Halit Yozgat – An Opera under Quarantine will be streamed by Staatstheater Hannover and co-producer Holland festival on Saturday 13 and Monday 15 June at 7.30pm BST (8.30pm CEST) and on demand for 12 hours following each broadcast. Work on the production was suspended midway through rehearsals, the film is made from footage shot (with everyone involved masked and observing social distancing) during the final rehearsal.

The Murder of Halit Yozgat – An Opera under Quarantine by Ben Frost, having its world premiere online on 13 and 15 June.
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The Murder of Halit Yozgat – An Opera under Quarantine by Ben Frost, having its world premiere online on 13 and 15 June. Photograph: Richard Mosse

[UPDATED] The final in the Bayerisches Staatsorchester’s live-streamed Monday concert series will be on 29 June and will feature Jonas Kaufmann and Kirill Petrenko conducting the Orchestra Academy in music by Schönberg, Stravinsky, Mahler and Strauss. From Monday 15 June the weekly concerts will also be open to the public for the first time – 50 tickets will be available in the balcony and first tier of the theatre. Each concert is available on demand for 30 days after broadcast.

Jonas Kaufmann, soloist in theBayerisches Staatsorchester’s Monday concert series
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Jonas Kaufmann, soloist in the
Bayerisches Staatsorchester’s Monday concert series

Daniel Harding will be conducting the Swedish Radio Symphony in a staged performance of Don Giovanni on 13 June live from Stockholm’s Berwaldhallen. The new staging is directed by Andrew Staples, who also sings the role of Don Ottavio; Peter Mattei and Malin Byström are also among the singers. “In this staging we explore the darker side of a reliance on screens and remote images, allowing us to examine Don Giovanni’s need for intimacy and adapt that idea to our own current situation” says Staples. The opera will be live-streamed at 7pm CET / 6pm BST and available for 30 days on demand.  

Conductor Daniel Harding
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Daniel Harding, Music Director of the Swedish Radio Symphony, who are returning to live music making this month with two live-streamed concerts Photograph: PR

[UPDATED] The Royal Opera House is to live-stream three concerts this month on YouTube and Facebook. The first, on Saturday 13 June, will also be broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and its programme will include performances from singers Louise Alder, Toby Spence and Gerald Finley, and a world premiere of a new work by the choreographer Wayne McGregor. The first concert will be free to view, the two further concerts (on 20 and 27 June) will be £4.99 for a virtual ticket.

Radio 3/Wigmore Hall’s lunchtime concert series of live recitals began on 1 June and runs throughout the month. Watch or listen at 1pm BST each day or catch up on demand. Full listings here, read our reviews of each one here.

Stephen Hough performs in the opening concert in the Radio3/Wigmore Hall lunchtime concert series.
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Stephen Hough performs in the opening concert in the Radio3/Wigmore Hall lunchtime concert series. Photograph: Tristram Kenton/The Guardian

The Taiwan Philharmonic began performing again in late May with a series of three concerts live-streamed from Taiwan’s National Theater and Concert Hall. The first, featured works by Dvořák, Tchaikovsky and Tyzen Hsiao. The second included works by Mozart and Dvořák, and, on Friday 12 June, the programme will feature Beethoven’s 5th and 7th symphonies.

Larger, socially distanced groups have continued to be permitted in Sweden, allowing the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra (albeit in a reduced form) to continue to perform to an empty hall. Weekly concerts are streamed live and available on demand for a year. On 20 May Nina Stemme performed Wagner’s Wesendonck Liede, on 27 May clarinettist Martin Fröst was soloist and also conductor in a programme of Piazzolla, Copland and Beethoven. Check the calendar for the next live-streamed concerts.

A second Bang on a Can Marathon will be live-streamed on Sunday 14 June from 3-9pm EST (8pm-2am BST). There will be 25 live performances from musicians in the US, Canada, Czech Republic, Switzerland, Scotland, Italy, Ireland and Japan, plus ten world premieres of newly commissioned works. The concert will begin with a performance by Rhiannon Giddens, and concludes with a performance by Terry Riley, live from Japan.

Outstanding young artists are live-streaming concerts from their homes via recitalstream.org, that features two or three new events each week. Check the schedule for the next concert.

Operas and concerts on demand

Sarah Tynan in Les Illuminations at the 2016 Aldeburgh festival
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Sarah Tynan in Les Illuminations at the 2016 Aldeburgh festival. Photograph: Mark Allan

[NEW] The Aldeburgh festival should have started on 12 June. Instead, it has a virtual presence, with some of its greatest hits available to watch online. The imaginative 2016 circus staging of Britten’s song cycle Les Illuminations premieres at 9pm (read more about it here), and later in June, Grimes on the Beach, the extraordinary and unforgettable 2013 production of Britten’s Peter Grimes set on Aldeburgh beach, comes to BBC4 and iPlayer.

[UPDATED] Established opera streaming platform operavision.eu has a rich archive of productions from across Europe all available free. New productions are coming every three or four days (check here). You can also watch via their YouTube channel. June sees a celebration of English opera, with highlights including Garsington Opera’s The Skating Rink (streaming from 9 June), Glyndebourne’s Vanessa (from 14 June) and, at the end of the month, two operatic rarities – Welsh National Opera’s production of Le Vin Herbé and Birmingham Opera company’s community staging of Tippett’s The Ice Break. Also worth catching is Komische Oper’s staging of Schönberg’s unfinished epic work Moses und Aron (from 12 June).

Rachel Kelly and Ilya Kutyukhin in a revival of Nicholas Hytner’s staging of Cosi fan tutte for Glyndebourne.
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Rachel Kelly and Ilya Kutyukhin in a revival of Nicholas Hytner’s staging of Cosi fan tutte for Glyndebourne. Photograph: Tristram Kenton/The Guardian

Glyndebourne Open House, a virtual season, began on Sunday 24 May – the day the festival should have opened, and features a different opera streamed from the festival’s archive each week. Currently streaming is Nicholas Hytner’s staging of Così fan tutte.  Check the website for details.

A new online film, The Goldberg Variations: Meditations On Solitude features poetry read by Sir Simon Russell Beale, Bach’s Goldberg Variations performed in an arrangement for strings by the Ysaÿe Trio, and photographic artworks by Kristina Feldhammer. It’s ticketed, but on a “pay what you want” basis; 20% of proceeds will be donated to the Royal Society of Musicians.

Live music – if not yet audiences – returned to Paris’s Philharmonie in the last week of May. Both concerts were live-streamed and are available on demand: a Wagner/Strauss programme, and violinist Renaud Capuçon leading a performance of Strauss’s Metamorphosen.

Renaud Capuçon and friends perform Strauss’s Métamorphoses
Renaud Capuçon and friends perform Strauss’s Métamorphoses Photograph: arte.tv

Grange festival’s acclaimed (“hugely enjoyable” wrote Tim Ashley) production of Handel’s Agrippina from 2018 is now streaming, last year’s staging of Marriage of Figaro will be available in mid July; a concert performance of Bernstein’s Candide comes online on 5 June.

Esa-Pekka Salonen conducting in 2015
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The Philharmonia’s Esa-Pekka Salonen Photograph: Nicolas Brodard | 2015

The Philharmonia Orchestra have uploaded a 2017 Royal Festival Hall concert in which Esa-Pekka Salonen conducted Mahler’s third symphony. Also available is an historic June 1970 performance, under Otto Klemperer, of Beethoven’s choral symphony with soloists including mezzo Janet Baker.

The Royal Opera House is streaming each week a new ballet or opera production on its Facebook and YouTube channels (then available on demand for several weeks). Puccini’s Il trittico is currently available until 19 June, followed by David McVicar’s much-loved staging of The Magic Flute on 19 June. More ROH content is available on Marquee TV (see below).

Symphonie Fantastique performed by the Aurora Orchestra at the proms 2019
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Symphonie Fantastique performed by the Aurora Orchestra at the proms 2019 Photograph: Mark Allan

Watch one of the highlights of last year’s Proms season – the Aurora orchestra’s imaginative and thrilling staging of Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique. The performance opened the orchestra’s new Aurora Play series that will see new content each week alongside introductions by conductor Nicholas Collon and other special guests.

France TV, the French public national television broadcaster, has a classical music and opera channel with some great content including (at the time of writing) Purcell’s Indian Queen, staged by Opera Lille with Concert d’Astrée and Emmanuelle Haïm, and a Robert Wilson staging of Turandot.

European cultural streaming platform Arte (which also hosts the fabulous Hope@Home – see below) has regularly changing content from opera houses across Europe. Current highlights include Gluck’s Orphée et Eurydice at the Opéra Comique in Paris, Turandot in a production for Barcelona’s Gran Teatre del Liceu, and Piazolla’s tango opera Maria de Buenos Aires, a 2019 production from Opéra National du Rhin.

Stuart MacRae’s Anthropocene, staged by Scottish Opera 2019.
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Stuart MacRae’s Anthropocene, staged by Scottish Opera 2019. Photograph: James Glossop

The Royal Liverpool Philharmonic is adding videos of past concerts to Facebook twice a week. Some have a specially-recorded introduction by chief conductor Vasily Petrenko. There’s also, in the Live From Liverpool Philharmonic Hall series, previously unreleased audio recordings of past concerts.

Scottish Opera’s world premiere production of Anthropocene by Stuart MacRae and Louise Welsh is available until mid-July via OperaVision. Read our four-star review here.

Wagner’s Parsifal, in a staging for Opera Ballet Vlaanderen
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Wagner’s Parsifal, in a staging for Opera Ballet Vlaanderen Photograph: Aanemie Augustijns

Ghent’s Opera Ballet Vlaanderen has productions including 2013’s Parsifal, winner of International Opera’s Best Wagner Anniversary Production (and which featured 250 litres of fake blood). And if you want to venture a little off opera’s beaten track, there’s Rimsky-Korsakov’s Sadko and Halévy’s La Juive. Their content is also available via OperaVision.

The New York Philharmonic is broadcasting past concerts every Thursday at 7.30pm EST (12.30am BST) on Facebook and YouTube. Several feature specially recorded introductions by Alec Baldwin, who chats to the soloists (including Renée Fleming and Yo Yo Ma, all in their respective homes of course). Full details at NY Phil Plays On, where there’s lots of content from its April Mahler festival that celebrated its former music director.

The iconic CD cover images for the Bach Cantatas series by the Monteverdi choir and English Baroque Soloists
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The iconic CD cover images for the Bach Cantatas series by the Monteverdi choir and English Baroque Soloists

The Monteverdi Choir and English Baroque Soloists are celebrating the 20th anniversary of their acclaimed Bach Cantata Pilgrimage with a new cantata every Sunday on their YouTube channel, selected to match the liturgical calendar. There’s plenty of other music to explore on the Monteverdi Choir and Orchestra’s YouTube channel, including Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo, recorded in 2017 in Venice’s historic Teatro La Fenice, and his Vespro della Beata Vergine recorded in the Palace of Versailles.

New music specialists the London Sinfonietta’s digital channel features interviews with many of its commissioned composers, performance guides and performances of short works by composers including Steve Reich and Harrison Birtwistle, as well as Tansy Davies and Nick Drake’s recent chamber opera Cave.

There’s a new concert each night – the “concert du jour” (available for 24 hours only) – plus a great selection of on-demand content from the Philharmonie de Paris, including Samstag, from Stockhausen’s Licht opera cycle, and Hans Krása’s children’s opera, Brundibar – plus jazz, chamber music and masterclasses. A well-designed search facility helps you navigate the wide variety of music.

Stockhausen’s Samstag aus Licht staged by le Balcon, in June 2019 at the Philharmonie de Paris
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Stockhausen’s Samstag aus Licht staged by le Balcon, in June 2019 at the Philharmonie de Paris

Each evening at 7.30pm EST, New York’s Metropolitan Opera is also streaming a past production from its award-winning Live in HD series. Each opera is available to stream, free, for 23 hours. More details on Twitter @MetOpera or at metopera.org/.

Violinist Isabelle Faust live-streamed a solo Bach recital on 5 April from Leipzig’s Thomaskirche, the church where JS Bach was Kapellmeister from 1723 until his death in 1750. The spine-tingling 60-minute concert is on Arte.tv, free to view until 4 July.

Isabelle Faust
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Isabelle Faust Photograph: Felix Broede

Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw Orchestra has a huge array of past concerts to watch, organised by composer (including a Beethoven and a Mahler symphony cycle), by conductor (well represented are former chief conductors Bernard Haitink, Mariss Jansonsand, Daniele Gatti, Andris Nelsons and Ivan Fischer ( women on the Concertgebouw podium are conspicuous by their absence), and soloists. There are also conducting masterclasses, portraits of the orchestra’s members, and documentaries – enough to keep you engaged for weeks to come.

The Dutch National Opera is showing a different production each week on its YouTube channel. Currently available is Ivo van Hove’s 2017 production of Strauss’s Salome.

Dutch National Opera/Ivo Van Hove'sproduction of Salome, with Malin Byström and Evgeny Nikitin
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Dutch National Opera/Ivo Van Hove’sproduction of Salome, with Malin Byström and Evgeny Nikitin Photograph: PR

The Melbourne Recital Centre has a range of performances from the past few years of predominantly Australian performers and repertoire in an admirably easy-to-navigate site.

Garsington Opera has made available its 2019 production of Smetana’s Bartered Bride in a staging our critic declared “full of charm and wit”, as well as its Nozze di Figaro captured in 2017.

Brussels’s famous opera house La Monnaie has curated a “virtual season” with seven recent productions (including Tristan und Isolde, Aida, Dusapin’s specially-commissioned Macbeth Underworld, and a hallucinogenic La Gioconda). Not all the surtitles are in English – try this database of librettos to gen up). You can also access the same content on its YouTube channel.

The EU-wide Early Music Day was, of course, online-only this year but featured livestreamed concerts that can all be watched on demand alongside plenty of previous concerts and shorter performances. Don’t miss Steven Devine’s performance of Bach’s 48 Preludes and Fugues on the harpsichord at the York Early Music Centre, or if you need a lift, Bach’s Toccata and Fugue (other Baroque composers are available) arranged for four very nimble-fingered recorder players.

The Gstaad Menuhin Festival and Academy has an online space where you can watch performances, backstage interviews and masterclasses from previous festivals. Registration is required, but this will also enable the non-German speakers among us to access the English-language version of the written content.

Berlin’s Pierre Boulez Saal’s Intermission series features a regularly updated selection of past concerts each available for two or three days.

Deutsche Oper Berlin has a regularly changing programme of past productions available on demand. Check for details.

The audio stream of Missy Mizzoli’s Breaking the Waves (which was at the Edinburgh international festival last year) captured in Opera Philadelphia’s premiere production in September 2016 is available via a Soundcloud embed.

Adam’s Passion by Arvo Pärt, available to watch via Marquee.TV
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Adam’s Passion by Arvo Pärt, available to watch via Marquee.TV Photograph: http://www.robertwilson.com/

Arts and culture streaming platform Marquee TV is offering a 14-day trial period, giving free access to a huge range of theatre and ballet productions and a large and varied collection of operas that includes most of Glyndebourne festival’s recent productions (from Brett Dean’s Hamlet to Jonathan Kent’s glorious staging of Purcell’s Fairy Queen, bonking bunnies and all). Other must-sees include Arvo Pärt’s Adam’s Passion, and Opera North’s award-winning production of Jonathan Dove’s children’s opera, Pinocchio, and one of the greatest opera events of the last decade: Aldeburgh festival’s outdoor production of Peter Grimes, staged on the beach where Britten’s opera is set. Registration (and thus credit card details) are required to activate the free trial period, but you can cancel anytime.

The Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra has a wide array of past concerts on demand and will be adding more regularly. Of many wonderful concerts, try Daniel Barenboim’s joyful performance of Beethoven’s 5th Piano Concerto under the baton of Mariss Jansons (from November 2017), or watch its celebrated and much missed chief conductor Jansons conducting Bruckner’s Mass No 3 F minor.

Opera North’s acclaimed semi-staged Ring cycle from 2016 is available on its website. The 2017 production of Trouble in Tahiti is available via Now TV and Sky on-demand services, and, on operavision (more of which below) you can watch its production of Britten’s Turn of the Screw, recorded live on 21 February 2020.

Opera North’s semi-staged Ring Cycle with Andrew Foster-Williams (Gunther); Mats Almgren (Hagen) and Mati Turi (Siegfried)
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Opera North’s semi-staged Ring Cycle with Andrew Foster-Williams (Gunther); Mats Almgren (Hagen) and Mati Turi (Siegfried) Photograph: Clive Barda/CLIVE BARDA/ ArenaPAL

The Teatro Massimo in Palermo has several concerts and recent opera productions recorded live available to watch on demand. At the time of writing the operas include Madame Butterfly, La Traviata, a Barber of Seville (check out the witty animated opening) and a Cav and a Pag. And there’s more to come, we are promised.

The Teatro Regio’s YouTube channel, Opera on the Sofa, is making available past productions from the historic Turin theatre. The opening offering is Nabucco, staged last February, and there’s also Madama Butterfly, La Sonnambula and a Carmen.

Vienna State Opera is making a different opera available to watch each day via its streaming platform. There’s also a large archive of previous ballet and opera productions that can be watched with a subscription.

Many UK organisations live stream concerts and make them available via YouTube or other channels. Check out Wigmore Hall, which has a huge selection of its past chamber music concerts free to watch, or try the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra’s YouTube channel or Melbourne Symphony Orchestra.

Part of its new portal, Lincoln Center at Home, the New York arts venue is posting on Facebook past concerts from its Live from the Lincoln series. Highlights include Jaap van Zweden conducting the New York Philharmonic in Mahler 5 or Joshua Bell’s Seasons of Cuba. Check for regular additions.

The Academy of Ancient Music’s streaming Sunday sees a new concert uploaded each week that you can watch on its YouTube channel. Scotland’s Dunedin Consort has a recent all-Bach programme on Facebook, recorded at Washington DC’s Library of Congress.

The London Philharmonic Orchestra launched LPonline with a remarkable performance of a movement of Beethoven’s String Quartet No. 10 led by Anne-Sophie Mutter from Munich, with her fellow musicians in Tonbridge, Pimlico and Barnes. More content includes listening guides, Spotify playlists and even a chance for the violas to shine.

The London Mozart Players’ “At Home” series features a daily changing selection of imaginatively-curated streams, workshops, family-friendly broadcasts and even live recitals. Check its YouTube channel or its website.

The London Symphony Orchestra is streaming full-length concerts on Sunday and Thursday evenings on its YouTube channel. Each performance will be available up to midnight (UK time) on the day of broadcast, and thereafter on streaming site Stingray Classica (currently offering a free 30-day trial).

Chineke! Orchestra’s concert (Coleridge-Taylor, Bruch and Beethoven) from Sunday 23 February 2020 has just been made available on YouTube. It was filmed at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, conducted by Fawzi Haimor, and featured Tai Murray as soloist.

Easter music

English Touring Opera has uploaded its staging of Bach’s St John Passion which premiered in London on 5 March 2020 and had been due to tour across the UK featuring local choirs. The broadcast weaves together footage of the live performance at the Hackney Empire, with 90 individual video contributions made by choir members in isolation from Cumbria to Cornwall who were due to participate in performances across the country.

An abridged version of Bach’s oratorio St Matthew Passion, with Streetwise Opera (who work with people affected by homelessness) and The Sixteen, is available to watch on YouTube. It was filmed live at Campfield Market, Manchester, in March 2016.

You can also watch The Sixteen’s performance of James MacMillan’s Stabat Mater in the Sistine Chapel from April 2018.

Newly created content on social media

Violinist Daniel Hope and pianist Christoph Israel broadcasting live Hope from Home March 2020
‘Welcome to my living room’ - violinist Daniel Hope and pianist Christoph Israel livestreaming the first Hope from Home concert Photograph: PR

[UPDATED] Violinist Daniel Hope’s hugely successful living room concert series Hope at Home has been reborn in a touring version, still offering live music and conversation. On Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays you can catch it from different locations across Germany live on the ARTE Concert website and Hope’s Facebook page. The past episodes of Hope at Home are all available on demand (for 90 days after broadcast) in the ARTE Media Library and can be accessed here.

The Royal Scottish National Orchestra’s Sunday Sounds series features a different RSNO musician performing from their home live at 3pm. Watch on its website, on Facebook or YouTube. There’s also new concerts from previous years made available to watch each Friday online or on the Glasgow orchestra’s YouTube channel.

Outstanding young artists are livestreaming concerts from their homes on impressive new platform, Recital Stream. Concerts are then available on demand for a fortnight. It’s free, but donations – that go direct to the performers - are welcome.

The Kanneh-Masons performing at the 2019 Royal Variety Show
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The Kanneh-Masons performing at the 2019 Royal Variety Show Photograph: Matt Frost/ITV/REX/Shutterstock

What’s lockdown life like in Nottingham with Britain’s most musical family (or at least surely a prime contender for the title)? Have a peek inside the Kanneh-Mason household with regular Facebook livestreams featuring short performances from cellist Sheku and his siblings. Don’t miss their scratch chamber orchestra arrangement of the first movement of Beethoven’s third concerto – a work that Isata had been due to perform at the Royal Albert Hall on 18 April.

Violinist Elena Urioste and her pianist husband Tom Poster are posting short clips each day of their performances of anything from Mozart to Messiaen, Nat King Cole to nursery rhymes. Don’t miss the Come on Eileen/Toxic/Baby Shark mashup, or their themed costumes to match the music. Send in your requests, and drop in to #UriPosteJukeBox to brighten your day. Wonderful stuff.

Every evening at 6.30pm BST there’s a live organ recital from Worcester Cathedral on Facebook Live.

Pianist Igor Levit has now finished his two month run of nightly house concerts on Twitter (52 concerts), but you can still catch up with his wonderful series of mini recitals.

Cellist Yo-Yo Ma is playing short pieces that give him comfort and is posting them regularly on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. Search hashtag #SongsofComfort.

Critics’ picks

8 June Flora Willson’s lockdown listening picks
1 June Tim Ashley’s lockdown listening picks
25 May Rian Evans on her lockdown musical picks
18 May Andrew Clements on his lockdown listening

Week eight: lushness from Renée Fleming and a torrid thriller from Korngold
Week seven: slo-mo Pärt, a glorious Figaro and Beethoven’s tenth (yes really)
Week six: dancing horses and bonking bunnies
Week five: Stockhausen’s devilish Saturday and a Beethoven marathon
Week four: Klemperer’s Choral symphony, a world premiere and splendidly sinister Britten
Week three: a charismatic Don Giovanni and ear-bending new sounds from Australia
Week two: Argerich, Aida and Hans Abrahamsen
Week one: Igor Levit, Il Trovatore and the Berlin Phil