New Year´s Eve Concert

Order tickets
PreviousSeptember 2027
Mo
Tu
We
Th
Fr
Sa
Su

 

Love’s pain meets exuberance – our New Year’s Eve programme is an emotional rollercoaster. Benjamin Bernheim, one of today’s leading lyric tenors, brings us the love-sick anguish of famous operatic heroes: Don José from Bizet’s Carmen, Lenski from Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin, Massenet’s Werther, and Gounod’s Romeo. The tragic story of Romeo and Juliet is also told in Tchaikovsky’s eponymous Fantasy Overture. With lively music by Bizet, Chabrier, and Gershwin, Kirill Petrenko and the Berliner Philharmoniker also take us to the sun: to southern France, Spain, and Cuba.

Program and cast

Berliner Philharmoniker
Kirill Petrenko, conductor
Benjamin Bernheim, tenor

 

Programme

Piotr Tchaikovsky
Eugen Onegin, op. 24: Polonaise

 

Piotr Tchaikovsky
Eugene Onegin, op. 24: Introduction, Scene and Lensky’s Aria from Act 2
 

Charles Gounod
Roméo et Juliette: “L’amour!”, Cavatina of Romeo from Act 2
 

Piotr Tchaikovsky
Romeo and Juliet, Fantasy Overture after Shakespeare

 

Interval (not on 31.12.2025)

 

Georges Bizet
Carmen: Ouvertüre. Allegro giocoso

 

Georges Bizet
Carmen: “La fleur que tu m'avais jetée”. Aria by Don José from Act 2
 

Georges Bizet
L'Arlésienne. Suite No. 2 for orchestra – No. 4 Farandole

 

Jules Massenet
Werther: Prelude to Act 1

 

Jules Massenet
Werther: “Pourquoi me reveiller”, Aria of Werther from Act 3
 

Emmanuel Chabrier
España, Rhapsody for orchestra

 

George Gershwin
Cuban Overture

Berliner Philharmonie

The Berliner Philharmonie is a concert hall in Berlin, Germany. Home to the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, the building is acclaimed for both its acoustics and its architecture.

 

The Philharmonie lies on the south edge of the city's Tiergarten and just west of the former Berlin Wall, an area that for decades suffered from isolation and drabness but that today offers ideal centrality, greenness, and accessibility. Its cross street and postal address is Herbert-von-Karajan-Straße, named for the orchestra's longest-serving principal conductor. The neighborhood, often dubbed the Kulturforum, can be reached on foot from the Potsdamer Platz station.

 

Actually a two-venue facility with connecting lobby, the Philharmonie comprises a Großer Saal of 2,440 seats for orchestral concerts and a chamber-music hall, the Kammermusiksaal, of 1,180 seats. Though conceived together, the smaller venue was added only in the 1980s.

 

By subway (U-Bahn):

Lines U2 (Bahnhöfe Potsdamer Platz or MendelssohnBartholdy-Park)

By city train (S-Bahn):

Lines S1, S2, S25 (Potsdamer Platz)

By regional train:

Lines RE3, RE4, RE5 (Potsdamer Platz)

By bus directly to the Philharmonie:

Lines 200 (Philharmonie), M48, M85 (Kulturforum or Varian-Fry-Straße),
Further bus lines: M29 (Potsdamer Brücke), M41 (Potsdamer Platz)

By car:

A limited number of parking spaces are available on the Philharmonie property. Please use the parking garages under the Sony Center and under the Potsdamer Platz Arkaden (Entrance at Reichpietschufer).

By bycicle:

A limited number of bycicle stands are available on front and behind the Philharmonie. Additional stands can be found in front of the State Library (Staatsbibliothek) across the street.

Related events