All events
- Camilla Köhnken, fortepiano
A unique series of concerts in the Beethoven House Museum brings the historical keyboard instruments from the museum's collection to life. Listeners can experience the sound ideals of Beethoven's time at first hand and learn about the special features of the instruments as the pianists explain them.
The concerts last around 40 minutes and take place in the museum's music room. The room is not air-conditioned.
With kind support of Deutsche Stiftung Denkmalschutz.
Concert tickets at a price of € 10 (plus admission to the museum) are available at the shop ticket office (always from the Monday before the event). This offer is aimed at individual visitors to the museum.
We want to get creative again during the Easter holidays and invite all visitors to create a silhouette of Beethoven, a museum in a box or another souvenir of their visit. If the weather is nice, this will take place in the museum's courtyard.
Free (with admission ticket to the museum)
We want to get creative again during the Easter holidays and invite all visitors to create a silhouette of Beethoven, a museum in a box or another souvenir of their visit. If the weather is nice, this will take place in the museum's courtyard.
Free (with admission ticket to the museum)
- Giuseppe Gibboni, violine
- Arsenii Moon, piano
Two exceptional musicians of their generation come together in a programme of rare expressive intensity. Giuseppe Gibboni, winner of the 56th Premio Paganini in Genoa, impresses with his stupendous technique, emotional depth and interpretative maturity that far exceeds his age. Arsenii Moon, winner of the 64th Ferruccio Busoni International Piano Competition and recipient of the Benedetti-Michelangeli Prize, is considered a 'sound magician' who ‘conveys genuine empathy and a unique sense of poetry in music' (Dallas Magazine). Together, they devote themselves to a finely balanced programme ranging from Alexey Shor's lyrical Violin Sonata No. 1 to the F.A.E. Sonata, composed jointly by Dietrich, Brahms and Schumann, to Rachmaninoff's dreamy Vocalise, culminating in a dramatic finale with Prokofiev's First Violin Sonata.
An evening of virtuosity and intimacy, precision and passion – between sound and poetry.
- Alexey Shor, Sonate für Violine und Klavier Nr. 1
- Albert Dietrich | Robert Schumann | Johannes Brahms, Sonate für Violine und Klavier "FAE-Sonate"
- Sergej Rachmaninow, Vocalise
- Sergej Prokofjew, Sonate Nr. 1 f-Moll op. 80 für Violine und Klavier
We want to get creative again during the Easter holidays and invite all visitors to create a silhouette of Beethoven, a museum in a box or another souvenir of their visit. If the weather is nice, this will take place in the museum's courtyard.
Free (with admission ticket to the museum)
- Mariia Kurtynina, fortepiano
A unique series of concerts in the Beethoven House Museum brings the historical keyboard instruments from the museum's collection to life. Listeners can experience the sound ideals of Beethoven's time at first hand and learn about the special features of the instruments as the pianists explain them.
The concerts last around 40 minutes and take place in the museum's music room. The room is not air-conditioned.
With kind support of Deutsche Stiftung Denkmalschutz.
Concert tickets at a price of € 10 (plus admission to the museum) are available at the shop ticket office (always from the Monday before the event). This offer is aimed at individual visitors to the museum.
What have you always wanted to know about Beethoven?
Together with you, we will focus on a special topic related to the great composer. The focus is primarily on Beethoven the man. We will introduce you to a few selected objects in the museum. In the coffee round afterwards, creative and thought-provoking impulses will stimulate discussion.
The programme is aimed at senior citizens, culture lovers, but also curious people who would like to learn and experience something. As the topics change, the round(e) can be booked as a single or multiple event.
Registration required: 0228 98175-25, museum@beethoven.de
Cost: € 15
- Michael Donak, bandoneon
- Arsen Zorayan, violin and conductor
- Hamburg Stage Ensemble
The Hamburg Stage Ensemble is made up of young, highly qualified instrumentalists who together pursue the vision of not only playing music, but also communicating it. The joy of playing together takes centre stage. The small ensemble and the conscious decision not to have a conductor means that the audience can participate directly in the concert.
Once again, violinist Arsen Zorayan will be the soloist and artistic director, and once again the audience will be taken on a journey through the four seasons - but this time the composer is not Antonio Vivaldi, but Astor Piazzolla. Multifaceted, exhilarating tangos and ballads by Piazzolla and other Latin American composers will also be heard in the second part of the programme, for which the Hamburg Stage Ensemble has been able to secure the outstanding bandoneonist Michael Dolak as a soloist.
- Aaron Pilsan, piano – Artist in Residence
- Juri Valentin, oboe
- Sindy Mohamed, viola
'Fairy Tales and Legends' - Artist in Residence Aaron Pilsan opens up a new world of sound with intimate colours and unexpected perspectives in the interplay of piano with oboe and viola and, in the spirit of Beethoven, shows himself to be curious about chamber music, experimental, honest and deeply human.
- August Klughardt, Schilflieder op. 28
- Robert Schumann, Drei Romanzen op. 94
- Robert Schumann, Märchenbilder op. 113
- Charles Martin Loeffler, Zwei Rhapsodien
- Robert Kahn, Serenade op. 73
- Kevin Chen, piano
At the age of eight, Kevin Chen won first place in the Canadian music competition and was subsequently named one of the '100 Remarkable Canadians'. Since then, his career has blossomed internationally and he has been widely recognised as a prizewinner at major competitions. In the Chamber Music Hall, he will play on the Steinway grand piano that led him to victory at the Arthur Rubinstein Piano Master Competition in Tel Aviv in 2023.
- Ludwig van Beethoven, 32 Variationen c-Moll WoO 80
- Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy, Variations sérieuses op. 54
- Alexander Scriabin, Fantasie op. 28
- Alexander Scriabin, Vers la flamme op. 72
- Franz Liszt, Années de pèlerinage II
- Franz Liszt, Sonetto 104 del Petrarca, S. 161, 5
- Franz Liszt, Les Préludes in der Bearbeitung für Klavier solo
- Airelle Besson, trumpet
- Sebastian Sternal, piano
- Jonas Burgwinkel, percussion
Some projects are the subject of lengthy artistic deliberations that lead to highly harmonised works. For example, the CD 'Surprise!' which brought French trumpeter Airelle Besson together with two outstanding figures from the young jazz scene on the other side of the Rhine, pianist Sebastian Sternal and drummer Jonas Burgwinkel, was the official birth of a trio that was as unexpected as it was seductive. The special alchemy between the three musicians is masterfully brought out on this first CD. Airelle on trumpet in her own personal style, precise, economical, pure, constantly focussed on the purity of the vocals; Sebastian on piano and Fender Rhodes, putting his fluid movements and the discreet virtuosity of his playing at the service of the overall sound, with a sense of architecture and spatialisation of remarkable clarity and precision; and Jonas on drums, breathing both sustain and breath into the trio, with his art of groove and dotting of rare delicacy.
- Peter Köcsky, fortepiano
A unique series of concerts in the Beethoven House Museum brings the historical keyboard instruments from the museum's collection to life. Listeners can experience the sound ideals of Beethoven's time at first hand and learn about the special features of the instruments as the pianists explain them.
The concerts last around 40 minutes and take place in the museum's music room. The room is not air-conditioned.
With kind support of Deutsche Stiftung Denkmalschutz.
Concert tickets at a price of € 10 (plus admission to the museum) are available at the shop ticket office (always from the Monday before the event). This offer is aimed at individual visitors to the museum.
- Andrè Schuen, baritone
- Daniel Heide, piano
The South Tyrolean baritone Andrè Schuen is at home on the world's great opera and concert stages. His recordings of the great Schubert song cycles together with Daniel Heide for Deutsche Grammophon have been highly acclaimed internationally. With the song programme 'Träume-Alpträume' he presents himself to the Bonn audience for the first time.
With the kind support of the Hermann J. Abs Foundation
- Richard Strauss, Liederauswahl
- Richard Wagner, Fünf Lieder für Singstimme und Klavier ("Wesendonck-Lieder")
- Alexander von Zemlinsky, Liederauswahl
- Kiryl Keduk, piano
Kissinger Piano Olympus winner Kiryl Keduk (first double winner of both first prize and the audience prize) takes the audience on a musical journey through North and Latin America. From the jazz clubs of Manhattan to the dance halls of Buenos Aires to the rhythms of Brazil – a piano recital full of virtuoso sound artistry. Critics describe him as a 'virtuoso with a poetic soul' He has performed at the Berlin Philharmonic, the Pierre Boulez Saal, the Mariinsky Theatre and Steinway Hall in New York, and is known for interpretations that combine clarity, imagination and technical brilliance.
- Ausgewählte Werke von George Gershwin, Leonard Bernstein, Astor Piazzolla, Heitor Villa-Lobos, Alberto Ginastera
- Tigran Sargsyan, piano
Immerse yourself in the fascinating world of piano music and experience an unforgettable evening with the compositions of two musical giants: Ludwig van Beethoven and Frédéric Chopin. Tigran Sargsyan's interpretation combines technical precision with emotional depth and invites the audience to be enchanted by the power and magic of these pieces. A special opportunity for connoisseurs and lovers of classical piano music - and for anyone who wants to be moved by the unique combination of melody and emotion.
- Takahiko Sakamaki, fortepiano
A unique series of concerts in the Beethoven House Museum brings the historical keyboard instruments from the museum's collection to life. Listeners can experience the sound ideals of Beethoven's time at first hand and learn about the special features of the instruments as the pianists explain them.
The concerts last around 40 minutes and take place in the museum's music room. The room is not air-conditioned.
With kind support of Deutsche Stiftung Denkmalschutz.
Concert tickets at a price of € 10 (plus admission to the museum) are available at the shop ticket office (always from the Monday before the event). This offer is aimed at individual visitors to the museum.
What have you always wanted to know about Beethoven?
Together with you, we will focus on a special topic related to the great composer. The focus is primarily on Beethoven the man. We will introduce you to a few selected objects in the museum. In the coffee round afterwards, creative and thought-provoking impulses will stimulate discussion.
The programme is aimed at senior citizens, culture lovers, but also curious people who would like to learn and experience something. As the topics change, the round(e) can be booked as a single or multiple event.
Registration required: 0228 98175-25, museum@beethoven.de
Cost: € 15
The project funded by the Mainz Academy of Sciences and Literature, 'Beethoven's Workshop. Genetic Text Criticism and Digital Music Edition', funded by the Mainz Academy of Sciences and Literature, has produced a digital sketchbook edition for the first time. This reconstruction and edition of the so-called 'Notirungsbuch K', the main part of which is in the possession of the Beethoven-Haus Bonn, contains sketches for the Ninth Symphony and the Diabelli Variations.
The basic research project, which has been based at the Beethoven-Haus and the Detmold/Paderborn Musicology Seminar since 2014, has developed specific digital tools and visualisation techniques to make Beethoven's compositional working methods accessible. The current 4th research module shows in a fascinating way how Beethoven prepared his works through extensive sketching work in order to finally realise them in scores. The Bonn-Detmold research team will present its conceptual considerations and the results of its work, which are not only intended for the specialist faculty, but also provide insights into creative processes that bring us a little closer to the composer.
Following the presentation, the research team will answer project-related questions from the audience.
Admission is free.
- Angela Hewitt, piano
With her Bach interpretations, which radiate from within and are always natural and never artificial, Angela Hewitt delights critics and listeners alike. Her recordings have set standards in the history of interpretation. In 2020, Angela Hewitt was the first woman to be awarded the Bach Medal of the City of Leipzig. However, her range extends far beyond this, as she will demonstrate with her varied recital programme.
With the kind support of the Hermann J. Abs Foundation
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Klaviersonate B-Dur KV 570
- Ludwig van Beethoven, Klaviersonate D-Dur op. 28 "Pastorale"
- Joseph Haydn, Fantasie C-Dur Hob. XVII/4
- Franz Schubert, Zwölf Valses Nobles op. 77 D 969
- Johann Sebastian Bach, Partita c-Moll Nr. 2 BWV 826
- Peter Köcsky, fortepiano
A unique series of concerts in the Beethoven House Museum brings the historical keyboard instruments from the museum's collection to life. Listeners can experience the sound ideals of Beethoven's time at first hand and learn about the special features of the instruments as the pianists explain them.
The concerts last around 40 minutes and take place in the museum's music room. The room is not air-conditioned.
With kind support of Deutsche Stiftung Denkmalschutz.
Concert tickets at a price of € 10 (plus admission to the museum) are available at the shop ticket office (always from the Monday before the event). This offer is aimed at individual visitors to the museum.
- Gagik Makichian, cello
- Kiryl Keduk, piano
- Valentin Kochetkov, percussion
- Luba Solodukhina, violin
Vivalis Project presents music from the animated films of Hayao Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli, including 'My Neighbour Totoro' ‘Castle in the Sky', 'Spirited Away', 'Princess Mononoke', 'Howl's Moving Castle' and 'Kiki's Delivery Service', The well-known soundtracks are performed in delicate chamber music arrangements for piano, violin, cello and percussion, opening up a world of wonder and fantasy for all generations. Vivalis Project brings together international musicians in carefully curated programmes and sees itself as a 'third place' – a space full of inspiration and emotion that you will want to return to again and again.
- Daniel Hope, violin
- Jacques Ammon, piano
- Omar Massa, bandoneon
- Stéphane Logérot, double bass
- Raffael Müller, guitar
Music by Johann Sebastian Bach, Béla Bartók, Chick Corea, Keith Jarrett, Duke Ellington, Carlos Gardel, Astor Piazzolla, George Gershwin, Omar Massa and others.
With the kind support of the DHL Group
- Musik von Johann Sebastian Bach, Béla Bartók, Chick Corea, Keith Jarrett, Duke Ellington, Carlos Gardel, Astor Piazzolla, George Gershwin, Omar Massa u.a.
- Daniel Hope, violine
- Yibai Chen, violoncello
- Marie Sophie Hauzel, piano
With the kind support of the Hermann J. Abs Foundation
- Edvard Grieg, Sonate für Violine und Klavier Nr. 3 c-Moll op. 45
- Ludwig van Beethoven, Variationen über "Bei Männern, welche Liebe fühlen" aus Mozarts "Zauberflöte" für Klavier und Violoncello Es-Dur WoO 46
- Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy, Klaviertrio Nr. 1 d-Moll op. 49
- Daniel Hope, violine
- Tanja Kuhn, soprano
- Anna Tyka Nyffenegger, violoncello
- Marie Sophie Hauzel, piano
Music by Nadia and Lili Boulanger
With the kind support of the Hermann J. Abs Foundation
- Daniel Hope, violin
- Marie Sophie Hauzel, piano
- Joseph Joachim, Romanze op.2, Nr. 1 B-Dur
- Ludwig van Beethoven, Sonate für Klavier und Violine F-Dur op. 24 "Frühling"
- Edward Elgar, Sonate für Violine und Klavier e-Moll op. 82
- Camilla Köhnken, fortepiano
A unique series of concerts in the Beethoven House Museum brings the historical keyboard instruments from the museum's collection to life. Listeners can experience the sound ideals of Beethoven's time at first hand and learn about the special features of the instruments as the pianists explain them.
The concerts last around 40 minutes and take place in the museum's music room. The room is not air-conditioned.
With kind support of Deutsche Stiftung Denkmalschutz.
Concert tickets at a price of € 10 (plus admission to the museum) are available at the shop ticket office (always from the Monday before the event). This offer is aimed at individual visitors to the museum.
Monday Concert III by the Beethoven Orchestra Bonn
Serenades
- Daniel Lohmüller, horn
- Joseph Rauch, horn
- Hans-Joachim Mohrmann, clarinet
- Stefan Dorfmayr, clarinet
- Thomas Ludes, bassoon
- Viola Focke, bassoon
- Dorothea Stepp, violin
- Anna Putnikova, violin
- Tigran Sudzhijants, viola
- Lena Ovrutsky-Wignjosaputro, cello
The heart of classical music, Mozart and Beethoven: the most classical of all chamber concert programmes of the season presents weightless music from imperial Vienna during the gallant era. Night-time music par excellence, giving us a glimpse of how high society was pampered by musicians who still seem to us today to be the greatest... But light music is not only found in the 18th century: even in the Romantic period and the turmoil of the early 20th century, there are works that remind us of southern evenings and gatherings among friends. We accompany the works of Mozart and Beethoven with two little string quartet gems with a Mediterranean flair. This is light-hearted and profound entertainment at its best!
- Ludwig van Beethoven, Sextett für 2 Hörner und Streicher Es-Dur op. 81b
- Germaine Tailleferre, Streichquartett
- Hugo Wolf, Italienische Serenade
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Bläserserenade Es-Dur KV 375
- Takahiko Skamaki, fortepiano
A unique series of concerts in the Beethoven House Museum brings the historical keyboard instruments from the museum's collection to life. Listeners can experience the sound ideals of Beethoven's time at first hand and learn about the special features of the instruments as the pianists explain them.
The concerts last around 40 minutes and take place in the museum's music room. The room is not air-conditioned.
With kind support of Deutsche Stiftung Denkmalschutz.
Concert tickets at a price of € 10 (plus admission to the museum) are available at the shop ticket office (always from the Monday before the event). This offer is aimed at individual visitors to the museum.
- Vision String Quartet
- Florian Willeitner, violine
- Daniel Stoll, violine
- Sander Stuart, viola
- Leonard Disselhorst, violoncello
The four musicians from Berlin regularly receive the highest praise for their lively, fiery and unusual performances. The string quartets by Mozart, Shostakovich and Grieg are performed in a new way, as the quartet plays from memory and attaches great importance to an unconventional stage presentation.
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,, Streichquartett D-Dur KV 575 (1. Preußisches Quartett)
- Dmitri Schostakowitsch, Streichquartett Nr. 7 fis-Moll op. 108
- Edvard Grieg, Streichquartett g-Moll op. 27
- Arash Rokni, fortepiano
A unique series of concerts in the Beethoven House Museum brings the historical keyboard instruments from the museum's collection to life. Listeners can experience the sound ideals of Beethoven's time at first hand and learn about the special features of the instruments as the pianists explain them.
The concerts last around 40 minutes and take place in the museum's music room. The room is not air-conditioned.
With kind support of Deutsche Stiftung Denkmalschutz.
Concert tickets at a price of € 10 (plus admission to the museum) are available at the shop ticket office (always from the Monday before the event). This offer is aimed at individual visitors to the museum.
- Anouchka Hack, violoncello
The BEETHOVEN RING 2025 from BÜRGER FÜR BEETHOVEN (Citizens for Beethoven) will be awarded to German cellist Anouchka Hack, born in Antwerp in 1996, announced chairman Stephan Eisel:
"Anouchka Hack impresses her listeners with her narrative diversity of sound and musical expressiveness. At the recent Beethovenfest, she gave a convincing performance of Beethoven's Cello Sonata in C major, Op. 102/1, which she performed together with her sister, pianist Katharina Hack. Both have also underlined their connection to Ludwig van Beethoven with their latest CD, 'Alle Menschen werden Schwestern' (All People Become Sisters)."
The Beethoven Ring was awarded in a vote by the 1,700 members of BÜRGER FÜR BEETHOVEN (Citizens for Beethoven) to one of the three youngest soloists at the Beethovenfest who performed a work by Beethoven.