28.3. - 6.4.26

Easter Festival Baden-Baden

In 2026, the Easter Festival Baden-Baden will welcome Amsterdam’s Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, the Mahler Chamber Orchestra, and the National Youth Orchestra of Germany. Baden-Baden looks back on a long tradition of "music of the world" and of proactively fostering cultural heritage. With Richard Wagner's Lohengrin, Bach's St. Matthew Passion, and Britten's War Requiem, a new generation of exciting artists interprets masterpieces of European music history. We can look forward to conductor Joana Mallwitz, conductor Klaus Mäkelä, and soloists Hélène Grimaud (piano), mezzo-soprano Elīna Garanča, Piotr Beczała as Lohengrin, Rachel Willis-Sørensen as Elsa, and young violin virtuoso Daniel Lozakovich. When spring awakens in Baden-Baden and the Easter holidays promise a festive mood and enjoyment, the music world comes together to experience hot springs and the Festspielhaus featuring operas, oratorios, exquisite chamber music, and monuments of the symphonic literature. We look forward to welcoming you! Once again, we are committed to world-class artists and the future of classical music!

The Program

SA 28.3.26/TU 31.3.26/SU 5.4.26

RICHARD WAGNER: LOHENGRIN

New production – Joana Mallwitz, Mahler Chamber Orchestra

Richard Wagner's redemption operas continually invite new interpretations. Joana Mallwitz was already deeply involved with the composer's oeuvre during her time as General Music Director in Nuremberg. Director and musician Johannes Erath will stage the Baden-Baden Lohengrin production. He began his directing career as an assistant to Willy Decker, worked at the Semperoper in Dresden among other venues, and has been awarded the Götz Friedrich Prize and the Austrian Music Theater Prize.

TO THE EVENT

SU 29.3.26

HÉLÈNE GRIMAUD

Mahler Chamber Orchestra

When Hélène Grimaud and the Mahler Chamber Orchestra perform Johannes Brahms’s First Piano Concerto and Robert Schumann's A-minor Concerto side by side in Baden-Baden, it is not by chance: both works revolve around the personage of Clara. It will be an evening remembering Robert, Clara, and Johannes – the latter two having lived within 800 meters of each other in their adopted home of Baden-Baden.

TO THE EVENT

MO 30.3.26

J. S. BACH: ST. MATTHEW PASSION

Klaus Mäkelä conducts the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra

In Amsterdam, every Easter week begins with a performance of one of Johann Sebastian Bach’s Passions. After Willem Mengelberg, Bernard Haitink, and Mariss Jansons, new chief conductor designate Klaus Mäkelä is now continuing this tradition. The role of the Evangelist will be sung by Maximilian Schmitt, that of Christ by Matthew Brook, the two artists representing the German and British interpretations of great Baroque oratorios. In Amsterdam, both performance traditions merge into their own oratorio heritage, which we can now also experience in Baden-Baden.
 

TO THE EVENT

WE 1.4.26

ROYAL CONCERTGEBOUW ORCHESTRA

Klaus Mäkelä, Daniel Lozakovich

At the ripe age of fifteen, violinist Daniel Lozakovich received an exclusive contract with Deutsche Grammophon. With Max Bruch’s First Violin Concerto, he performs  one of the most popular concertos of the nineteenth century. In the concert’s second half, Klaus Mäkelä and the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra interpret Gustav Mahler's Fifth Symphony. The Concertgebouw Orchestra can look back on one of the world’s longest Mahler traditions. It was the first orchestra to make the works known in Europe, and continues to perform them to this day.

TO THE EVENT

THU 2.4.26

ANTON BRUCKNER: SYMPHONY NO. 8

Klaus Mäkelä conducts the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra

Enthusiastic audience, horrified critics: this sums up the reactions to the premiere of Anton Bruckner's Eighth Symphony. Today, the symphony is considered one of the most important monuments of musical art. The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra made Amsterdam a mecca for Bruckner fans. Klaus Mäkelä looks forward to continuing this tradition, bringing along the magnum opus of the Austrian court organist and Wagner admirer for the orchestra's debut at the Baden-Baden Easter Festival.

TO THE EVENT

FR 3.4.26

WAR REQUIEM

Joana Mallwitz, Mahler Chamber Orchestra

Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem is based on Latin texts and poems by the English poet Wilfred Owen, who died in the war in 1918. At the work’s premiere in 1962 in the rebuilt Coventry Cathedral, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau sang alongside British artists: a statement of reconciliation by the composer. The oratorio features a mixed choir, a boys' choir, a symphony orchestra, a chamber orchestra, and vocal soloists. These large forces underline the composer's desire to mobilize all efforts towards overcoming war and violence.

TO THE EVENT

SA 4.4.26

ELĪNA GARANČA

Song recital

Her mezzo-soprano voice is "one in a million," wrote the British Observer following a performance by Latvian singer Elīna Garanča. With her interpretations, songs become miniature operas. In Baden-Baden the international star has enjoyed numerous successful appearances – and so we are particularly looking forward to seeing her again at the 2026 Easter Festival. The program will be announced in autumn 2025. 

TO THE EVENT
Official partner of the Easter Festival 2026