The Lucerne Festival has announced the programme for its 2026 Summer Festival, to be held from 13 August to 13 September, marking the first summer edition under the leadership of Sebastian Nordmann, who recently assumed the roles of Executive and Artistic Director.
The season brings together more than 120 events over 32 days, with 20 symphony orchestras appearing during the month, while maintaining the festival’s established artistic framework centred on leading international ensembles and soloists.
“American Dreams” as a thematic framework
The 2026 Summer Festival is organised around the theme “American Dreams”, which frames a broad exploration of music connected to the United States, spanning symphonic repertoire, musical theatre, jazz, film music, and minimalism.
The Opening Concert on 14 August will be performed by the Lucerne Festival Orchestra under its Music Director Riccardo Chailly, with a programme featuring works by George Gershwin and Charles Ives. The opening also includes Steve Reich’s New York Counterpoint in a version for eleven clarinets, performed by soloists of the Lucerne Festival Contemporary Orchestra.
The Closing Concert on 13 September is devoted to Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess, performed by the Chineke! Orchestra together with the Cape Town Opera Vocal Ensemble, conducted by Kwamé Ryan.
Throughout the season, works by American composers are featured across multiple programmes. Several of these will be heard at Lucerne Festival for the first time, including Ives’s Symphony No. 1, Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring, and Samuel Barber’s Piano Concerto, to be performed by Yuja Wang with the Mahler Chamber Orchestra.
New formats and public access
The 2026 edition introduces several new concert formats. On 13 August, the evening before the official opening, the festival presents two free events: “Overture” at the KKL Concert Hall, featuring the Lucerne Festival Orchestra, and “Classical Music for All: Open Air” on Europaplatz, with horn player Sarah Willis and musicians of the Havana Lyceum Orchestra.
Another new format, “Mittendrin”, places audience members among the musicians on stage. In 2026, the Budapest Festival Orchestra, conducted by Iván Fischer, will perform a suite from Sergei Prokofiev’s ballet Cinderella in this immersive setting.
The festival also expands its street programme with “In the Streets: City Stage”, running from 25 to 30 August and involving musicians from the Lucerne Festival Academy. The programme further includes a performance by the Hamburg-based techno marching band MEUTE during the festival’s final weekend.
Soloists and debuts
Alongside artists who regularly return to Lucerne — including Martha Argerich, Cecilia Bartoli, Isabelle Faust, Víkingur Ólafsson, and Yuja Wang — the 2026 season also features musicians making their Lucerne Festival debut or returning after long absences. These include Ray Chen, Hilary Hahn, Joyce DiDonato, Elisabeth Leonskaja, and Yo-Yo Ma.
The festival also highlights a younger generation of soloists, including pianists Seong-Jin Cho, Alexandre Kantorow, Yunchan Lim, Alexander Malofeev, Lukas Sternath, and Hayato Sumino.
Anne-Sophie Mutter marks 50 years on stage
A central focus of the 2026 Summer Festival is Anne-Sophie Mutter, who marks 50 years since her Lucerne Festival debut in 1976. Over the course of the season, she appears both as soloist and conductor with the Lucerne Festival Orchestra, performs with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra under Manfred Honeck, and introduces scholarship holders from her foundation.
On 23 August, exactly five decades after her debut, Mutter will take part in a public conversation with Sebastian Nordmann at St. Charles Hall in Meggen, the venue of her first Lucerne appearance.
Orchestras, opera, and the Academy
The symphonic core of the festival includes daily appearances by major orchestras such as the Berliner Philharmoniker, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, and Vienna Philharmonic, alongside first-time Lucerne appearances by the Met Orchestra under Yannick Nézet-Séguin.
Opera projects include Porgy and Bess at the Closing Concert and the conclusion of “The Wagner Cycles” with Götterdämmerung, performed by the Dresden Festival Orchestra and Concerto Köln, conducted by Kent Nagano. Les Musiciens du Prince – Monaco, led by Gianluca Capuano, present a concert performance of Christoph Willibald Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice with Cecilia Bartoli.
The Lucerne Festival Academy, led for the first time by Jörg Widmann, focuses on contemporary music, with repertoire including works by Wolfgang Rihm, John Adams, Frank Zappa, and a world premiere by Liza Lim.
Ticketing information
Online ticket sales for the 2026 Summer Festival begin on 24 March 2026 at 10:00 am, with full programme details to be published on the festival’s official website .
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