GUEST CONCERT

The Lahti Symphony Orchestra’s 25th International Sibelius Festival will take place at the Sibelius Hall in Lahti from 29 to 31 August 2024, crowning the four-year term as the festival’s artistic director of Dalia Stasevska, the Lahti Symphony Orchestra’s principal conductor. The festival will feature all seven of Sibelius’s symphonies and Luonnotar under her baton.

The Lahti Symphony Orchestra will open the festival on Thursday 29 August with Symphonies Nos 1 and 2, while the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra’s guest concert on Friday 30 August will include Symphonies Nos 3 and 5 and Luonnotar, with the South African soprano Golda Schultz as soloist – her first appearance in Lahti. The final concert on Saturday 31 August will feature Symphonies Nos 4, 6 and 7. As usual, all the orchestral concerts will be preceded by a pre-concert talk.

The orchestral concerts will be complemented by a narrative runic singing concert by the Pajolaine Folk Song Duo on Friday and a chamber music concert on Saturday afternoon, in which the legendary actress Seela Sella will read Aino Sibelius’s letters and Vilina Rainisto will perform a selection of Sibelius’s piano music.

For almost 200 years, Ludwig van Beethoven’s Ninth and last symphony has been played wherever major events are celebrated with music: at the fall of the Berlin Wall, in Tiananmen Square, at the opening of the Olympic Games, at New Year celebrations. The Lahti Symphony Orchestra’s concert season, too, ends in the grandest possible way when the finest Finnish vocal soloists, a big symphony choir and principal conductor Dalia Stasevska perform the ‘Ode to Joy’.

The Lahti Symphony Orchestra’s 25th International Sibelius Festival will take place at the Sibelius Hall in Lahti from 29 to 31 August 2024, crowning the four-year term as the festival’s artistic director of Dalia Stasevska, the Lahti Symphony Orchestra’s principal conductor. The festival will feature all seven of Sibelius’s symphonies and Luonnotar under her baton.

The Lahti Symphony Orchestra will open the festival on Thursday 29 August with Symphonies Nos 1 and 2, while the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra’s guest concert on Friday 30 August will include Symphonies Nos 3 and 5 and Luonnotar, with the South African soprano Golda Schultz as soloist – her first appearance in Lahti. The final concert on Saturday 31 August will feature Symphonies Nos 4, 6 and 7. As usual, all the orchestral concerts will be preceded by a pre-concert talk.

The orchestral concerts will be complemented by a narrative runic singing concert by the Pajolaine Folk Song Duo on Friday and a chamber music concert on Saturday afternoon, in which the legendary actress Seela Sella will read Aino Sibelius’s letters and Vilina Rainisto will perform a selection of Sibelius’s piano music.


For almost 200 years, Ludwig van Beethoven’s Ninth and last symphony has been played wherever major events are celebrated with music: at the fall of the Berlin Wall, in Tiananmen Square, at the opening of the Olympic Games, at New Year celebrations. The Lahti Symphony Orchestra’s symphony concert season, too, ends in the grandest possible way when the finest Finnish vocal soloists, a big symphony choir and principal conductor Dalia Stasevska perform the ‘Ode to Joy’.

Iceland’s most acclaimed contemporary composer Anna Thorvaldsdóttir has succeeded in fulfilling an artist’s dream: developing a recognisable style and having her works performed by the world’s major orchestras, from the Los Angeles Philharmonic to the BBC Symphony Orchestra. The three-movement symphony AIŌN is her most ambitious work to date – a cosmically rippling field of energy in which time, place and movement merge into an inexorable mass of sound on its journey to the listener’s consciousness.

Gustav Mahler, one of the last giants of Romanticism, began his series of symphonies with a work ‘only’ an hour long. But it still bears all his trademarks: sarcastic dances, powerful outbursts, natural landscapes whispering in the distance and the sounds of inner struggles. All this, of course, as experienced by the solitary hero, Titan.

Giuseppe Verdi’s Messa da Requiem was written in memory of the writer and philosopher Alessandro Manzoni. This great work was expected to continue the Requiem Mass tradition with its devotional, funereal atmosphere, but Verdi could not go against his nature. The issue of death drew the Italian master towards the dramas of Aida, Rigoletto and La traviata – the larger-than-life pathos of tragedy. His Requiem turned out to be too religious for the opera house and too ostentatious for the church. Yet the touching arias, moving choral scenes and eternal questions about life in the inimitable style of Italian opera are perfectly suited to the concert hall.

The final concert of the Lahti Symphony Orchestra’s season crowns Dalia Stasevska’s successful tenure as principal conductor with impressive contributions from top Finnish soloists and a large choir.

The pages of history were irrevocably ripped up in the early years of the last century, both in politics and in music. Claude Debussy, the last composer icon of the so-called ‘Belle Époque’, took the art of composition to a compelling culmination, after which Arnold Schoenberg, the pioneer of new music, set it on a new path. Actress and singer Maria Ylipää interprets the slow madness of the moonstruck clown Pierrot in a timeless cult classic that must be experienced first-hand at least once in a lifetime.