Kronos Quartet. Concert at Hanzas Perons
On Tuesday, May 13, 2025, the exceptionally virtuosic string chamber ensemble Kronos Quartet from the United States will return to Latvia for an exclusive performance in the Baltic States at the cultural venue Hanzas Perons.
Last year marked half a century since violinist David Harrington, inspired by the Vietnam War and George Crumb’s composition Black Angels, founded the ensemble. The use of water glasses played with a bow, passages incorporating spoken word, and electronic elements were innovations in chamber music composition that particularly captivated Harrington. Over time, and with changes in the quartet’s lineup, Kronos Quartet has persistently pursued its artistic vision, where fearless exploration and a continual rewriting of the experience of string quartets intersect. It is no exaggeration to say that Kronos remains the most significant string quartet in the world and one of the most influential music ensembles overall.
Currently, Harrington’s colleagues and fellow musicians—Gabriela Díaz (second violin), Ayane Kozasa (viola), and Paul Wiancko (cello)—continue to carry the torch of string quartet reformers with every concert, recording, commission, and collaboration with other artists. Through their creative work, they embody music-making as a living art form and define “contemporaneity” in its broadest and most precise sense. In other words, Kronos Quartet creates music that responds to the world’s most pressing questions, engaging directly with reality. As The New York Times aptly put it, they have long since “broken the boundaries of what a string quartet does.”
With thousands of performances worldwide, dozens of released recordings, countless collaborations with elite musicians and composers from various genres, and around a thousand commissioned works and arrangements, these are just some highlights in the quartet’s artistic biography. They have also received more than 40 awards, including the Polar Music Prize, the Avery Fisher Prize, and the Edison Klassiek Oeuvre award—some of the highest honors in music—as well as three Grammy awards: for Best Chamber Music Performance in 2004, for Best Small Ensemble Performance (where they won against themselves, as their recording of Alban Berg’s music outperformed their recording of Pēteris Vasks’ String Quartet No. 4), for their collaboration with Laurie Anderson on her 2018 album Landfall, and for Best Engineered Album with their recording of Sun Rings by their close friend and contemporary, Terry Riley, four years ago.
“My devotion is to try to create music that could embrace us all like hands,” said Kronos Quartet leader David Harrington about his life’s mission. Though spoken at different times, he echoed this thought in a conversation with Dāvis Eņģelis six years ago:
“I would love to find music that could protect children, people who will live here in the future. Music that is bulletproof. That would be wonderful. We haven’t found such music yet—music that, for example, could surround my grandchildren and shield them from danger. But I haven’t given up this search because I believe such music exists in this universe. If we focus and never stop looking. I am devoted to finding music so powerful that it would make violent people stop being violent.”
Today, such music and such artists are needed by the world more than ever.
Tickets for Kronos Quartet’s concert at Hanzas Perons on May 13 are available through the Biļešu Paradīze ticketing network.
Doors open at 6:00 PM.
AL DI MEOLA - ACOUSTIC TRIO
On 4th of May Latvian music lovers will have an exclusive opportunity to hear one of the world's most famous guitarists, Al Di Meola, who will perform in Riga, Hanza Perons Concert Hall, with the programme Al Di Meola - Acoustic Trio.
This programme is a special musical journey, combining jazz, rock, Latin American, and classical music genres. Al Di Meola will be accompanied on stage by two exceptional musicians, Italian guitarist Peo Alfonsi and Spanish percussionist Sergio Martínez, whose talent and experience will add even more colour and energy to the concert.
Al Di Meola, an Italian-American guitarist, has won prestigious Grammy Awards and many other honours for his unparalleled playing technique. Five times voted Best Jazz Guitarist by Guitar Player magazine, he has recorded more than 20 solo albums. In a career spanning almost five decades, he has performed with world music legends such as Luciano Pavarotti, Stevie Wonder, Carlos Santana, and many others.
The concert will be enriched by Peo Alfonsi, who has a unique ability to combine classical, jazz, and Mediterranean musical traditions. His collaborations with artists such as Michel Godard and Kenny Wheeler, as well as his long-term participation in Al Di Meola's World Sinfonia project, have made him one of the most versatile guitarists on the international scene.
Sergio Martínez, is a world-renowned percussionist who brings a variety of flamenco and Latin American rhythms to the trio's performances. Having previously worked with the legendary Paco de Lucia and collaborated with many international music stars, he is the perfect complement to Al Di Meola's creative style.
Promoter:
http://www.forsevent.com
Fors event UAB
Pylimo st. 9-1, Vilnius Vilnius
SYMPHONIC HIT WITH GORAN GORA. RAVEL’S BOLÉRO AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
SYMPHONIC HIT WITH GORAN GORA. RAVEL’S BOLÉRO AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
Narrator GORAN GORA
Director Roberts RUBĪNS
Playwright Jānis JOŅEVS
Artist Krišs SALMANIS
Animator Pauls POIKĀNS
Conductor Vilhelms VĀCIETIS
Programme:
Maurice RAVEL Boléro
In this multimedia concert, young audiences will experience a unique fusion of music, art, and technology. The conductor will guide the orchestra in a performance of Maurice Ravel’s Boléro, while content created through artificial intelligence enhances the emotional depth of the music. This innovative experience aims to inspire young people to explore classical music in a contemporary, engaging way.
LNSO, Andrejs Osokins, Grieg and Dvořák
Andrejs Osokins – Piano
Kristian Sallinen – Conductor
Program:
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- Zoltán Kodály – "Dances of Galánta"
- Edvard Grieg – Piano Concerto
- Antonín Dvořák – Symphony No. 9 "From the New World"
At the concert on March 14, the audience will hear the work of Hungarian composer and folk music researcher Zoltán Kodály, inspired by the vibrant musical traditions of Roma ensembles. Also featured is the Piano Concerto by Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg, written in his youth and considered one of the greatest in history. The program concludes with Czech composer Antonín Dvořák's Symphony No. 9 "From the New World", a masterpiece filled with unprecedented impressions of travel and deep longing for home. This concert will be performed by the Latvian National Symphony Orchestra (LNSO) under the baton of young Finnish conductor Kristian Sallinen.
This concert is part of the LNSO's 2025 autumn subscription, available for purchase until February 14. Subscriptions can be purchased here.
Doors open at 18:00.
Symphonic Hits with Goran Gora. Vivaldi's Four Seasons and Electrocellos
Thursday, December 12, at 7:00 p.m. at Hanzas Perons
SYMPHONIC HITS WITH GORAN GORA. VIVALDI'S FOUR SEASONS. ELECTROCELLO
Valters PŪCE – Cello
Conductor Artūrs Oskars MITREVICS
Program:
Antonio VIVALDI – The Four Seasons
Hidden Orchestra. Live at Hanzas Perons
On Sunday, December 1, the cultural venue "Hanzas Perons" in Latvia will host the first-ever concert in the country by the instrumental music collective Hidden Orchestra from the UK, led by musician Joe Acheson, as part of their European tour.
Hidden Orchestra is the “imaginary” orchestra of multi-instrumentalist, composer, and music producer Joe Acheson. It was created and continues to exist in his studio and imagination. Over the years, numerous musicians have participated in the orchestra, either in live performances or remotely during recording sessions. Acheson masterfully blends their individual impulses, motifs, and styles into a cohesive whole—whether it’s a recording or a live concert—enriching it with field recordings, bass, and multilayered, intriguing drum parts. It might seem that Hidden Orchestra is the creative playground of a brilliant but eccentric professor in a lab setting. However, from time to time, Joe Acheson brings like-minded musicians together to tour as a real ensemble. The upcoming concert at Hanzas Perons in Riga will mark Hidden Orchestra's first visit to Latvia.
“Their desire to explore the territories of jazz, film, and ambient music makes Hidden Orchestra emotionally compelling—something not always typical for instrumental music,” wrote the media outlet Pop Matters in an album review. This sentiment holds true largely because Acheson and his collaborators’ creations often resemble electronic music performed with acoustic instruments, complemented by various natural sounds. Seemingly predetermined and “preserved,” the music still allows room for playfulness and improvisation, grounded in contrasts. At times it becomes intense, then soothing, leading from light to darkness and back. Sometimes accelerating to an almost untraceable speed, then slowing to a comfortable, safe rhythm—but always with a twist. In other words, Hidden Orchestra is a cinematic experience for both the musicians and the listeners. This music transforms into “a complex system of tools and methods for capturing moving objects on light-sensitive film and projecting the resulting images onto a screen,” where the “film” is each person’s imagination, emotions, and interpretative ability, and the “screen” is how one decides to continue the journey.
Hidden Orchestra's latest studio album, To Dream Is To Forget, was released last year after a six-year hiatus during which the pandemic shaped the passage of time. Joe Acheson used this period to work on other projects, including composing the soundtrack for the acclaimed video game Creaks, collaborating with singer Cerys Matthews and ten prominent contemporary British poets on a project under Decca Records, and creating a sound installation for the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew in London.
For the upcoming tour, Joe Acheson will be joined by percussionists Jamie Graham and Tim Lane, with specially crafted video scores by Tom Newell enhancing the experience. A guest artist, already familiar to Latvian audiences, will perform as the opening act, with more details to be revealed closer to the event.
Tickets for Hidden Orchestra's concert at Hanzas Perons on December 1 are available through the "Biļešu Paradīze" ticketing network. The first 50 tickets are priced at a special rate of €22.00. Ticket prices will increase as the concert date approaches.
Saturday, November 30, at 2:00 p.m. at Hanzas Perons
LENESON GOES NORTH
Latvian National Symphony Orchestra
Conductor Māris KUĢIS
Program:
Music by Leroy ANDERSON, Edvard GRIEG, Carl NIELSEN, and Jean SIBELIUS
*Ticket prices are the same for both children (ages 7+) and adults.
Children up to 6 years old (including those not occupying a separate seat) require a special ticket priced at EUR 1.50 (available online or at the venue before the concert).
LNSO, Tarmo Peltokoski and Salome by Strauss
At the beginning of November, the Latvian National Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of artistic leader and chief conductor Tarmo Peltokoski, will perform some of the most thrilling works from the first half of the 20th century in two concerts—on November 1st at Hanzas Perons and on November 2nd at the Cēsis Concert Hall. Messiaen composes on the theme of mourning, Debussy paints the sea in sound, and Richard Strauss shakes the world of opera with a work based on the literary piece by Oscar Wilde.
Vida Miknevičiūtė – Soprano
Tarmo Peltokoski – Conductor
Program:
Olivier MESSIAEN – Le Tombeau resplendissant
Claude DEBUSSY – La Mer ("The Sea")
Richard STRAUSS – Fragments from the opera Salome
Entry to the concert from 6:00 p.m.