Piano Street Magazine

Take Your Seat! Vikingur Ólafsson Plays Beethoven in Berlin

May 28th, 2026 in Piano Street Site News by

Composed as Napoleon’s cannons battered Vienna, Beethoven’s “Emperor” Concerto abandons classical restraint, launching the soloist immediately into an epic, defiant struggle. Don’t miss the chance to hear Víkingur Ólafsson tackle this convention-shattering masterpiece live from Berlin. Piano Street’s members are invited to watch the livestream.

Free tickets for Piano Street’s members

Thanks to a continuous collaboration with the Berliner Philharmoniker’s Digital Concert Hall, Piano Street members can enjoy a free 7-day ticket to the platform. Simply log in to your account to get your voucher code, which provides instant access to the live stream on Saturday, May 30, and full access to the concert archive for seven days.

Members: Get your free 7 days ticket here! >>

Berliner Philharmoniker – Semyon Bychkov – Víkingur Ólafsson

LIVESTREAM: Sat, 30 May 2026, 19:00, (17:00 GMT/13:00 ET)
REPEAT: Sun, 31 May 2026, 13:00, (11:00 GMT/07:00 ET)

Ludwig van Beethoven:
“Coriolan”, overture, op. 62
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 5 in E flat major, op. 73

Dmitri Shostakovich:
Symphony No. 5 in D minor, op. 47

Before the concert and during the intermission:
Semyon Bychkov and Víkingur Ólafsson in conversation with Allan Nilles


While the Napoleonic Wars were raging, Ludwig van Beethoven created one of his most brilliant works: the Fifth Piano Concerto – played here by Víkingur Ólafsson – defies the challenges of the time with its heroic optimism. Semyon Bychkov then conducts Dmitri Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony, composed in the shadow of Stalinist tyranny. Triumphant at first glance, it reveals an ironic ambiguity – a work that feigns rejoicing and undermines it at the same time.

It is 1809: Beethoven is almost completely deaf and deeply shaken by the ongoing war around Vienna. His former admiration for Napoleon has turned to bitter opposition. What has become of the ideals of the French Revolution – liberty and fraternity – which the composer believed in as a young man? For his Piano Concerto No. 5, Beethoven chose the key of E flat major, the key of the Eroica. The piano opens the first movement confidently with a majestic cadenza; the movement is characterised by a stately march-like quality. The intimate adagio – one of the most moving slow movements in the piano repertoire – floats like a heavenly, comforting idyll in the middle of the work. The finale, which follows immediately after a suspenseful transition, exudes an unbridled, almost frenzied joy. “It must be played not like a smile, but like a grin,” Lars Vogt once remarked, “man is born to be free. And freedom – can be fought for”. Following his debut with John Adams’s original Piano Concerto, Víkingur Ólafsson now presents a popular classic from the repertoire.

Beethoven’s Coriolan overture, composed around the same time and which opens the programme, also centres on a questionable hero – one who is ultimately broken. The second half features Dmitri Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony, a work of unparalleled complexity that answers the question of how an artist can voice his protest whilst risking his life. Here, in 1937 – already in the regime’s sights – the composer achieved a masterstroke: while outwardly feigning conformity with the aesthetics of the Soviet dictatorship, he distorts heroic elements such as march rhythms into grotesque caricatures. The concert is conducted by Semyon Bychkov, a Shostakovich expert with a particular feel for the existential urgency of this music.


Víkingur Ólafsson returns to the Philharmonie following his celebrated autumn 2024 performance of Schumann’s Piano Concerto under chief conductor Kirill Petrenko. His deep engagement with Beethoven’s music is also the focal point of his latest Deutsche Grammophon release, Opus 109, which explores the composer’s late language alongside works by J.S. Bach and Franz Schubert.

Free tickets for Piano Street’s members

Thanks to a continuous collaboration with the Berliner Philharmoniker’s Digital Concert Hall, Piano Street members can enjoy a free 7-day ticket to the platform. Simply log in to your account to get your voucher code, which provides instant access to the live stream on Saturday, May 30, and full access to the concert archive for seven days.

Members: Get your free 7 days ticket here! >>

Follow along in the digital piano score!

Experience Beethoven’s architectural genius from the inside out. Download our digital sheet music and follow Ólafsson’s performance note by note.

PDF-score from Piano Street:

Brahms Piano Concerto no 2

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